indecency... |
Posted by
parhad
(Guest)
- Wednesday, June 23 2004, 3:15:06 (CEST) from Mexico - Windows XP - Internet Explorer Website: Website title: |
the Nazis too were very concerned over public morals..they vowed to clean up Berlin of smut and Queers and hookers..and they did too...then they proceeded to get rid of the rest of the people they were aiming at all along...Bush is using the same strategy...if there was ever a country and a people addicted to sex and all that raunch, it`s your basic Christian American...yet it roubles them too and they want it to stay immoral cause they get better hard-ons that way...so gere come laws that will start by claiming to "protect women and children"...and will end up protecting them from a lot more than nudity...but truth in reporting..accurate articles...addmissions of mistakkes and exposes of government whore mongering...that`s the real point. Thanks to Janet`s nipple we get move along the fsats track to a "clean" country that won`t have to be bothered by the site of women raped naked by soldiers or children starved naked by these Christians... Introduced in January, after FCC Chairman Michael Powell demanded higher fines, the bill wound up on a fast track to passage after the Feb. 1 Super Bowl halftime show that ended with Timberlake partially exposing Jackson's breast for an instant to 90 million viewers. The incident generated more than 500,000 complaints to the FCC. If the legislation isn't approved as part of the bill to authorize spending for the Defense Department, Brownback said he would try to find another way to get it through the Senate. "This is something the public wants," he said. The Senate also approved a provision that would delay for one year the FCC's media ownership rules that allow, among other things, companies to own both newspapers and broadcasting stations in the same market. Breaux said that measure also made him oppose the bill. "It repeals the FCC's media ownership rules using what I have argued is a flawed and inaccurate measurement of network television viewers," he said. But a consumer group cheered the move to delay the rules. "Once again the Senate has demonstrated its objection to weakening rules that keep massive media conglomerates from swallowing up local media outlets and ignoring community values," said Gene Kimmelman, senior public policy director of Consumers Union, publisher of Consumer Reports. Brownback said he wasn't sure that those provisions would make it into the final legislation that emerges from the Senate-House conference committee. ___ --------------------- |
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