340 lines
27 KiB
Plaintext
340 lines
27 KiB
Plaintext
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From the Harvard Law Record
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April 17, 1987 Vol.84, No.8
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Transcribed 8/90 by Diabolical Ed
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Holiday Inn, Cambodia BBS - 209/456-8584
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100 Megs online, hundreds of TFiles
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The Far Right and the Censorship of Music:
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An Attack on the Freedom of Expression
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By Jello Biafra
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Jello Biafra was until recently lead singer, lyricist, and chief songwriter
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of the San Francisco-based punk rock group Dead Kennedys, one of the leading
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undergound bands in the country. He also operates Alternative Tentacles
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Records, their own recording label. He came fourth place in the 1979 San
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Francisco mayoral election, won by Diane Feinstein. On June 2, 1986 Biafra
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was charged by the Los Angeles City Attorney's office with distributing
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harmful matter to minors. The charge stemmed from Dead Kennedy's inclusion
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in their third album, Frankenchrist, of a poster by Oscar award-winning
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Swedish artist H.R. Giger, entitled Landscape No.XX: Where Are We Going?
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Biafra and four other defendants intend to plead not guilty; the American
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Civil Liberties Union is assisting in Biafra's defense, challenging the
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constitutionality of the charge. Since that time, the Dead Kennedys' have
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broken up, an event the associate editor of Rolling Stone magazine termed "a
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real loss to the American scene". To raise the necessary funds to fight this
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case, Biafra helped to form the San Francisco-based No More Censorship
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Defense Fund. He now tours various parts of the country giving talks on the
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issue of censorship, and performing "spoken word" readings of his poetry and
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lyrics. His musical activities will probably remain on ice for some time to
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come.
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-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
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I was half asleep in the attic of my rented flat on April 15th of last
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year when I was startled by nine police officers tearing my place apart.
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They had broken a window by the front door in order to get in. They claimed
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they had knocked but I had not heard them. The police were hoping, I think,
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to find the original Giger painting, or better yet, Giger himself, and were
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disappointed to learn that the painting was hanging in aa private collection
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in France and that Giger lived in Switzerland. With their vaguely-worded
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search warrant, they looked through so many places that it was quite obvious
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they were hoping to find drugs or weapons as well as anything pertaining to
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the set-up of a harmful matter bust. (The search warrant said nothing about
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drugs or weapons.) They were again disappointed. They found nothing of this
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type since we don't touch that sort of thing in the first place.
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All this apparently started just the day before Christmas of 1985, when a
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teenage girl bought the Frankenchrist album as a present for her younger
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brother. Upon seeing the poster, their mother wrote a letter of complaint to
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the California Attorney General's office, the Los Angeles City Attorney's
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office, and on April 15th both my flat and the offices of the record company
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I own, Alternative Tentacles Records, were raided by the police - three
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officers from Los Angeles and six from San Francisco.
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Criminal charges were levelled against me, the by then ex-general manager
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of our record company, the distributor, the wholesaler in Los Angeles, and a
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67-year-old man who owns the record pressing plant that actually manufactured
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the posters and inserted the poster in the albums. The charges were
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announced to the press on June 2nd, the day before primary elections in
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California.
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I see this prosecution as a direct result of a nation-wide climate of
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hysteria created by an orchestrated power play by forces on the far right to
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set in motion a pattern of censorship that will allow them to censor anything
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they find 'objectionable'. There are already movements to purge 'The Wizard
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of Oz, 'The Catcher inthe Rye', and many other books out of the public
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schools, and remove or qualify the mention of Darwin's theory of evolution in
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school science text-books. The recent U.S. District Court ruling in Alabama
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striking down the use of any textbook that mention what the judge classified
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as "secular humanism" resulted from a lawsuit partly orchestrated by the
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judge himself and funded by TV evangelist Pat Robertson.
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Yet rock music, and particularly underground and independent rock music,
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has become one of the far-rights' most convenient targets. Ideally, what
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such groups are hoping to do is set in motion a domino effect, similar to
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what happened with 7-11 and other conveniance stores pulling Playboy and
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Penthouse off their shelves after that under-the-table threat letter from the
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Ed Meese Inquisition saying that these stores would be labeled 'peddlers of
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pornography' unless such magazines were removed. Lo and behold, less than a
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month later, the Wal-Mart drug store chain, with stores throughout the
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Midwest, South, and Southeastern seaboard pulled Rolling Stone, Creem, Tiger
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Beat and 30 other publications pertaining to rock music off their shelves on
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the grounds that they too were 'pornographic'. Who was it that threatened
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Wal-Mart by branding these magazines pornographic? Not Ed Meese, but TV
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evangelist JIMMY SWAGGERT! Since when has a religion-for-profit exhorter
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been allowed wield this much power?
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We have truly reached a low point in our history when self-appointed
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guardians such as Jerry Falwell and Pat Robertson are presented as valid
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spokesmen for the American mainstream. Thinking people are aware they
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represent nothing of the kind, yet at times it seems otherwise because the
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far-right is better organized and more widely exposed than at any time in the
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recent past. Their success so far in advancing their adgenda is at least
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partly due to the fact that people are characteristically silent in this
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country until something reaches their own raw nerve and threatens their
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personal comfort and cocoon. When a few loudmouths on the far right begin
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harping at grocery stores or at local school boards, and the majority fail to
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take notice and respond, the school board or retailer feels it has no choice
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but to give in to the high-pressure tactics, exaggerations, and outright lies
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employed by the far right.
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Enter the PMRC (Parents Music Resource Center), a pressure group formed
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by the wives of several Congressmen and a member of President Reagan's
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cabinet. Like so many far right groups, they masquerade their real goals
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behind the ruse of the 'concerned parent'. That time-honored cry of 'what
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about our children?' has always been an effective tool for getting attention.
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The PMRC operates as a secret society, complete with tax-exempt status.
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They claim they have no membership (only founders) and refuse to divulge
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their sources of financing. Their start-up money apparently came from a rock
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musician, Mike Love of the Beach Boys. Now their backers reportedly include
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noted arch-conservative fundraiser and Reagan kitchen-cabinet member Joseph
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Coors of the Coors brewing family.
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The co-founders of the PMRC are Susan Baker, wife of Treasury Secretary
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James A. Baker III, and Tipper Gore, wife of presidential aspirant Senator
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Albert Gore, Jr.(D-Tenn). Their avowed purpose is to force record companies
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to bypass the law and censor their own releases by slapping movie-style 'R'
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or 'X', or at the very least Parental Advisory warning labels on the album
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covers of artists they deem 'morally objectionable.' What is 'morally
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objectionable'? According to the PMRC's 'Rock Music Report', it is any song
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dealing with rebellion, substance abuse, sexual promiscuity, perversion,
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'violence-nihilism', or their definition of the occult. Ironically, they
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voice next to no objection to violent TV shows or opera and country-western
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music lyrics.
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Besides a rating system, they call for lyrics to be printed on album
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covers whether the artist deems it appropriate or not, and covers deemed
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'explicit' to be kept under the counter. More dangerously, they call for the
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're-assessment of contracts of performers' they claim 'engage in violent or
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explicit sexual behaviour' on stage. Their so-called 'media-watch' asks
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citizens and record companies to pressure broadcasters not to air
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'questionable' artists. Many chain shopping malls have already threatened to
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evict any record store that stocks any item carrying any kind of warning
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sticker whatsoever, including the 'Explicit Material Warning Advisory'
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warning label the PMRC proposes. This not only amounts to censorship, but a
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partial and all-too-ominous black-balling of the artist himself.
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The joke stopped being funny in the fall of 1985 when the PMRC wives
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arranged for the U.S. Senate Commerce Technology and Transportation Committee
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to hold public hearings on obscenity in rock, even though no legislation was
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actually being considered. Five of the wives' husbands were on that
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committee.
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The mainstream record industry has been all too silent about this power
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play towards censorship. Very few major artists, with the exception of Frank
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Zappa, have spoken out against this subject in interviews. Zappa has even
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wound up spending over $70,000 of his own money, and at least one year of his
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time, trying to raise the awareness of music enthusiasts to the growing
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threat of censorship and blackballing. Why isn't the industry backing him up?
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It appears members of the Recording Industry Association of America
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(RIAA) have agreed to censor their own artists by playing ball with the wives
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in hopes their husbands will ram a tax on blank recording tapes and/or
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cassette tape recorders through Congress. They claim this tax ($0.01 per
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minute of tape, $.90 on a 90-minute tape at the WHOLESALE price) will
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reimburse musicians who lose royalties when listeners tape their albums at
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home. This is complete fraud. In reality, 90% of this tax would go DIRECTLY
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TO THE RECORD COMPANIES, with only %10 to the artist, a $250 million
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windfall. Even the artists' %10 would be divided according to whoever sold
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the most units, thus ensuring the smaller artists would get nothing. This
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also means that if I were to buy a cassette tape and a recorder to tape, say,
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a classroom lecture or correspondence memos, I would wind up paying a royalty
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to Michael Jackson. I hardly think that's fair, yet this is why major record
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companies continue to cooperate with the censors.
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Ours is a test case. I have no doubt that if someone as popular as
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Madonna, Prince, or Ozzy Osbourne were charged as we are, the record
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companies would give them the best legal help money could buy. But
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Alternative Tentacles and I are a self-supported, self-managed independant
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artist and record company, and are therefore the easiest to destroy through
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bankruptcy. An official said on network television news that they picked us
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to prosecute because "We feel this is a COST-EFFECTIVE (our emphasis) way of
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sending a message that....we are going to prosecute."
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It is also curious that the record store responsible for the actual sale,
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an outlet of the giant Wherehouse chain, was not charged in this case, on the
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grounds that "they were cooperative and took the record off the shelves."
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This same prosecuting official also told the National Law Journal in the July
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28, 1986 issue: "We don't feel that the City Attorney's office is in charge
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of protecting [the daughter of the mother who complained] from this: We are
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responsible for seeing that the Dead Kennedys don't profit from the sale of
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this sort of merchandise[.]"
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The major reason we are fighting this charge instead of taking a slap on
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the wrist, paying a fine, and negotiating away the jail sentence is that a
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conviction would have ramifications far beyond this case. A legal precedent
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set by such a conviction could only open the floodgates nationwide for
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further charges and harassment against other artists, big and small. Not
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just underground artists, but also folk artists, as well as some of the
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journalists who are being kept out of the country by the INS would be
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affected. We hope that fighting this charge will help stop this lurch
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towards blackballing dead in its tracks.
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The rippling effect of a McCarthy-style chill factor has already taken
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its toll. Contrary to media predictions, there has been no dramatic rise in
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our record sales as a result of the publicity surrounding this case. In
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fact, many retailers have already removed our records from their shelves in
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fear of being dragged down to the nearest kangaroo court by the local
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gendarmes. They know too well how easy it is to go broke defending
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themselves, even if they win in court. People have written in from all over
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the country, saying they can no longer find Dead Kennedy records in their
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local stores, especially chain stores.
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Another alarming example of possible blackballing is the banishment of
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John Denver from RCA records. Until recently RCA was owned by General
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Electric, one of the world's largest arms manufacturers. John Denver, a
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veteran and very successful RCA recording artist, included a song attacking
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the arms race on his last LP. After his album was released Denver testified
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against the censorship warning sticker proposal at the Senate hearings. Soon
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afterwards, RCA dropped John Denver - someone who has sold tens, if not
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hundreds of millions of records for them. Sure, Denver's sales have been
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declining, but would RCA have dropped Frank Sinatra or Elvis Presley?
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Turning now to the poster itself, when I first saw H.R. Giger's work, I
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was very impressed, emotionally affected, and even uplifted by it. The art
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that truly inspires me is the kind that jolts the dormant sediment in my
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brain and gets thoughts spinning and whirling so ideas pop into my head, and
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I am then inspired to create on my own. I had not seen any visual art that
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had affected me this deeply since viewing the work of Hieronymus Bosch.
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'Landscape No.XX', in particular made me think, "My god, here it is, this is
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how we treat each other every day in a consumer-orientated society,
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intentionally or as a self-defense mechanism This is consumer culture on
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parade!" This painting portrayed to me a vortex of exploitation, that
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vicious circle of greed where one of us will exploit another for gain and
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wind up looking over our shoulder lest someone do the same thing to us in
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return. I realized that many of these same themes ran like a thread through
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the songs slated to be on the 'Frankenchrist' album, which we were in the
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process of recording at the time. I felt that we should include this piece
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of artwork as a kind of crowning statement of what the record was tryng to
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say, musically, lyrically and visually. The Constitution implies that it is
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up to the individual to make that decision, not the State or self-appointed
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surrogate parents in Washington, DC to make it for them.
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We do not feel the mother who complained about the poster had a valid
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complaint. Nothing we have ever included on one of our records or in an
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album cover was intended to be harmful to anyone. But even if she thought it
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was harmful it is the height of irresponsibility by a parent to be so lazy as
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to expect the police to do one's parenting for them. If my kid brought home
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home something that I thought was harmful, the last thing I would do would be
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to call the police and try to have the artist arrested.
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But let me mention first what I would consider harmful. If my kid
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brought home something like 'Top Gun' on videotape, or one of those blatantly
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nationalistic, racist, or sexist heavy metal albums that promote beating or
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sexual assault of women, or some whisky-drenched country-western song where
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the guy brags about beating or shooting his wife, or a Rambo-type toy - yes,
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that would rub my fur the wrong way. What, after all, encourages kids more
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kids to go out and get killed, Ozzy Osbourne records or armed forces'
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recruiting ads? I do not feel, however, that any of the above should be
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censored. That's not what the Constitution says. I would rather reply to
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and expose stupidity in media through my own artwork, and make it an issue
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that way.
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Nor would I abdicate my parental responsibility and chicken out and call
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the cops. I wouldn't even confiscate the offending article, because that
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would not teach the kid that the article could be harmful or misconstrued.
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Such an action on my part would only serve to reinforce the notion that daddy
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is a fascist, or that daddy is mean, or worse yet an uptight jerk who just
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doesn't understand.
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What I WOULD do is sit down with the kid and say "Look, you went out and
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brought home this item. Why? Why did you buy this? Why do you like it?
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What do you see in this? How does it affect you? How do you think it might
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affect someone else? And now let me tell you what I think of it and how it
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affects me." A meaningful discussion is a far healthier way to help nurture
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a loving family than is discipline with no rational explanation to back it
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up. Such a breakdown in communication might also encourage the kid to simply
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sneak the offending artical home and hide it.
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More generally, Dead Kennedys have always used their art as political
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speech. One element of the band has always been journalism. Through our
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songs we have exposed issues around us that our audience might not ever even
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have heard of otherwise, since many people their age who listen to records
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were brought up on television and hardly ever read books and newspapers.
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If we are successful in defending ourselves on this charge, we hope a
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dismissal will help slam the door on prosecutions of rock musicians for what
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they say with their records, and artists and journalists for what they say
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with their work. And perhaps ultimately we would be able to send a message
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to public officials who think they need to hop on the censorship bandwagon in
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order to avoid attacks from wealthy far right wing fringe groups or attract
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funding from the same right wing political action committees, by saying that
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perhaps this is not such a lucrative issue after all since it makes the
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person doing the harrassing out to be the pompous jerk he or she really is.
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Censorship is like that certain brand of potato chips. Nobody can stop
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with just one. Well-organized and financed pressure from the far right has
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already dealt a serious blow to what we see, read, hear - and ultimately
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think. People once viewed as dangerous right-wing extremists have succeeded
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in casting themselves as spokespeople of the American mainstream. In their
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world music and literature can be judged harmful, yet Star Wars is considered
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perfectly safe. And genocide squads like the Nicaraguan contras are "the
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moral equivalent of our founding fathers."
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Libraries and textbooks are under new attacks in schools. Many gifted
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artists now face possible blackballing. Urinalysis and lie detector tests at
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work are actively being promoted by the Reagan Administration under the
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continuing guise of a drug scare. Attorney General Edwin Meese has used a
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wildly-contrived "study" of "pornography" as the first step in a crusade to
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widen the crackdown on free speech. His commission threatens magazine
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retailers through extra-legal manuevers such as threat letters, while he
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strives to pack the federal court system with avowed enemies of
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Constitutional liberties.
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A fresh PMRC media blitz again has them in the news, with new censorship
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via warning label proposals. Their tone is more concilitory now, with their
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more volatile edges temporarily masked. They compare the rock music they
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deem "objectionable" to the violence on television many of the rest of us
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have problems with, yet they still concentrate their attack on one form of
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music - rock - and barely address the issue of television at all. What about
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all the families bombrded every night by the violence seen on the six o'clock
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news?
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History has shown us that any compromise with cultural vigilantes just
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encourages more of them to go further. The hysteria sparked by the PMRC
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husbands' Senate hearings is what gave Jimmy Swaggart's views front page
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respectibility in the first place.
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The rationale behind freedom of speech has always been that truth emerges
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out of open debate. Democracy assumes a variety of voices, each trying to
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persuade the other. Dissent is healthy, even when presented in a a manner
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which may seem abhorrent or obscene to those who fear direct confrontation
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with the reality that surrounds us. Only an informed population can make
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responsible choices.
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-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
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For more information on this case, please address all correspondence or
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contributions to:
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No More Censorship Defense Fund
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P.O. Box 11458
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San Francisco, CA. 94101
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