Thanks for the contact effort John P.
I don't know if you are aware of the following, but I know that it is likely foreign to some of us, so I'll put it out.
The airwaves are considered an area of privledge, an entity owned and doled out by the government. They are subject to rulings about the public interests and "protecting" people. Like driving is a privilege, because of need for order and safety, even though it could be seen as restricting free movement. That's how people got fined when Jackson flashed her nipple at the Super Bowl. Certain obscenities, which are not.
This is wrong and it does curb free speech and expression, but then again, judges have been ruling with the excuse of public interest, prurient interest, going back at least more than a century. Personally, I'd call it unconstitutional. There is movement to do such to the internet, as it it is seen as subject to those wrong principles. There is fear of reprisal, or government stepping in and providing restrictions, IF we don't police ourselves. There is much controversy with the FCC wanting to allow private entities to police the internet, and private entities would use that for profit, as well as dictating (unelected) free speech to us all.
When I grew up, there was a Supreme Court that held the 1st Amendment principle absolutely. Censorship still happened and still does, but didn't at the Supreme Court level. One day, the court ruled that yelling fire in a theater was not upheld by the constitution and it has been downhill, slow but sure, methodical, every since, during my lifetime.
The current court, a group with politicians in robes, tend to interpret the constitution with less absolutism and agree with excuses to wear away the absolute God Given Rights. They see things as what THEY interpret the founding fathers were getting at. There is controversy between the right-wing, who declare that courts are making up laws/legislating with their interpretations, while they appoint people who do just that. Then the other more left side of the coin that declares the same. Personally, I was happy with the Warren Court of my youth, absolute, simple, knew where we stood, principles, others may differ. But these factors don't make for free speech, Supreme Court or no. It takes years and lots of money to get a case there, and when it doesn't always make it the actual working law of the land in practice, when a case is won. My case cost around $500,000 bucks to get there, $350,000 just to get to the next lower court.
So, I for one, don't believe that we are protected. We can be sued in a civil, not criminal court. We can be pulled off of the street, abused and beaten and/or imprisoned for expressing that non-sexual nudity is not obscene. This is why we must be proactive to educate, and get the body freedom message out there, world wide.
Just take your kids nude pics to Walgreens anymore. There is another example. When Child Protective Services are involved, or the wrong judge is on the bench and there are children around, there is not effective Constitutional protection.
Still, we don't know what John's motives were. Let's hope for the best outcome.
Hiking Colorado! Trip Report! Call for trip report! I know that you're having fun, ya gotta share some of it, that's the unwritten rule...
...or maybe written?
We're getting out of the heat and doing some car camping, some retreat work on ourselves and backpacking all of next week. We'll be in the Arizona White Mountains at around 9000 ft.
Jbee