moriarty@fluke.UUCP (Jeff Meyer) (01/07/86)
One of the most unpleasant of all post-Christmas tasks has to be coming back from vacation and re-discovering how nasty people can get over an emotional discussion. I was going to leave the issue alone, like a decaying roadkill carcass, when I remembered an article I read this month that had some impact on this issue. It's from the popular radio (NPR), TV (Nightline), and literary "social critic", Ian ("I gotta go") Shoales (aka Merle Kessler and the Duck's Breath Mystery Theatre). It's on censorship, and while it doesn't completely fit the current flame-out on Ellison, CBS and Twilight going on, I thought it provided a capper and/or summary of my feeling on the whole issue of censorship, written much better than I ever could (yes, I know, that's not much of a feat). Any flames will be cheerfully dumped on the compost heap. Reprinted without permission from _I_Gotta_Go_ by Ian Shoales; I suggest you read at a breakneck speed, it sounds more like Ian: According to the self-appointed watchdogs of our culture, _Huckleberry_Finn_ is too racist for the young to read, _The_Color_Purple too violent. Kids today can't have prayer in schools, fairy tales, evolution or breakdancing at the mall. Even Disney cartoons are under attack. [...] I know that the price of freedom is eternal vigilance, but can't the vigilantes take a break once in a while? Right-wingers like to brag that this is the greatest country on earth, yet they think their own children are potential psychopaths who need only the spark of bad pop culture to set them on a rampage. Vigilantes on the left, on the other hand, worry about books and movies creating a "climate of violence," "desensitizing" our children. This concern for the sensitivity of the young is touching, but don't the critics realize that the very elements they object to are the same elements kids think are the "cool parts"? What's at stake here, you see, is America's moral fiber. Moral fiber is a mysterious substance strong enough to make America great, but flimsy enough to unravel at the merest hint of undue excitement. Critics think that American youth is a fragile boat rocking in a pitiless sea of immorality. One little tip and kids will either drown in a sea of evil or grow up to be hit men. All of this leads me to hate parents -- not mine, of course, but the principle of the thing. Parents are OK when they stay at home, but when they start messing with what America can do or see, they're trouble and a discipline problem to boot. I've got nothing against burning books -- I've burned the best by Norman Mailer and Joan Didion myself; it keeps me warm on a cold night and makes me think my opinion has an impact; but I've got my own fireplace and my own matches. Don't keep books and movies out of my grasp just because you're afraid they'll give your precious one nightmares. And what do we want books and movies to be about anyway? Puppy dogs and kitty cats? Smurfs and bunny rabbits? Sure, pop culture gives us inane fantasies based on our deepest fears and desires, but remember, bitterness, lust and greed are the stuff of art as well as dreck. Go ahead and number and code the culture, and you'll get exactly what you want: a culture as sensative and moral as all get out, smarmy bestsellers and bland blockbusters with no cool parts at all. I gotta go. 'Nuff said. I gotta go, too... "If you tell the truth, you must smile. Otherwise, people will kill you." Moriarty, aka Jeff Meyer ARPA: fluke!moriarty@uw-beaver.ARPA UUCP: {uw-beaver, sun, allegra, sb6, lbl-csam}!fluke!moriarty <*> DISCLAIMER: Do what you want with me, but leave my employers alone! <*>