WizOp Wes Meier <76703.747@compuserve.com> asks: > Perhaps it isn't an exact parallel, but wouldn't you do something > similar to avoid Babylon 5 becoming rated "R"? As an example, in > your role as sole producer/creator of Babylon 5, would you > tolerate the viewers of your program voicing their opinions of > its direction while you were producing it?
||Pictures or text exposing extreme cruelty, physical or emotional acts against any animal or person which are primarily intended to hurt or inflict pain. Obscene words, phrases, and profanity defined as text that uses, but not limited to, George Carlin's 7 censored words more often than once every 50 messages (newsgroups) or once a page (web sites).||
Well, then you have an immediate probelm here, Wes. The deletion in question seemed to occur after only ONE appearance. The rule stipulates "more often than once every 50 messsages." If you are strictly adhering to this rule, then it stands to reason that you have the statistics to back it up. Otherwise how can you enforce it?
So it is incumbent upon you to demonstrate that the use of one word occured more than once in every 50 messsages. Please show me the stats you used to verify this position. Otherwise it is random, capricious, and in direct violation of the rules you say you are following. Because by inference, removing messages that contain words such as the one you note LESS than every 50 messages is a VIOLATION of CIS rules...and since only you have the access to the full stats on this system, it is now incumbent upon you to demonstrate whether or not you are in adherence to, or violation of, CIS rules.
"As you can see, Joe, we really have NO CHOICE but to adhere to the "Carlin's 7" list of forbidden words (and "but not limited to")."
Except, of course, that Carlin's list of Words You Can't Say On Television is no longer applicable, because many of the words he said you couldn't say back in the 1960s and 70s *can* be said NOW on TV. So the rule itself is irrelevant. Even Carlin himself has said so...I was watching one of his HBO specials yesterday, and he his own self noted that the list was no longer accurate, and he had to revise it upward to include new and more interesting words (which he enumerated at great length).
Since CIS seems to be looking to a comedian to define its rules on language -- odd since I can't ever remember a Supreme Court decision favoring the Comedian Rule in examining issues of censorship -- then if Carlin himself has stated that the rule no longer applies, then why does CIS not recognize this? If Carlin's word was good enough to make the rule, why is it not good enough to UNmake the rule?
Additionally, the argument falls apart on the basic principles of language itself. The word Carlin offered, another word for urine, is not the same word as "pissed. The latter refers to anger, and has nothing whatsoever to do with bodily fluids of any form. It's spelled the same, but IT'S NOT THE SAME WORD, WES. It's like *heat* and *heat*. They're both spelled the same, but one is a unit of temperature, and the other is a term used in racing for a match between several cars. So you're in the unlikely position of deleting a message for using a word that LOOKS like a word you supposedly can't say, but ISN'T the same word, wasn't intended as the same word, and doesn't mean the same thing within context.
From a simple, grammatical perspective, it isn't ON Carlin's (now defunct) list because it isn't one of those words.
"You don't like it. We don't like it. Perhaps it isn't an exact parallel, but wouldn't you do something similar to avoid Babylon 5 becoming rated "R"?"
I used language that I knew would get us a more restrictive TV rating just two weeks ago. Also, there is no R rating in TV. The highest you can go is TV-M. Which was the category under which Schindler's List was just broadcast...which received praise from members of Congress (all but one), and was upheld by every conceivable standard even though it featured full frontal nudity. If I felt it had sufficient merit, I'd be willing to go for a TV-M. If it's good enough for Spielberg and Congress, sure, it's good enough for me.
"Members of these forums are welcome to ask about our policies and, even, to question them. However, such messages are considered to be between the sender and the senior staff of this forum and are not subject to open debate."
So in other words, the discussions people would need to determine what they should and should not say are closed off from the people so that they cannot see those discussions and thus cannot know when they offend, or why, or what recourse they may have. "not subject to open debate" is another way of saying "not subject to open *dissemination*." Sure, you can't do an offensive thing if everybody knows about it...so you make sure the discussions of it all take place in utter privacy.
Every user here is DIRECTLY AND PERSONALLY affected by CIS's policies on language and message content. So how, then, can discussions of these policies be excluded from the users? Logically, you *want* users here to know what the rules are, so that they understand them, and thus you don't have to enforce policies that seem arbitrary and blindside people. Therefore the logic of "not subject to open debate" falls apart on the face of it; the line stems from the corporate arrogance that says, "We cannot be questioned, and we will not be held accountable. Only YOU can be held accountable."
"As an example, in your role as sole producer/creator of Babylon 5, would you tolerate the viewers of your program voicing their opinions of its direction while you were producing it? Such would be distracting to the cast and crew and would be something best held in privacy between those concerned and yourself."
Well, in point of fact, every day I'm online, I hear from the thousands of people online who express their opinions of the direction of B5 while we're making it. That's kinda why I'm HERE.
Secondarily, the purpose of message boards is DISCUSSION. The purpose of a TV studio is to make a show. Two different creatures. Which puts you in the position of, "The message boards are for the purpose of users expressing their opinions EXCEPT when the messages are ABOUT expressing their opinions, in which case they cannot express their opinions."
Every argument you have presented is either fallacious, unprovable, involve mass exercises in paralogia, or come down to the basic bottom line, "Because I *said* so, that's why!"
It doesn't hold up, Wes.
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