Stopping Indecency on the
Airwaves
By Maurine Proctor
If you don't want to hear the "f-word"
and the "s-word" when you or your children flip on the
TV, then please contact your U.S. Senator! The Protecting
Children from Indecent Programming Act (S.1780) has unanimously
passed the Senate Commerce Committee and is on its way to the
Senate Floor.
The Protecting Children from
Indecent Programming Act, S. 1780, is critical to restoring
the Broadcast Decency Bill passed in Congress in 2006. This law
was gutted last month when two New York judges in the U.S. 2nd
Court of Appeals ruled that so-called "fleeting profanity"
should be allowed on the public airwaves.
Here's the background on the court
case. As part of its March 15, 2006 Omnibus Indecency Order, the
FCC had determined that the 2002 and 2003 Billboard Music Awards
broadcasts were indecent because Cher and Nicole Richie each dropped
the "f-bombs" on the viewing audience. The judges said
to the FCC, no, that's not indecent. If parents don't like it,
there are existing blocking technologies.
The court ruling in June 2007 has paved the
way for profane language-including the s and f-words to be aired
at times when tens of millions of children are most likely to
be in the television audience and turns its back on 80 years of
jurisprudence on the proper use of the public airwaves.
Because the court did not address the constitutionality of broadcast
decency law, merely the FCC's interpretation of it, Congress must
act yet again to protect children by clarifying that single instances
of indecent language and images are actionable under existing
broadcast decency law.
It is imperative that the Protecting Children from Indecent Programming
Act pass to protect America's children and sense of decency!
Take Action:
Contact Your Senator Today
Click
here to see a list of which senators are on the Senate Commerce,
Science and Transportation Committee. If your senator is one of
them, click on the senator's name for his or her contact information
to express appreciation for supporting the Protecting
Children from Indecent Programming Act (S. 1780).
Click
here to contact your senators to urge him or her to VOTE
YES on the Protecting Children from Indecent Programming Act
(S. 1780).