Arbre said:
Huh, that's a problem of context, or perspective.
By definition, yes, nonbelievers are exempt because they don't believe, because the Hell claim is just a subcase of the whole religious rumour issue.
For those who do believe in the texts, those willfully ignorant ones will go down into the Pit of Fire.
You can't people to agree, because the standards are different.
But I side with nonbelievers, for the simple reason that any shmuck on Earth can craft an hypothesis, then say it's correct, and therefore claim that there's a Hell and whatever, and that if you don't buy in said theory you go down the flush pipe. HA. HA. HA.
The mere difference being that you have 2000 years of "history" to *cough* back it up.
I get the overwhelming impression that we agree, but that we're talking about different things. Understand that my whole point presupposes that Hell does, in fact, exist, and that non-believers will be sent there when they die to be tortured. Now, given that we here on Earth have absolutely no methods to prove or disprove this, we have no basis for gauging whether the Perry's and Hagee's of the world are correct, or not. Thus, we end up with a lot of people that believe, and a lot of people that don't believe. They each have their reasons, and neither has any particular incentive to believe otherwise (because, as stated, the 'threat' of Hell is rather ineffective against those that don't believe in it.)
In the end, given the original condition that Hell does exist, and non-believers are sent there, the non-believers disbelief does nothing to protect them from it. This is a semantic point, and largely irrelevant, but I just wanted to point out how silly it is to say "I'm not going to Hell, because I don't believe in it". Kind of like saying "If I step out of a plane with no form of equipment, just me and my birthday suit, I will not fall because I do not believe in gravity." The latter we can verify scientifically, and thus it sounds much sillier, but the former is equally, if not more, silly, because it cannot be verified.
The_root_of_all_evil said:
Ok, let's take the Sims 2.
A) the average person, applying contemporary community standards, would find that taken as a whole appeals to the prurient interest in sex; (Now I think that's a tick) especially as homosexual parents can have children.
B) patently offensive representations or descriptions of ultimate sexual acts, normal or perverted, actual or simulated, including sexual intercourse, sodomy, and sexual bestiality;
(More difficult, but I'm sure good old JT could describe them as offensive giving the panning Mass Effect got)
C) It's a game; Therefore we lose.
Now, off the top of my head, I could apply this to any game that depicts sexual acts between adults, because unless your defining "obscence" or "average" then JT et. al. will have a reasonably solid case, for once.
Load up Mortal Kombat by De-Rez or Tomb Raider by Yahtzee; and see if you can't provide a solid reason for them to be withheld due to that law.
I remain at a loss for your point. Are you arguing that standard US boilerplate obscenity laws don't make sense? That they are largely arbitrary and arguable? Ummm, yes. Point of fact.
They were made that way on purpose, so as to evolve with the changing standards of the community. This is why they're typically handled in courts, where judges either come up with new tests, or make "judgment calls" on whether a particular item fails or passes the existing tests. If an individual community wants to declare Sims 2 as obscene, they are allowed to do so, and Sims 2 will not be allowed display in public. If the state of Texas wants to declare Sims 2 obscene and deny the developers subsidies to make it there, they get to do that. I'm fairly certain that JT et. al. HAVE spent a great deal of time trying to get obscenity laws applied to various videogames (without too much success).
Why you bring up De-Rez or Zero Punctuation, I'm unsure, because they don't qualify as "digital interactive media production"s, and thus would not fall under the scope of the clause in this particular law. Would you be subject to obscenity laws in most US communities if you chose to blow up ZP on the side of your house, and show it to the kiddies in the neighborhood? Highly likely.
What's new about this?? Again, let me be clear: if you want to argue about the basis of US obscenity law, [a href=http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Miller_test]the Miller test[/a], fine and dandy, but there's no point in mixing that argument up with the Texas subsidy law/Gov. Rick Perry and his heathen views. And if you do want to debate the Miller Test, I really recommend a new forum thread, because it has approximately nil to do with this one.