Russia Bans Profanity — Why Don’t We?
Bryan Fischer
Vladimir Putin
is making news again, this time by banning foul language in Russia. According
to CNN, he signed off this week on a new law that “bans swearing at arts,
cultural and entertainment events” in the country. In the Kremlin’s words, the
new measure “bans the use of obscene language.” While Putin is wrong on
Ukraine, he’s right on profanity.
You make a film
with obscene language in Russia, you won’t even be able to show it in a
theater. Books, CDs and DVDs that contain profanity will have to be distributed
in a sealed package with a visible warning label.
Violators are
subject to fine of $70, while potty-mouthed officials can be dinged to the tune
of $40 and businesses that are guilty can face fines of up to $1400.
The new law,
scheduled to go into effect on July 1, echoes the prohibition against blasphemy
found in the Ten Commandments (“You shall not take the name of the Lord your
God in vain”) and will provide another example in which Russia’s public policy
conforms more closely to biblical standards than Christian America.
Could a similar
ban be instituted in the United States without violating the First Amendment?
Of course. The free speech plank of the First Amendment was intended by the
Founders to protect political speech, not profanity, vulgarity, obscenity or
pornography.
The Founders
were eager to ensure that the new republic would be characterized by robust
political dialogue on all matters of public policy. All would be free to inject
their ideas and convictions into public debate without fear that they would be
censored and silenced by a draconian central government.
But the Founders
would be aghast at the thought that anyone, anywhere, at any time would think
they were crafting a document intended to allow the unlimited use of the F-bomb
in polite society. If states want to ban foul language in public, under the
Constitution as written (not as mangled by the courts) they are perfectly free
to do so.
George
Washington was known for prohibiting the use of profanity in his military. Said
our first commander-in-chief and father of our country, “The foolish and wicked
practice of profane cursing and swearing is a vice so mean and low that every
person of sense and character detests and despises it.”
As General
George Washington, he issued the following general order (not a recommendation,
you will note):
The General is
sorry to be informed that the foolish and wicked practice of profane cursing
and swearing, a vice hitherto little known in our American Army is growing into
fashion. He hopes that the officers will, by example as well as influence,
endeavor to check it and that both they and the men will reflect that we can little hope of the blessing of
Heaven on our army if we insult it by our impiety and folly. Added to this
it is a vice so mean and low without any temptation that every man of sense and
character detests and despises it. (Emphasis mine.)
At the time the
First Amendment was enacted, there were laws against public profanity and
blasphemy in every one of the original states, either by statute or common law.
The Founders quite obviously saw no contradiction between the First Amendment
and laws against profanity, for the simple reason that the Amendment was about
protecting political speech, not gutter talk.
Massachusetts
still has a law on its books – you
could look it up – that prohibits blasphemy against God, Jesus Christ, the
Holy Spirit and the Scriptures.
It reads:
Section 36.
Whoever wilfully blasphemes the holy name of God by denying, cursing or
contumeliously reproaching God, his creation, government or final judging of
the world, or by cursing or contumeliously reproaching Jesus Christ or the Holy
Ghost, or by cursing or contumeliously reproaching or exposing to contempt and
ridicule, the holy word of God contained in the holy scriptures shall be
punished by imprisonment in jail for not more than one year or by a fine of not
more than three hundred dollars, and may also be bound to good behavior.
To give another
example, Pennsylvania’s law against profanity was drawn up by James Wilson, a
signer of the Constitution and one of the original justices of the Supreme
Court.
And in 1811,
while the ink was barely dry on the First Amendment, the New York Supreme Court
upheld the conviction of a man who had publicly proclaimed that “Jesus Christ
was a bastard, and his mother must be a whore.”
Such laws were
rarely enforced because they were rarely needed. But they were there because
there are occasions in which public eruptions of vulgarity need to be
restrained for the public good.
There are de
facto prohibitions against swearing that governments enforce all the time.
Profanity is will be punished in the classrooms of our government schools, for
instance, and decorum does not allow profanity in legislative assemblies
without severe repercussions. Try cussing out a cop and see what happens.
Few would doubt
that a profanity-free culture would be better than the one we have now. As
AFA’s president Tim Wildmon has pointed out, nobody walks out of a movie
saying, “You know, that movie would have been so much better if they’d only
thrown more cussing in there.”
The point here
is not to advocate for any particular expression of this principle. The point
here is that if want to ban profanity, we can. In the name of free speech, let
the discussion begin.
Recommended Reading:
No comments :
Post a Comment