Wednesday, September 18, 19.85 Daily Nebraskan Page 5 ITT ' JTJ 1 ius oom .t .Know now to oiusn anymore ere is a question that might cause you to blush: What causes you to blush? When considering the campaign against- ,fporn rock" vulgar and obscene lyrics in rock music con sider 'that -question, and this one: Would you want to live in a world in which no one, hot even the ' young, blushed? ' jQW George 1-V1 Will Various parents' groups are putting wholesome pressure on recording companies, radio stations and the makers of rock videos to exercise dis cretion and self-restraint. Approximately one-third of the nation's radio stations have rock formats, and many are behav ing responsibly. But the sort of people who profit from aggressively marketing porn rock have the morals of the mar ketplace, and the marketplace is the place to get their attention. In addi tion, putting labels on records with vulgar lyrics is going to help parents exercise supervision. Rock music has become a plague of messages about sexual promiscuity, bisexuality, incest, sado-masochism, satanism, drug use, alcohol abuse and, constantly, misogyny. The lyrics regard ing these things are celebratory, encouraging or at least desensitizing. By making these subjects the common TT 11 Many reasons fail as justifications for violence ROGERS from Page 4 This rule is no different for the state than for the individual. Morally, the state is little more than a congregation of individuals. However, this claim does not deny that congregations act differently than individuals and, thus, are justly permitted to act differently. Consequently, civil government must obey constraints upon just action sim ilar to those upon the individual or small institutions. Emory law professor Roger Pilon dis tinguished between reasons and war rants for actions as they affect civil policy: "(T)o have a reason for want ing to control someone or something is .. not the same as having a warrant or justification for doing so ... . A gunman surely has reasons for taking his victim's wallet, but no justification for doing so. "But to have a justification for doing something, especially when others are affected by that action, is ordinarily to have more than a mere reason for doing it. It is to have a warrant or a right to undertake the action. And this warrant or right is not simply an evaluative but a normative notion, rooted not in con notation alone but in the faculty of reason and hence in the theory of justification." The moral basis of conservatism does not lie in some simplistic vision of static governmental size for where justified, the conservative's viewpoint leads to the embracing of a more than minimal state. However, rightful state action is justly employed only in response to threats. In contrast the liberal employs the intrinsic violence of the state for any one of a veritable plethora of mere reasons from mat A . MEL7 tisit t isn Lsttcrrasa's Club currency of popular entertainment, the lyrics drain the subjects of their power to shock their power to make people blush. The concern is less that children .will emulate the frenzied behavior des cribed in porn rock than that they will succumb to the lassitude of the demor alized literally, the' de-moralized. As people become older they become ' less given to blushing. This is, in part, because they lose that sweet softness of youthful character, that is called innocence and makes one's sensibili- ties subject to shock. People blush for various reasons. Sometimes it is because we suddenly have embarrassing atten tion called to ourselves. Sometimes we blush when utterly alone, when we think of something about ourselves that is shaming such as the fact that almost nothing causes us to blush. Often people blush because they are exposed to something that should be private or is shameful. This may be an endangered species of blushing, thanks to omnipresent vulgarities like porn rock making even the vilest things .somehow banal. Walter Berns, the political philo . sopher, asks: What if, contrary to Freud and such conventional wisdom, shame is natural to man and shamelessness is acquired? If so, the acquisition of shamelessness through the shedding of "hang ups" is an important political event. There is a connection between self-restraint and shame. An individual incapable of shame and embarrassment is probably incapable of the gover nance of the self. A public incapable of shame and embarrassment about pub- , lie vulgarity is unsuited to self-govern ters of taste to the supposed civil claims of altruism (although it can be readily doubted that any altruism exists when violence is employed to prod the activity of "charity"). The liberal state is the dehumaniz ing state: Human beings are treated as resources to be used for some greater human good. This vision of humanity stands in sharp contrast to the conser vative vision, which holds that unless the individual engages in criminal vio lence, society is not justified in aggres sing against him for any reason. Only upon this conservative vision can a truly just and human culture be reconstructed. The alienation and de humanization of "modern" and secular Western states are a cruel joke played upon the human spirit by minds con vinced of their own brilliance, minds which that culture cannot progress without their "enlightened" meddling. Editorial policy Unsigned editorials represent offi cial policy of the fall 1985 Daily Ne braskan. Policy is set by the Daily Nebraskan Editorial Board. Its members are Vicki Ruhga, editor in chief; Jona than Taylor, editorial page editor; Ad Hudler, news editor, Suzanne Teten, campus editor and Lauri Hopple, copy desk chief. Editorials do not necessarily reflect the views of the university, its em ployees, the students or the NU Board of Regents. The Daily Nebraskan's publishers are the regents, who established the UNL Publications Board to supervise the daily production of the paper. if yr:r H, U ment. There is an upward ratchet effect in the coarsening of populations. Today's 12-year-olds can not enjoy can hardly sit still for the kind of 1950s West erns that enthralled their fathers. Today's 12-year-olds are so addicted (that is not too strong a word) to the slam-bang nonstop roar of Steven Spieiberg movies, their attention is not held by, say, John Wayne in "She Wore a Yellow Ribbon." The social atmosphere is heavily dosed with sexuality, from the selling of blue jeans to the entertaining of prime-time television audiences. Thus it is perhaps reasonable to have feel ings of fatalism. Perhaps societies, like rivers, run naturally downhill. Perhaps the coarsening of a public is irreversible, especially when the coarsening con cerns a powerful and pleasurable appe tite such as sex. But is is demonstrably not true that societies can not move away from coarseness toward delicacy of feeling. In the first half of he 18th century, the dawn of the Age of Reason, a form of English merriment on Guy Fawkes nights was to burn an effigy of the Pope. The belly of the effigy was filled with cats whose howls of agony in the flames were supposed to represent the voice of the devil emanating from the Catholic Church. a 1 ' r i . C 4-4 is 1 ' A-i yj I A K"m L J E5 iffflil 3E ' Ml! f S ( ENTIRE STOCK I Ax Q f C-J SqZ il (' iCcntcysfCTp Shtios is having ' 6 T'jl Lyjl thslr fifth birthday "se!o ; A) . f'J fjobig cn new! IT; j a : i . : - J i'U vl J NUN L$ lJv 1 j: j I vi. TTl 1 TT 1 rl T rv That kind of cr nelty to animals is, by today's standards, obscene. Sensibili ties can change for the better. So fatal ism is wrong and the porn rock fight is worth fighting. Mass culture, and especially music, matters. Nothing is more striking to a young parent than the pull of popular culture on even 3- and 4-year-olds. And perhaps good music can make good values more adhesive to children. People can reasonably argue about what is the second finest work of music a Mozart concerto, a Beethoven Ready for a Try ours ..... they're NEW! Regular flavors: Vanilla Chocolate Strawberry fcs - -j&y Only at Belmont Location VV ' 1 11th & CORNHUSKER yj symphony, this or that Bach tune. But everyone knows that the acme of the art of music is the currently popular song that says, "Put me in coach, I'm ready to play. . . . Look at me, I can be centerfield." The Republic has a fight ing chance as long as the popularity of porn rock can be rivaled by the popu larity of its moral opposite, baseball rock. 1985, Waslngton Post Writers Group Will is a Pulitzer Prize-winning columnist and contributing editor for Newsweek magazine great shake? Gourmet flavors: Butterfinger Oreo Cookie Chocolate Chip Mystic Mint Cookie Crushed Pinneapple Maraschino Cherry