Defenders, foes of pom square off ruitTN irom page 1 The links will fill up the page. Click on one of the links, and they lead to hundreds more. And hundreds more after that. Into the billions. Just pick one. It won’t take long. Pornography loads fast on the Internet. Remember - instant gratification. It’ll be there. A man, a woman, usually oppose legislation to regulate it. “Some see porn as nudity. What about if it’s nude artwork from hun dreds of years ago? You tell me. You simply can’t define what pornography is.” Tom Osborne says he can. And so begins his side - along with many maybe both, eroti cally intertwined for the viewer’s enter tainment. Maybe there’s two men. Maybe'two women. -Maybe a group. Maybe animals. Maybe all of them, qjl together. And it isn’t sick to everyone. It couldn’t possibly be. If it were, the indus try of sex - the videos, the prosti 66 You simply can’t define what pornography is.” Matt LeMieux Nebraska ACLU UII1C1 WIIU I1CIVC stood with him - as to why pornogra phy ought to be curt>ed. The prurient issues The billboards have been taken down now. But there was a time, about four years ago, when people across \T_I_1. „ 1 J tutes, the Internet sites, the strip clubs, the diamond ring a man buys his mis tress - wouldn’t have the same worth in dollars as the number of people it enraptures: billions. Pornography has its detractors out in force, too, actively campaigning against the evils of hard-core sex and the bad influence they say pom has. On the flip side of the coin, pornography has its staunch defend ers, the strongest ones preaching First .\mendment rights - the right to free dom of speech, and in porn’s case, freedom of expression of a very sexual nature. It’s a debate that has raged well before Hugh Hefner ever introduced Marilyn Monroe to world with the first Playboy in December 1953. So look at the picture on the com puter screen. So is it? Is it pornogra phy? Isn’t seeing knowing? Isn’t it? “I’ve heard so many people say Til know pornography when I see it,”’ said Matt LeMieux of the Nebraska chapter of the American Civil Liberties Union. “And that’s the prob lem . You can’t define it. “And I don’t see the government changing how we look at pornography without sweeping into the First Amendment,” he said. “That’s why we nvuiaoiva tuuiu spend their morning drive time staring up at the man GQ Magazine once called God - Tom Osborne, the former NU head football coach who was in the process of leading the Comhuskers to their first national title since 1971 72. He sat on a chair, holding a chil dren’s book surrounded by elementary school-age Nebraskans. Him smiling, them grinning, a message appeared at the bottom of the billboard in harsh looking letters: “Real Men Don’t Use Pom.” It was Osborne’s most public foray into the pornography debate. And although he’s still strongly against what he calls “the ills of prurient inter ests,” it was his last truly public denun ciation of pom. “(The billboards) weren't my idea,” Osborne said. “There were some people who just said, ‘Would you be willing to put your face on there?’ “I’m really not a billboard person. I’m not comfortable with billboards. I don’t like that. But it was a important project,” he continued. “So even though I wasn’t personally happy with it in terms of the publicity, I though it was worth the price.” Osborne has since severed ties with the organization that arranged the billboard. But he’s still committed to the anti-pornography movement. He will expound upon it in the many speeches he makes, or if approached, he will espouse his phi losophy. Osborne said his biggest problems lie with magazines like Hustler, “X-rated stuff” and even movies on cable TV “It’s garbage in, garbage out,” Osborne said. “If you, hour after hour, day after day, fill your mind with those kinds of images, it does play out.” Osborne described a former foot ball player at Nebraska who brushed with the law. Osborne blames music, what he calls a “violent pornographic record,” on the problems the player had. “It pushed him over the edge,” Osborne said. “He entered into a men tal and emotional breakdown. He real ized later that the record was a major factor. I think it’s an evil, pernicious thing.” - But when pressed about what exactly is defined as pornography, Osborne gives the same idea LeMieux outlined: “When you see it, you know what is.” “It goes toward only prurient inter est,” Osborne said. “It has no social or redeeming value.” Still, Osborne has some contradic tions. He allows his team to be part of the Playboy All-American football team. Once, he was even invited to a Playboy event, which he attended. “It wasn’t my type of deal; I wish I had never gone,” Osborne said. He’s never read Playboy, but says he doesn’t “suppose everything that’s in there is of bad nature.” “I couldn’t tell a player he couldn’t go td a Playboy All-American func tion,” Osborne said. “That’s their choice.” These types of gray areas are what LeMieux refers to as the real problem. The regulation One of the biggest mantras anti pornography groups use to regulate pom deals with the damage it does to its participants. And with one specific area of pom - child pornography - it does hurt the CN Ttze $roctt Of Men’s & Women’s Shoes Up To... 10% OFF! Lincoln Store Only! im WMIKS 5 Days Only (Ends Sunday) Over i.000 r^irs! Includes New Arrivals! Distinctive Clothing, Sportswear, and Shoes. ^Downtown Lincoln 14th & P _Omaha 132nd & Centety participants, LeMieux said. On that subject, there is no debate, as it is ille gal. So are “snuff” films, a film that shows the actual rape or murder of an individual -/usually a young woman - during a sex act. Aside from those two categories, LeMieux said, claiming pornography hurts people is a foggy issue. “I don’t believe there’s a jump from child pornography to adult pornogra phy in terms of victims,” LeMieux said. “Typically, a child is forced to participate. There isn’t a government study that proves to what extent women are forced into pornographic material.” And if there’s no study that can prove it, LeMieux said, the ACLU will come down on the side of defending pornography. A good exam ple comes from Oklahoma City, where police and state officials tried to block the avail ability of “The Tin Drum,” a 1979 Academy Award winning film about a boy growing up in Nazi Germany, lhe film implies a sex act between the boy and a teen-age girl. The ACLU sued the district attorney in Oklahoma City and won a preliminary ruling in 1998. Despite the legal protection, many pornography users don’t tout their behavior. Most people keep it very quiet. The social sanctions Take a walk over to Adult Book and Cinema X Bookstore on 921 O Street and there’s bound to be some customers inside. There has to be sometime; otherwise the place would go out of business. However, no one can see inside the store. From the outside, blackened window greets a passerby, who, if they entered the sture, would notice an atmosphere that demands ID for those who look too young and casts a wary eye upon those who linger in the store. The companies that run adult stores are equally hush-hush. A call placed to the Adult Emporium, an adult bookstore located in Council Bluffs, Iowa, elicited this response: “Let me get a manager,” the first man said. No names were ever given. The next person comes on the line. The question is simple: “What kind of traffic does a business like this get?” “Just a minute, let me get some one,” the woman said. Manager No. 3 - a man again - said no information can be given with out the permission of the supervisor, who doesn’t work at the store, but rather resides “elsewhere.” The number to the supervisor, then? “Oh no Manager No. 3 said. “The supervisor will call you. If he wants to. And he probably won’t want to.” Why the cloak-and-dagger antics? “It’s the nature of this business,” Manager No. 3 said. “It’s just the way this business goes.” usoorne said me social stigmas against pornography still exist, although they were once much stronger in the 1960s, the early part of the era, anyway. At that time, Osborne said, pornography was strictly frowned upon, even movies that were R-rated. “But now it appears that the only major sin in our culture is intolerance,” Osborne said. “If you’re intolerant of anything, you’re out in left field.” The absence of social mores is more prevalent with the Internet - a point-and-click alternative in the sex industry. The best part for anyone that wants to keep a low profile is that it can be done within the privacy of the home, an option that has left the indus try booming with more cash than ever before. Kevin Krueger, director of finan tt “If you, hour after hour, day after day, fill your mind with those kind of images, . it does play out ” Tom Osborne former NU coach cial planning at the Minneapolis-based Pinnacle Planning Group, advises cus tomers who don’t want |heir money invested in pom-related industries to come to him. Oftentimes, Krueger said, compa nies that seem unconnected to pom sites actually are tied to them through advertising deal. He said more money is tied up with or connected to the sex industry than is realized. “The money is unfathomable,” Krueger said. “We’re talking million upon millions. Billions, actually. Pornography is a bulk moneymaker. It does extremely well.” That makes reg ulation against pornography, if there ever was to be any, much harder. It’s not readily admitted, but, Krueger said, porn pours money m the econo my like many other industries. Try tak ing that money - nobody knows exactly how much because of the num ber of organizations involved - out of the system. Just how many unhappy Americans would there be? “There’s a lot of people in the business and who like (pornogra phy),” LeMieux said. “It is their First Amendment rights that need to be pro tected.” To try and succeed So look at the computer screen. Still on the sex site? Good. And the picture there, is it pornography? For sure? If one adheres to LeMieux’s phi losophy, seeing and believing isn’t enough. It’s enough for personal choice, sure. It’s enough for a person to decide whether or not it’s for them. But can they decide for others? If one adheres to Osborne’s philosophy, yes. Not only should people make those decisions, but they should try and regulate the sex industry for the common good of soci ety. But ultimately, the picture on that computer screen won’t do anything more than exist for others to find it, much like the other activities outlined in this series of Sex, Drugs and Saving Souls. It makes no proposals of its own. Alcohol, marijuana, premarital sex, pregnancy, pornography - they all exist to be experienced, for better or worse. But there are those who have clear choices and intend to influence those who have not. An easy conclusion doesn’t exist in examining the sociological impacts of these activities. As LeMieux said about pornography: “It’s a different definition for everyone.” 1 hroughout, it s clear that every body’s definition of “what” - what is sex education, what is binge drinking, what is pornography - is different. And, in the end, the struggle in obsess ing in these high-risk behavior remains very real and very human. -It might be best said by Russian novelist Vladimir Nabokov, who would have been 100 years old Thursday. His trademark novel, “Lolita,” was a lesson in obsession. The obsession of his anti-hero, Humbert Humbert, serves as a reflec tion point for all such pleasurable devices that surround us. Humbert’s obsession may be have been different from most (a 12-year old girl) but his rationalization behind is universal: “While my body knew what it craved for,” Nabokov wrote, “my mind rejected my body s every plea. One moment I was ashamed and fright ened, another recklessly optimistic. Taboos strangulated me. Psychoanalysts wooed me with psy choliberations andpsycholibidoes... “But let us be prim and civilized. Humbert Humbert tried hard to be good. Really, truly, he did.” Maybe it is the effort, not the ideals, that really matter.