EDITOR Josh Funk OPINION EDITOR Mark Baldridge EDITORIAL BOARD Lindsay Young Jessica Fargen Samuel McKewon Cliff Hicks Kimberly Sweet. Our VIEW Web wars Parents, not laws, should decide rules It’s over, censors. The war over the Internet is done. You lost. Get over it. You lis tening, Virginia? A few years back, Congress passed a law called the Communications Decency Act. It basically said that anyone caught posting something “illicit, indecent or immoral” on the Internet where children could have access to it would be guilty of a crime. The Supreme Court laughed it out of existence. The law took far too many liber ties and infringed on the First Amendment far too much. - It also just doesn’t work practically. The Internet doesn’t know how to discriminate ✓✓- between one per rrii r . son who’s 15 and The Internet one who’s 85. doesn *t know , A blggf prob_ lem is that the HOW tO Internet is a global j. . force, not a local discriminate one. Laws such as between one these drive busi" ueiween urie ness out of the person who S United States and into foreign coun 15 and one tries. The problem wUn V. O ' doesn’t go away. WnU A OJ. InJuly,Virginia passed a law that would bring back the CDA. Except, of course, that the Supreme Court’s already said the CDA is unconstitutional. Yet, Virginia is adamant that its law has a good purpose behind it. What makes Virginia’s law any different from the CDA? Nothing, really. The law makes it illegal to “knowingly display” Web content deemed “harmful to juveniles.” It also makes it illegal to display this material “for (a) commercial purpose (and) in a manner whereby juveniles may examine or peruse” the material. The burdens this places on Internet providers alone is enormous. Under this law, ' the state can go after the service provider and the person who made the Web site. It’s the equivalent of suing a landlord for what a ten ant hangs in an apartment window. Laws such as Virginia’s and the CDA seem appealing on the surface but sink much lower into much less-wanted effects. Censorship gives people a chance to screen out what they don’t like, but the law says people always have the right to talk, so censorship is, for the most part, illegal. In several of the Supreme Court justices’ writings about the CDA, many of them stressed that parental supervision is the solu tion, not censorship that infringes on the rights of millions. We couldn’t agree more. Editorial Policy Unsigned editorials are the opinions of the Fall 1999 Daily Nebraskan. They do not necessarily reflect the views of the University of Nebraska-Lincoln, its employees, its student body or the University of Nebraska Board of Regents. A column is solely the opinion of its author. The Board of Regents serves as publisher of the Daily Nebraskan; policy is set by the Daily Nebraskan Editorial Board, me UNL Publications Board, established by the regents, supervises the production of the paper. According to policy set by the regents, responsibility for the editorial content of the newspaper lies solely in the hands of its student employees. Latter Policy The Daily Nebraskan welcomes brief letters to the editor and guest columns, but does not guarantee their publication. The Daily Nebraskan retains the right to edit or reject any material submitted. Submitted material becomes property of the Daily Nebraskan and cannot be returned. Anonymous submissions will not be published. Those who submit letters must identify themselves by name,. year in school, major and/or group affiliation, if any. Submit material to: Daily Nebraskan, 20 - Nebraska Union, 1400 R St. Lincoln, NE. 68588-0448. E-mail: letters@unlinfo.unl.edu. Obermeyer’s VIEW ''APPARENTLY VoiO DON’T UNDERSTAND WHo V&J'RE PEfrLIHGr DN LETTERS Love Letter Trevor, I just wanted to take the time to thank you for your column, “Love from a distance” (DN, Wednesday). It really hit home. The key to my girlfriend’s future dreams lie at the University of Findlay in Ohio ... more than 800 miles away. Being on campus and watching couples walking to classes hand in hand can be torture to a person when his or her love is so far out of reach. Knowing and hearing from people who share in my torture makes it a lit tle easier to handle. Jesse Koepke freshman computer science Get it Right In response to Betsy Severin (DN Letters, Wednesday): To call Jessica Flanagain’s blatant lies “The Truth” is an outrage to me as a Christian, a stu dent and a human being. The fact is: Being gay is not the same as being a pedophile. Ms. Flanagain keeps writing about agen das - the Women’s Studies agenda, the gay agenda - but I question hers. Keep praying, Ms. Severin. The Truth is still out there. Jane Wright senior English No Justice I would like to respond to the col umn by Daniel Justice, “Fight against history: Columbus Day a celebration of racism and savagery in ‘White’ America” (DN, Wednesday). I genuinely dislike the term “white.” I come from an Irish, German and Swedish background. This does not make me a drunken, Nazi, neutral. I am not a European-American but an American. I was bom here, not in another country. I guess I have to apologize for being bom “white.” Where exactly do you get off blaming the problems of America on the “white” population? I personally wasn’t around in 1492, and I’ll assume that Daniel, and other com plainers, weren’t either. I have some advice: Stop com plaining, and do as Gandhi said: “Be the change you want to see in the world.” Nicole Walden freshman broadcasting Hysterical Events I’d like to express a rebuttal to Daniel Justice’s comments about Columbus Day. One thing I resent is the modem tendency to put 20th century stan dards on historical events. In regards to racism, I believe it was simply a matter of a superior force overcoming a lesser force. In regards to genocide by disease, explorers didn’t know the peoples they would meet would not have the ability to fight the bacteria they brought. In regards to slavery, although it is abhorrent, it was an accepted trade in its day. There are several instances where cultures bought and sold their own kind, and they were just as cruel to their kinsmen. Keep historical events in the con text of their time, not ours. Steve Hunt BA in history 1997 UNO Arts and Entertainment I’m pleased to read an article about Jim Thompson in the DN. He is, after all, “one of our own.” His brilliant, twisted noirs are known, imitated and routinely appro priated. His work resulted in such classic films as “After Dark, My Sweet” and “The Getaway,” and more recently an unpredictable, well-directed post modern noir, “This Life, Then the Fireworks,” which stars Gina Gershon and Billy Zane. Few people know that Thompson attended the University of Nebraska. A recent issue of “Bomb” published one of Thompson’s previously unpub lished short stories, “Sympathy,” which was written during Thompson’s sophomore year in the College of Agriculture. His attitude toward women is sometimes misogynist, but he was equally misandrist. He seemed to loathe the human race, even as he empathized with it. To some degree, he shares his mis anthropy with the brilliant Nebraska author Weldon Kees. I’m glad to see that Thompson’s finally getting some attention here in the Midwest. Check out his work sometime, and check out the films based on his work. Gwendolyn Foster assistant professor of Him studies Department of English The Greek Disease Attention: All those sorority members who feel they have been violated by Panhellenic and Greek Affairs: GET USED TO IT. The disease called Greek Affairs has already infected many fraterni ties, leaving them stripped of their independent pasts. And now, the dis ease is spreading to you, the sorori ties, promising to bring you to your knees, screaming for Panhellenic for giveness. As a greek member, you give up most of your personal rights (such as moderate drinking before a game), and you receive an ultimatum: Comply, or get the hell out. I can guarantee that you will be promised independence, leadership, a “clean slate” if you will, by comply ing with every proposed agreement. BEWARE. Once your house passively rolls over for any greek governing body, you will begin to feel the reins of con trol slip through your fingertips - until decision-making is nothing more than a distant memory. I respect the strong voice of Melissa Gonnion (DN, Thursday). Her words convey sincerity and concern for her sorority. At the same time, the article in which her words appear, “Drinking accord sparks dis cord,” leaves me shaking my head in disappointment: Certain members, leaders of the sororities nonetheless, failed to speak out because they “feared punish ment.” What kind of communist orga nization do you belong to? Well, sorority girls, I see two options for you: Stand up for your selves and speak out like Melissa Gonnion, or grab your ankles again, and again, and... Ben Novotny junior environmental studies