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The Year in First Amendment Rights: Television Censorship

James Tucker,
Washington Legislative Office
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January 7, 2008

Censorship has not been limited to the Internet. The continuing fallout from has spurred the FCC and some members of Congress to push for increased fines for indecency. Targeted television programs have included broadcasts of the CBS news show

Perhaps the most ridiculous example of broadcast censorship came earlier this year when , The War, because during its 14-1/2-hour run, it included three words banned by the FCC: one use of the word shit by a veteran and two uses of the word fuck that were spoken by the narrator to explain the origin of expressions used during the War, SNAFU and FUBAR.

Some Senators also have taken up the crusade to paternalistically police the rights of parents to control what their children watch by introducing That bill would keep undefined profanity off broadcast television from 6 a.m. to 10 p.m. Supporters of the legislation apparently want the government to control what is watched in every living room in America, whether in the form of so-called fleeting expletives or determining what is too violent for Americans adults.

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