Are You Being Censored?

What Censorship Really Is

Jamie K. Wilson
Censorship is the removal of information from the public by a controlling group. This would not be one television station firing one individual; this would be a large group of television stations choosing to not broadcast information about something. For instance, if all the television stations in the country got together and decided to ban information relating to changes in the school systems about how sex education is taught, that is an example of censorship.

Only three reasonably-cohesive public institutions are capable of true censorship: the media, religious organizations, and the government. Of those three ONLY THE GOVERNMENT is legally forbidden to censor.

In media, if news organizations get together and agree to censor something - or agree to all report the same way on something - it may be illegal due to trust regulations. However, in most cases they can say or not say whatever they like.

Religious organizations are largely outside the law. Provided they don't violate other laws, like inciting crime or plotting to harm others, they can censor whatever they like within the confines of their communities.

If You Are Censored

You may feel censored in other situations. For instance, I was once in a class where the professor was a complete - well. He was rapturous about his and only his interpretations of literature, and insisted that there was only one interpretation. I butted heads with him over and over, to the fascination of everyone else in the class. The day he skipped me when going through the class for reactions on Huckleberry Finn, I and my small group of supporters stood up and walked out. Just one of those college things, I suppose!

At the time, I certainly felt censored. But I wasn't. This professor could not censor me because he was one guy. If I stood outside the classroom and lectured everyone else on what the true meanings of Huckleberry Finn were, he had no recourse. I was completely free to speak my mind without the bounds of the classroom.

But then he gave me a D grade, simply because I persisted in my disagreement in my papers and tests. Other professors looked at my essays and agreed with me that it was A or B work. In this case, he was using his limited power to harm me (and my GPA!).

In almost every case like this, whether it is the workplace, at school, or with an individual newspaper, there are recourses. At work, you should have a grievance procedure you can go through. At school, you can grieve - but you can also form networks of support with other professors and teachers who believe in you and your work. If a newspaper is harming you in this manner, you may be able to sue.

Another Case of Pseudo-Censorship: Print Media

Newspapers are much more free to publish or not publish items than professors are free to grade students. I once worked at a small free weekly paper that was completely advertiser-supported. Among our advertisers: phone sex and classified personals. These advertisers, for a small paper with decent circulation among the 18-24 segment, were very lucrative, and most weeks were the primary supporter of the paper.

But then local escort services and massage parlors started clamoring to advertise. The editor in chief, a very nice guy, called a general meeting of everyone from me, the lowly editorial assistant, up to the publisher to decide whether we wanted to carry these ads. With one or two salespeople dissenting, we all agreed: because of possible legal ramifications and also because we were trying to appeal to young families, we would not carry these advertisements.

The largest escort service's owner pitched a fit when we rejected her ads. She marched her beachballesque body into our office, backed up by her very uncomfortable mountain-man enforcer looming in the background, and insisted to me that she had every right to run her advertisements and that she wanted me to fix it Right Now. I was speechless - torn between uncertainty and laughter because she looked so much like the medium in Poltergeist.

Fortunately, our editor in chief was there that day. He intervened, politely told them that it was an editorial decision, and that she could leave now or be escorted out by his friends the police officers eating in the restaurant next door.

And he was completely within his rights. Individual newspapers have every right to make individual editorial decisions. This paper made other controversial decisions. When one of our columnists - a gentleman who was not terribly stable - threatened the life of congressman Mitch McConnell in print, he was immediately, though with regrets, fired. Other ads were rejected, and stories pulled because of unexpected circumstances.

Not once did anyone file a suit against the paper. Why? Because there was no legal grounds for a suit.

Similarly, NBC was completely within its rights to fire Don Imus, or anyone else they want to fire. Why? Because they perceived him as a danger to their bottom line. They are a business. He was causing damage to their reputation. He had become more of a liability than an asset. So they fired him. Any news organization is within its rights to do the same, just as CBS fired Dan Rather, and earlier removed Bernard Goldberg because he'd published some things they didn't appreciate.

This is not censorship. It is business. We have the right to say anything we wish to say in this great country, but we don't have the right to stand on someone else's soapbox to say it. The sooner we all get this straight, the sooner we can get down to business.

Published by Jamie K. Wilson

Jamie K. Wilson is the wife of a US sailor and mother of two teen boys, one Marine, and two beautiful baby girls. The family hails from Louisville, Kentucky originally.  View profile

9 Comments

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  • Melanie Schwear6/12/2007

    Great article - very right.

  • Jamie K. Wilson6/6/2007

    Holly, I can agree with that too. However, instead of attacking the parties who are choosing to not carry voices they don't like or that they fear, we should all be turning to alternate media and alternate platforms -- like this one. CBS et al are becoming increasingly irrelevant. That puts the power of free speech back into our own hands. To paraphrase Princess Leia, the more they tighten their grips, the more power slips through their fingers.

  • Alyce Rocco6/6/2007

    Exactly.

  • Herstory6/5/2007

    NO doubt.

  • Carol Gilbert6/1/2007

    Yup.

  • Holly6/1/2007

    I think Blakely said it best when he wrote that even if it is not a literal first ammendment issue, what we are dealing with in the US today is the threat of losing our CULTURE of free speech. See how the precedent started with Imus(an artist, by the way) and has rolled on over to hip-hop artists and other radio personalities? Of course, CBS was within their rights. It simply wasn't a principled decision.

    What CBS seems to be really supporting is a culture of fear.

  • Mike DeMarco5/31/2007

    You're right on the major points. I would point, however, there can be a spirit of censoriousness (even or perhaps especially when there is an absence of unconstitutional government censorship) that is quite unhealthy for our society.

  • Mark Rollins5/31/2007

    I think you had a very good point with these articles. I hope you do more like them. These articles just state the facts. You did an excellent job.

  • ALBAN MEHLING5/31/2007

    Nicely put Thank You

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