Pubdate: Sun, 11 Nov 2007 Source: Kamloops This Week (CN BC) Copyright: 2007 Kamloops This Week Contact: http://www.kamloopsthisweek.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1271 Author: Christopher Foulds Note: Christopher Foulds has been editor of Kamloops This Week since 2005, arriving in the Tournament Capital after 13 years with fellow Black Press paper, the Abbotsford News. Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/decrim.htm (Decrim/Legalization) WHY IS SEX AND SWEARING VERBOTEN, YET WE'RE FINE WITH ALL THE KILLING? I've got a theory as to why all sorts of young punks in the Lower Mainland are shooting each other dead in record fashion. This theory tackles a possible reason why the killings seem to be so cold, so automatic, so matter-of-fact, so devoid of even a snapshot-length hesitation of conscience. Of course, the real reason bodies are piling up, cold and stiff, is the continued dinosaur-like stance of yesterday's men - John Les, B.C.'s solicitor general, Stockwell Day, our nation's public safety minister and George W. Bush, leader of the free world - who refuse to acknowledge the fact their pursuit of prohibition only fuels these murders. Legalization of drugs, if not all then certainly marijuana, would do two things: virtually eliminate the killings and related crime that exists solely because of increased prohibition; and result in making heretofore illegal drugs far more difficult to obtain by minors. Don't believe me? Answer this: Ask a 15-year-old to get you a case of beer. Ask another 15-year-old to get you some pot. Guess which one will deliver first? Aside from finally dispensing with the failure of prohibition - which will never happen because far too many people on both sides of the "war" stand to lose too much - there is my theory. It's not really my theory, as it deals with words and how society determines which ones are harmful and which ones are acceptable to the eyes and ears of impressionable youth. Surely there have been numerous studies done on the issue, but I am approaching from a layman's point of view. It was 2:51 p.m. Thursday and Kamloops radio station 97.5 FM The River had just finished playing What It's Like, a stunning song by a band called Everlast. And, as has been my experience when listening to this song on myriad other radio stations, the decision on which words to bleep and which words to ignore befuddled me once again. The song is essentially a "there but for the grace of God go we" tune, depicting three people whose hard luck we should be careful not to mock unless we have walked in their shoes. There is a verse dealing with a girl, Mary, who is pregnant and her deadbeat boyfriend has taken off. So Mary decides to have an abortion. "And then she heads for the clinic and she gets some static walking through the doors. "They call her a killer, and they call her a sinner, and they call her a whore." On the radio, the word "killer" is permissible, as is the word "sinner." But the word "whore" is excised. Tim Tyler, music director at 97.5 FM The River, says this particular song arrived edited from the record company, but noted he has been tasked with edited other songs. Tunes with the F-word, for example, will be edited. He took the "god" out of "goddamn" in a Jann Arden song, and excised "crack whore" from a Lily Allen song. The River, Tyler says, is a family radio station that does not wish to offend its listeners. Still, he acknowledges the "strange," varied societal approach to violence, profanity and sex. "I think violence is just as bad," Tyler says. "Maybe even worse in some cases." Which leaves us in a strange place indeed. The record company that released What It's Like to radio stations found nothing wrong with labelling a pregnant girl a "killer," but God forbid if our kids hear that the pregnant girl is being called a "whore." It's OK for our kids to hear about "killing," about dying, about taking a life. But it's not OK for our kids to hear about the sexual practises of their peers. And we wonder why teens are desensitized to violence? We live in a puritanical society where we shield our children's eyes from the hint of erotica on the TV screen, yet allow them to watch death after death after death while playing a video game or renting the latest Hollywood blockbuster. Another verse in the Everclear song focuses on a kid named Max who led a very dangerous life. "Until late one night there was a big gun fight, "Max lost his head, "He pulled out his chrome .45, "Talked some shit, "And wound up dead." Sure enough, the word "shit" was censored on the radio, yet the images of being shot and killed, of dealing drugs, of hanging out with thugs, were deemed fine for airplay. If death and destruction is deemed fine for a general audience that includes kids, yet words they hear on the playground and images about sex are verboten, can we be surprised at the casual approach to life being taken across the Lower Mainland by those who, only a few years ago, were shielded from "damaging" words like "whore" and "shit," yet fed a steady diet of death? Christopher Foulds has been editor of Kamloops This Week since 2005, arriving in the Tournament Capital after 13 years with fellow Black Press paper, the Abbotsford News. - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D