counton2.com — State Senator Robert Ford is hoping to outlaw lewd language and is pushing for a bill that would prohibit profanity. Under the pre-filed bill, profanity could land you in jail for up to 5 years and/or cost you up to $5,000 in fines. Debra Gammons says, that the First Amendment is not absolute. You cannot say whatever you want whenever you want to.
Jan 23, 2009 View in Crawl 4
kobewon490Jan 23, 2009
No exploiting us "potty mouths" for money!!! f**k that bastard!
hcarlgoldenJan 24, 2009
f**k that f**king f**k f**ker
4u55l3nlnj4Jan 25, 2009
<a class="user" href="http://tinyurl.com/d6wze5">http://tinyurl.com/d6wze5</a>
mountainwebJan 26, 2009
Sad that these idiots cannot find something more useful to do with their time!
fyngyrzJan 29, 2009
Look here, johnnick: What part of "shall make no law" do you not understand?Shall make NO law. NO, as in NOT ANY, as in DON'T DO IT, as in FORBIDDEN. Capice?The *problem* is "1st Amendment jurisprudence", which honest people identify as "sophist nonsense."Any questions?
secrityFeb 4, 2009
What you can and can't say on radio and television is covered under FCC regulations.
67cowboyFeb 16, 2009
I grew up where most restaurants had signs that said, NO PROFANITY ALLOWED, simply because when families brought their little kids in for dining they didn't have to worry about their little ones picking up foul language; it was a respect thing and NOT at all about depriving someone their 2nd Amendment Rights.I believe people like George Carlin and Howard Stern have the Right* to say anything they want on their radio show. But I would hope a business owner or police officer would throw them out if they ran their foul mouth in front of a bunch of little kids, it's just not something they have the right to do to my kids or anybody else's.All we need is to be able to teach respect for others, and that includes stopping evil, vial, profane language in public places !!!