I also find the language used in the bill to be dangerous. How do you even define "health[y] [development] of... youth[s]" without forcing your own morals and opinions upon others?
crusader88 wrote:I think this bill's a good idea.
at least the bill shows the Tokyo Metropolitan Assembly is concerned about the downside of anime and manga.
Even if a lot of series are affected, my hunch is a lot more bad than good will be omitted.
We're not going to get a perfect bill in a fallen world, ergo I'm all for it.
Nate (post: 1381558) wrote:You think banning literally 90% of anime, including My Neighbor Totoro, Fruits Basket, and Doraemon is a good idea? Please explain how. Because you DO realize under the language of the bill, those titles I said would be banned, right?
Being vague in a bill is BAD. I really, honestly fail to see how making things less definite is a solution.
That is so far from the truth I can't even say the truth without starting a political debate. Let's just say they're only doing it because the UN has been bugging them. The Assembly probably just slapped together the bill, which will be turned down (this is the fourth time they've tried to introduce this bill) just so they can say "See? We're trying but mean ol' democracy and the will of the majority is making it impossible! Oh well!"
If you want literally every anime to be exactly like...you know what? I can't think of a single anime that wouldn't be banned under this bill. My Neighbor Totoro, Snow Fairy Sugar, Pokemon, Kiki's Delivery Service, Sailor Moon, Hamtaro, Bottle Fairy...every single one of those titles would be banned under the bill. The ONLY anime I can think of that wouldn't be banned is Jagainu-kun (Dogtato). And actually due to the language of the bill even THAT could be banned.
So how will you feel if Tokyo decides that Christianity is detrimental to the healthy development of youth and decides to ban it? Will you still support the bill then?
That just seems silly to me to say "Well, this is a terrible idea, but it's an idea so let's do it!"
Sheol777 wrote:Anyhow, this is not the first time something like this was brought up.....it won't be the last, and I see nothing coming out of this.
Any literature or film which might be thought to constitute a depiction of sexual activity involving or apparently involving a person under 18, someone dressed in a manner reminiscent of an under-18, or who speaks like an under-18, may not in Tokyo be viewed by or sold or distributed to any young person.
crusader88 wrote:Since the (new) 2nd clause of the section 3 concerns depictions of or what seem to be depictions of sexual activity, I think 90% is too high a guess even for anime.
I can still acknowledge that if no one saw it, or that it could only be seen with the effort and inconvenience of evading the law, society at-large might be better off.
These series may all seem perfectly legitimate, but I believe that the destruction of traditional mores in the modern age is due to an entire phalanx of factors, and more explicit sexuality, which has seeped into even many of the more innocent animes, is one of them.
We should be open to the government regulation of potentially unhealthy influences, and recall that unlimited freedom of media and the arts, whatever its effect on the body, was thought up during the anti-Christian Enlightenment.
To frame Christianity as harmful for the youth, one would need to completely invert the meaning of language and ignore nature
Some popular media... are detrimental to the healthy development of youth... if we do not ban or regulate them... it will be detrimental to the healthy development of youth.
even the UN is right some of the time.
And of course democracy isn't always right
if the bill fails, I encourage them to try it a fifth time.
It is past midnight here, so I'll have to come to the defense of that South Carolina politician some other time.
crusader88 (post: 1381667) wrote:Since the (new) 2nd clause of the section 3 concerns depictions of or what seem to be depictions of sexual activity, I think 90%]Fruits Basket[/I], Sailor Moon, and Hamtaro--I must have missed the explicit Hamtaro episode). I admit it--many of the series I like are a lot worse than those (DearS, My Wife is a High School Girl, etc., though I think Maria-sama ga Miteru would still pass muster somehow or other). But just because a series is good overall doesn't mean it doesn't have elements that might have a bad effect on a young person's malleable mind. To finish my logic, I won't deny that some enjoyable series may have a bad effect on most people of any age, sometimes including you and me. Even if I take myself to be more mature and unimpressionable so that I can enjoy a series without detriment, even if I am confident that I can responsibly recommended it to friends, I can still acknowledge that if no one saw it, or that it could only be seen with the effort and inconvenience of evading the law, society at-large might be better off.
These series may all seem perfectly legitimate, but I believe that the destruction of traditional mores in the modern age is due to an entire phalanx of factors, and more explicit sexuality, which has seeped into even many of the more innocent animes, is one of them. We should be open to the government regulation of potentially unhealthy influences, and recall that unlimited freedom of media and the arts, whatever its effect on the body, was thought up during the anti-Christian Enlightenment. To frame Christianity as harmful for the youth, one would need to completely invert the meaning of language and ignore nature, but it's more to the point and pithy to say: Some popular media... are detrimental to the healthy development of youth... if we do not ban or regulate them... it will be detrimental to the healthy development of youth.
My apologies for not seeing into the alterior motives behind this bill, but ashamed as I am to say it, even the UN is right some of the time.
And of course democracy isn't always right; if the bill fails, I encourage them to try it a fifth time. It is past midnight here, so I'll have to come to the defense of that South Carolina politician some other time.
crusader88 (post: 1381667) wrote:It is past midnight here, so I'll have to come to the defense of that South Carolina politician some other time.
crusader88 (post: 1381690) wrote:Oh ho ho! Posh, I was just joking about the SC guy! I thank you all for the responses, and with the appearance of Radical Dreamer I take a parting bow.
Nate wrote:Right, I don't even know why ANN brought it up in the first place.
Whew. It seems that cooler heads have prevailed regarding Japan's disturbingly general anti-loli legislative proposals, as the scheduled vote has been delayed to facilitate further deliberation on the issue. Maybe now that they have a little more time to think about it, supporters of the bill might notice that what amounts to a blanket ban on characters that random people think look "underage" doesn't exactly foster creative endeavor.
And it was worse than we originally thought. The law was to be applied to pretty much every form of 2-D media, including games, anime and manga, not just adult material. No wonder so many mangaka and publishers came out to voice their opposition to the measure.
Doubtless these cultural heavyweights had some influence on the decision to delay the vote to June. Even some Japanese politicians didn't quite appreciate their peers working the "moral panic" angle.
That doesn't mean we should get complacent, though. The fight to maintain artistic freedom is a neverending one.
Roy Mustang wrote:Because now a days ANN will post anything close to anime as they can. I would go as far and say they kind of wanted to stir the pot, if you will, so they could get their name out there as much as they can as an anime news site.
That doesn't mean we should get complacent, though. The fight to maintain artistic freedom is a neverending one.
Rewin (post: 1386668) wrote:One of the biggest problems I saw in the bill was that it bans the distribution and lending of the anime/manga to minors rather than just the sale. That means under law the parents would not be allowed to buy them for their own children, thus taking power away from the parents. This bill is in essence saying that the parents don't know what is good for their own children and the government knows best, which is a very dangerous road for a government to take.
Yamamaya (post: 1381204) wrote:From the Bill: Any literature or film which might be thought to constitute a depiction of sexual activity involving or apparently involving a person under 18, someone dressed in a manner reminiscent of an under-18, or who speaks like an under-18, may not in Tokyo be viewed by or sold or distributed to any young person.
Section 3: Restriction of the Sale of Unhealthy Literature
[SIZE="5"][A ban on sales, lending or distribution to, or viewing by, minors in the Tokyo area would cover:][/SIZE]
1. Items which stimulate sexual emotions, foster cruelty, encourage suicide or promote crime, or otherwise impede the healthy growth of youth. [This clause is identical to current legislation]
2. Items which through age, clothing, accessories, school year, setting, other peoples ages, or voice, seems reminiscent of a person who might be recognised as an under-18 (hereafter called a a fictional minor) engaged in, or appearing to be engaged in, sexual activity or activity resembling sexual activity, or which impede the development of healthy sexual faculties in youths, or which might be feared to obstruct the healthy development of youths.
bkilbour wrote:I also keep hearing about artistic expression - despite the valid desires for parents to protect their children.
I would vote for that bill in a heartbeat.
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