It’s hard for me to believe 2016 was only 10 years ago. In the years since, we’ve had a pandemic, a handful of Olympic Games and 1.25 Trump Administrations. We’ve also had a few wars, as well as one “short-term excursion” that bears a strong resemblance to a war, at least to my untrained eye.
In a less literal sense of the word war, we’ve also seen an escalation in the War on Porn, at least with respect to state laws in the United States and international laws and regulations globally.
Interestingly, the one force that hasn’t fired the sort of shot it certainly could squeeze off in the War on Porn has been the federal government. While various bills that would impact the adult entertainment industry are being considered in the House and Senate, what we haven’t seen is an effort on the part of the current Department of Justice to prosecute federal obscenity crimes, other than cases involving Child Sex Abuse Material (“CSAM”).
This brings me back to 2016. That was the year then-presidential candidate Donald Trump signed the “Children’s Internet Safety Presidential Pledge,” an oath authored by the anti-porn activism group Enough is Enough.
Under the terms of the pledge, Trump promised that if he was elected, he would “uphold the rule of law by aggressively enforcing existing federal laws to prevent the sexual exploitation of children online, including the federal obscenity laws,” and appoint an Attorney General “who will make the prosecution of such laws a top priority in my administration and give serious consideration to appointing a Presidential Commission to examine the harmful public health impact of internet pornography on youth, families and the American culture.”
I put the “including the federal obscenity laws” because that phrase indicates obscenity prosecutions involving content created by and for adults, not CSAM. (There are always lots of prosecutions for crimes involving CSAM, as there should be.)
During the first Trump Administration and the first 14 months of the second one, the DOJ has initiated zero obscenity prosecutions of that sort, so far as I’m aware. I can’t speak to whether Trump ever gave “serious consideration” to appointing a Presidential Commission like the one the pledge describes, but no such Commission has been established.
On the one hand, the fact that Trump hasn’t followed through on the pledge he signed is unsurprising. Like every politician, Trump is happy to make promises in one moment and forget all about them in the next. On the other hand, if the current polls are to be believed, he could use a boost – and making a move that appeals to a big segment of his support base might have more appeal than it did previously.
I’m not saying I expect the Trump Administration to suddenly start indicting American pornographers for alleged violation of federal obscenity laws. All I’m saying is it wouldn’t shock me if they did, even if only to bask in the glow of positive publicity coming from the socially conservative ‘Christian Right’ after the press conference at which the prosecutions are announced.
I can almost hear that press conference now:
“These guys we indicted for obscenity are the worst of the worst. They made filthy, disgusting pornography at a level nobody has ever seen before, not even my super smart uncle who taught at MIT and whose great brain was almost as big as mine. And now we’ve totally obliterated their ability to make any more of their sick, demented, often foreign pornography – unless they agree to a deal, which they really should, because we have so much evidence. I’m telling you, we have so much evidence, the jury will be tired of all the evidence we have. And that’s why we have to get rid of paper ballots and mail-in voting.”
I sure hope I’m wrong. Among other things, I’m sick of hearing about his uncle. Except the whole lying about his uncle’s connection to the Unabomber thing. That was awesome.
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