A former U.S. Department of Justice pornography prosecutor is sounding the alarm on a proposal to establish a new “.XXX” domain on the Internet. Instead of creating an online home for explicit material, there should be a public call to halt it from spreading. Evidence proves the viewers of porn are never satisfied with what they see, and thus are driven to consume more and more until addiction develops.
Citizens are urged to speak out against the .xxx domain. The public comment period for the .XXX domain proposal ends on May 10, 2010.
TAKE ACTION:
To stop the .XXX domain, comments may be emailed to icm-options-report@icann.org by May 10.
SNOW HILL — Mayor Stephen Mathews is suggesting the town impose its own two-year moratorium on adult entertainment businesses within town limits. Officials want to consider ways to control adult businesses, should proposals make their way to the small, rural destination.
DAYTONA BEACH — The city won a full-frontal victory from a federal appeals court in Atlanta on Thursday when the court upheld its zoning and nudity ordinances, meaning erotic dancers in adult bars in most parts of the city can’t bare it all anymore. “The bottom line is the 11th Circuit Court (of Appeals) upheld the city’s authority to enforce its zoning regulations and public nudity ordinance with regard to the adult entertainment establishments,” a jubilant City Attorney Bob Brown said.
[FPN - May 18, 2007] - A national video retail company distributing hard core pornographic materials from the back room of a store just north of Charlottesville may soon face prosecution if a Virginia pro-family activist gets her way. Family Policy Network of Virginia Director Marnie Deaton says efforts to convince a local prosecutor to take legal action against the store for the alleged violations have thus far been unsuccessful, and the time has come to let citizens throughout the county voice their opinion.
If promoters of Porn Nation were trying to capture the attention of students at Marshall, they did.
At 9 p.m. on February 28th, about 500 students filled the Don Morris Room to hear nationally renowned speaker Michael Leahy give his 90-minute multimedia and speaking presentation along with his own personal story to capture the controversial impact of pornography on campus.




