Open Up, Movie Police!
By Vin Suprynowicz 
[email protected]
Special to The Libertarian Enterprise
   
         Michael Camfield, 
development director for the American Civil 
Liberties Union in Oklahoma, had not even finished watching his rented 
videotape of the Academy Award-winning 1979 German film, "The Tin 
Drum," when Oklahoma City police came pounding on his front door June 
25, demanding that he hand it over.
         "I got 
the strong impression that verbal resistance on my part was 
futile and they were going to get that tape one way or another and 
arrest me if they had to," Mr. Camfield told The Associated Press.
         The officers 
had used video store records to track Camfield down. 
         District 
Judge Richard Freeman ruled June 25 that the movie was 
obscene under Oklahoma law, which rules obscene any depiction of a 
person under 18 -- or anyone portraying someone under 18 -- having 
sex.
         Judge Freeman 
was responding to a complaint by Oklahomans for 
Children and Families, a pro-censorship group protesting the 
availability of the film at a public library.
         "The Tin Drum," 
which won the 1979 Oscar for best foreign film, is 
Volker Schlondorff's adaptation of Gunter Grass' respected novel of 
the same name.  The movie includes one scene in which a boy, 
supposedly about 6 or 7, is depicted having oral sex in a bathhouse 
with a teen-age girl.  
         (Of course, 
anyone who really investigated the film or book 
would know that the hero stops growing, physically, upon the ascension 
of the Nazi Party, making it a matter of debate just how old a 
character is being depicted in this not-particularly-arousing scene.) 
         Regardless, 
because of the judge's ruling, police felt obliged to 
move within hours to confiscate copies of the film from six video 
stores and Mr. Camfield's home.  Mr. Camfield said he rented the movie 
so he would be familiar with the contents, and before learning of the 
judge's decision.  
         While most 
reports of "censorship" in America concern parents 
questioning whether materials in the government schools are 
age-appropriate, here we have the real thing -- a heavy-handed example 
of overzealous police out running around protecting the public from 
... what, exactly?  Was anyone forced to view this rather rarefied 
entertainment against his will?  
         The film 
in question is a surreal look at -- ironically enough -- 
the way the Nazi terror crept into Germany on little cat feet.  The 
point of view of a child is purposely chosen, in part to show the way 
evil can at first appear natural enough ... a mere upswing in the 
incidence of brass bands and new uniforms ... but also to develop the 
metaphor of a society trapped in a childish desire for pageantry and 
"purity," no matter who has to be burned at the stake to keep the 
fires going.
         The modern 
American judge and police who claim the enactment of 
this troglodyte law "left them no choice" are dead wrong.  Their oaths 
of office -- and the precedent of Nuremberg -- require them, first and 
foremost, to protect and defend the Constitution, and the plain 
meaning of its First Amendment.
         Would 
they enforce a new law, requiring them to round up and ship 
off some unpopular minority group in box cars?  Presumably they would, 
arguing they "had no choice."
         Joann 
Bell, executive director of the Oklahoma ACLU, said Thursday 
the seizures reminded her of "book burnings organized by Hitler's 
Gestapo." 
         Me, too.
         #  #  #
         Carole Moore 
from Washington sends word that the first forthright 
documentary on the Waco massacre, "Waco:  The Rules of Engagement" -- 
featuring the government's own Forward-Looking Infrared Footage 
(acquired via the Freedom of Information Act) of automatic weapons 
being fired into the church during the final tank assault, is 
scheduled to air July 7 on "National Empowerment Television."
         "This is 
on satellite and various cable networks," Ms. Moore 
advises, "7 p.m. pdt, GE1 channel 19."
         In his 
recent review of the David Kopel-Paul Blackman book "No 
More Wacos:  What's Wrong With Federal Law Enforcement and How to Fix 
It" (Prometheus Books, Amherst, N.Y., ISBN 1-57392-125-4), Dr. Paul 
Gallant, a Wesley Hills, N.Y. optometrist and chairman of the 
Committee for Law-Abiding Gun Owners, writes that current trends in 
federal law enforcement are "now threatening to derail the course of 
American history, irrevocably, into a dead-end police state ...
         "The sole 
legal justification for the BATF investigation at Waco 
was ownership of automatic firearms without proper registration and 
taxation.  No crimes were even alleged to have been committed by the 
Branch Davidians with their firearms, Kopel and Blackman note:  'The 
76-person BATF raid on Mt. Carmel was, ultimately, a tax collection 
case'."
Vin Suprynowicz is the assistant editorial page editor of the Las 
Vegas Review-Journal.  Readers may contact him via e-mail at 
[email protected].  The web site for the Suprynowicz column is at 
http://www.nguworld.com/vindex/.  
The column is syndicated in the 
United States and Canada via Mountain Media Syndications, P.O. Box 
4422, Las Vegas Nev. 89127.