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Are_we__sure ago

Hi, all your posts on this have been very unclear and confusing.

What you seem to be asking is can obscenity law be applied to material like Elsagate or Pinkie Pie?

Is this the crux of the issue? Did I miss anything?

Enigmatic_Continuum ago

Yeah, that's it. Why is it you and the other shills are the only ones who couldn't see this? The genuine PG investigators identified this immediately.

Are_we_sure ago

Perhaps because you surrounded your post with extraneous and confusing nonsense.

I don't know what Pinkie Pie is, but the Elsagate/Toy Freaks stuff was not illegal.

Anthony Jeselnik's jokes are not illegal.

No federal prosecutor in the country would try to say that they are.

If you think these are legally obscene as oppossed being obscene in a colloquial sense, please lay out a case with a specific example that violates the Miller test.

Currently, obscenity is evaluated by federal and state courts alike using a tripartite standard established by Miller v. California. The Miller test for obscenity includes the following criteria: (1) whether ‘the average person, applying contemporary community standards’ would find that the work, ‘taken as a whole,’ appeals to ‘prurient interest’ (2) whether the work depicts or describes, in a patently offensive way, sexual conduct specifically defined by the applicable state law, and (3) whether the work, ‘taken as a whole,’ lacks serious literary, artistic, political, or scientific value.

JohnDavidPodesta ago

You're absolutely wrong and I will demonstrate why if I can receive adequate up-votes to post on the main forum.

Oh_Well_ian ago

you should have picked a better SN if you wanted to be taken seriously as a White Hat