Hotel porn the new target for conservatives

E-Z-B

CAGiversary!
NEW YORK - Pornographic movies now seem nearly as pervasive in America's hotel rooms as tiny shampoo bottles, and the lodging industry shows little concern as conservative activists rev up a protest campaign aimed at triggering a federal crackdown.

A coalition of 13 conservative groups — including the Family Research Council and Concerned Women for America — took out full-page ads in some editions of USA Today earlier this month urging the Justice Department and FBI to investigate whether some of the pay-per-view movies widely available in hotels violate federal and state obscenity laws.

Though porn is now cheaply and readily accessible on the Internet, and through many other outlets, the activists chose to target the hotel industry in part because of the well-known brands of corporations that cater to family vacationers as well as business travelers.

"These are places that you take your family — these are respectable institutions," said Tony Perkins, president of the Family Research Council. "Anything that brings porn into the mainstream is a concern. It just desensitizes people."

Precise statistics on in-room adult entertainment are hard to come by. By some estimates, adult movies are available in roughly 40 percent of the nation's hotels, representing more than 1.5 million rooms. Industry analysts suggest that these adult offerings generate 60 to 80 percent of total in-room entertainment revenue — several hundred million dollars a year.

Both Kathy Shepard of Hilton and Roger Conner of Marriott said the bulk of their hotels are operated by franchise-holders who make their own decisions about in-room programming. They made clear, however, that their companies consider adult movies to be an acceptable option because they can be ignored or blocked out by guests not wishing to view them.

The leader of the campaign against in-room porn is Phil Burress, a self-described former porn addict who heads the Cincinnati-based Citizens for Community Values.

Burress and his allies have had some success regionally, pressuring about 15 Ohio and Kentucky hotels to stop offering adult movies. But he says a nationwide pressure campaign would be difficult because nearly all the big hotel chains have similar policies — porn is available at some but not all of their affiliates.

Though unable to cite specific cases, Burress contended that the availability of in-room porn is making hotels more dangerous.

"As more and more of these (hardcore) titles become available, we're going to have sexual abuse cases coming out of the hotels," he said. "Hotels are just as dangerous as environments around strip joints and porn stores."


http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20060822/ap_on_re_us/hotel_porn

These people are only happy when they're bitching. :roll:
 
http://www.reason.com/sullum/092702.shtml

"When I was 14 years old," Burress said on CNN the other day, "I was exposed to pornography on the way to school one morning, and for me it led into an addiction that lasted more than 25 years. So I know about the harms of pornography and what it can do to a young child and their perception toward women."

Having been around Burress for years (and this should come as no surprise to anyone paying attention to the conservative christian right), he's not the kind of person you can even begin to rationalize with. Discourse with him becomes so frustrating that you just wanna punch him and break his fucking nose.

...which, of course, would make him even more correct, in his and his viewers' eyes. You had to resort to violence because you couldn't break down the sound logical foundation of his biblical message.
 
This is good. I have trouble not spending $15 on a 90 minute movie that I'll really only watch 5 minutes of anyway. Especially when most of the same hotels have WiFi signals that will take care of the "problem" I am having for free.
 
Wtf? I've never had the porn attack me at a hotel.

I must admit though that I am also a porn addict like Burress, seeing as I have a penis and I'm over the age of 12. fucking people.
 
Won't somebody please think of the children who can check into these hotel rooms, find the porn and order it all by themselves?!!!11!?!11
 
[quote name='E-Z-B']NEW YORK - Pornographic movies now seem nearly as pervasive in America's hotel rooms as tiny shampoo bottles, and the lodging industry shows little concern as conservative activists rev up a protest campaign aimed at triggering a federal crackdown. [/quote] Sigh. That's the main reason I've switched parties.
 
Though unable to cite specific cases, Burress contended that the availability of in-room porn is making hotels more dangerous.

"As more and more of these (hardcore) titles become available, we're going to have sexual abuse cases coming out of the hotels," he said. "Hotels are just as dangerous as environments around strip joints and porn stores."

More like sexual self-abuse cases coming out of hotels. If anything, it will alleviate the demand for prostitutes and strip joints if you can get porn in private and for much cheaper.

It's always the former addicts who are the biggest assholes about this stuff.
 
[quote name='bmulligan']More like sexual self-abuse cases coming out of hotels. If anything, it will alleviate the demand for prostitutes and strip joints if you can get porn in private and for much cheaper.

It's always the former addicts who are the biggest assholes about this stuff.[/QUOTE]

He's been a major hassle in the city of Cincinnati for decades. As a former addict, in order to avoid temptation but, er, "remain current on the subject," his wife watches porno videos while he looks away. She's the "play by play" commentator.

I wish I was joking.
 
So, he's really doing this for free publicity. Either that or he got busted for something and he's doing his community service ?
 
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