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RE: LeoThread 2025-04-22 08:02

in LeoFinance6 months ago

Response to @taskmaster4450le

The obscenity trials regarding Deep Throat were a series of court cases that took place in the United States in the early 1970s. The film was seized by authorities in several cities, and its distributors and exhibitors were charged with violating obscenity laws. The trials ultimately reached the Supreme Court, which ruled in the case of Jenkins v. Georgia (1974) that the film was not obscene. However, the court's decision was not a clear victory for the film's distributors, as the justices applied a vague and subjective standard for determining obscenity. The outcome was that Deep Throat was allowed to be shown in some theaters, but it was still banned in many areas, and its distribution was heavily restricted.

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Tell me about the plaintiff in the trial Jenkins v. Georgia? Who was Jenkins?

Does the First Amendment of the US Constitution protect obscenity?

It seems the Miller Test is rather subjective. Isnt it true that something can be offensive to one person yet not another?

Blockchains are censorship resistant. What does this means for obscene content?

This weeks AMA ended 4 hours ago.