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*  [[BoyWiki:Current events | Current events]]
*  [[BoyWiki:Current events | Current events]]


*1996 - '''Getting the 'ol VIP treatment''' - The public prosecutor's office in Munich made a request for assistance from Austrian authorities on this date. They asked for Austrian ISPs to an investigation of a pedo who had posted to a usenet group the previous February. To show their support for the Germans, Austrian secret policemen raided Austrian provider VIP during which they pulled the plugs on every machine and confiscated every single piece of hardware leaving hundreds of VIP customers with no connectivity. This despite the fact that the search warrant did not include any accusations against VIP. Peter Wlcek, webmaster at VIP said that before the raid police already had the name and address of the man they were allegedly targeting. In an emergency meeting, an ad-hoc-counsel of Austria's major Internet providers decided to take action against this governmental attack on the free flow of information by pulling the plug on the nations' entire Internet connection for a day.
*1996 - '''The personification of moxie, or just nothing to lose by trying this gambit?''' - In Illinois a pedo challenged a federal program to combat on-line child pornography on this date by claiming his rights have been infringed. Bruce Black, a former Boy Scout worker charged with circulating on-line child pornography, claimed the FBI was infringing on his privacy and free speech rights with its anti-porn program, "Operation Innocent Images." His lawyer, who admitted that Black enjoys looking a pictures of young boys having sex, said prosecutors wanted to punish his Black for indulging his fantasies. Black got little help from sectors of the on-line community defending free speech and privacy rights. Stanton McClandish of the Electronic Frontier Foundation, a free speech rights organization, said, "We certainly don't have a problem with the police investigating people for child porn."<ref name="tdiphmarch10">{{cite news  |author= Author unknown|title=''This Day In Pedo History: March 10''  |date=2003 |accessdate= 3-10-15}} </ref>


*1996 - '''The personification of moxie, or just nothing to lose by trying this gambit?''' - In Illinois a pedo challenged a federal program to combat on-line child pornography on this date by claiming his rights have been infringed. Bruce Black, a former Boy Scout worker charged with circulating on-line child pornography, claimed the FBI was infringing on his privacy and free speech rights with its anti-porn program, "Operation Innocent Images." His lawyer, who admitted that Black enjoys looking a pictures of young boys having sex, said prosecutors wanted to punish his Black for indulging his fantasies. Black got little help from sectors of the on-line community defending free speech and privacy rights. Stanton McClandish of the Electronic Frontier Foundation, a free speech rights organization, said, "We certainly don't have a problem with the police investigating people for child porn."


*1997 - '''Maybe there is a party pedos can support''' - The American Libertarian Party issues a press release on this date calling for the complete legalization of pornography. "Legalizing sexually explicit material should be one way to satisfy every American," said Steve Dasbach, national chairman of the Libertarian Party. "Ironically, people who oppose pornography would get more of what they want - less pornography - without interfering with the rights of others. Of course, there are better reasons to repeal all laws against movies, books, and magazines, starting with the First Amendment. In a free society, most adults are angered by the thought of politicians censoring their books and movies. It's not the government's job to play Siskel & Ebert with a gun." The release also cited Dr. Richard Green, founder of the International Academy of Sexual Research, as reporting that sex crimes fell 67% in Denmark after sexually explicit material was legalized there. More recently, Dr. Green has argued that pedophilia is not a mental disorder at all and called for it to be removed from DSM.
*1997 - '''Maybe there is a party pedos can support''' - The American Libertarian Party issues a press release on this date calling for the complete legalization of pornography. "Legalizing sexually explicit material should be one way to satisfy every American," said Steve Dasbach, national chairman of the Libertarian Party. "Ironically, people who oppose pornography would get more of what they want - less pornography - without interfering with the rights of others. Of course, there are better reasons to repeal all laws against movies, books, and magazines, starting with the First Amendment. In a free society, most adults are angered by the thought of politicians censoring their books and movies. It's not the government's job to play Siskel & Ebert with a gun." The release also cited Dr. Richard Green, founder of the International Academy of Sexual Research, as reporting that sex crimes fell 67% in Denmark after sexually explicit material was legalized there. More recently, Dr. Green has argued that pedophilia is not a mental disorder at all and called for it to be removed from DSM.<ref name="tdiphmarch10" />


== Births ==
== Births ==
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==Deaths==
==Deaths==
 
==References==
{{reflist}}


==External links==
==External links==

Revision as of 12:50, 16 March 2015

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Events

  • 1996 - The personification of moxie, or just nothing to lose by trying this gambit? - In Illinois a pedo challenged a federal program to combat on-line child pornography on this date by claiming his rights have been infringed. Bruce Black, a former Boy Scout worker charged with circulating on-line child pornography, claimed the FBI was infringing on his privacy and free speech rights with its anti-porn program, "Operation Innocent Images." His lawyer, who admitted that Black enjoys looking a pictures of young boys having sex, said prosecutors wanted to punish his Black for indulging his fantasies. Black got little help from sectors of the on-line community defending free speech and privacy rights. Stanton McClandish of the Electronic Frontier Foundation, a free speech rights organization, said, "We certainly don't have a problem with the police investigating people for child porn."[1]


  • 1997 - Maybe there is a party pedos can support - The American Libertarian Party issues a press release on this date calling for the complete legalization of pornography. "Legalizing sexually explicit material should be one way to satisfy every American," said Steve Dasbach, national chairman of the Libertarian Party. "Ironically, people who oppose pornography would get more of what they want - less pornography - without interfering with the rights of others. Of course, there are better reasons to repeal all laws against movies, books, and magazines, starting with the First Amendment. In a free society, most adults are angered by the thought of politicians censoring their books and movies. It's not the government's job to play Siskel & Ebert with a gun." The release also cited Dr. Richard Green, founder of the International Academy of Sexual Research, as reporting that sex crimes fell 67% in Denmark after sexually explicit material was legalized there. More recently, Dr. Green has argued that pedophilia is not a mental disorder at all and called for it to be removed from DSM.[1]

Births

Deaths

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 Author unknown. "This Day In Pedo History: March 10", 2003. Retrieved on 3-10-15. 

External links