rare21 said:crap thats serious (a ticket) ??? i've seen those signs around but thought nothing of them.
Is that sign supposed to seriously convey that no cursing is allowed? I don't know what I would have thought had I seen those without reading this post first. Certainly, I wouldn't have thought of no cursing. Most likely, I would have been walking down the street and then after seeing that sign I'd probably look over to my wife and say something like, "What the fvck is that?"pilot_man said:Does anyone know how the city of Virginia Beach can get away with their no profanity law? It just doesn’t seem like it would hold up in a higher court, but it is just a ticket so who is going to fight it anyways. :devil_125
pennst8 said:Like the kiddies weren't gonna hear it elsewhere?
I understand the whole basic courtesy thing to not curse in front of kids. I watch myself when I see them (or old people) around, and I understand that cursing excessively makes you sound like a moron. However, the idea of a ban is among the stupidest things I've ever heard.
Maybe VA Beach should focus on not losing the air station instead of screwing around on things like this.
In conclusion, Fvck fvckity fvck fvck! What's that? A ticket? Fvck the police...
Brett327 said:I'd be interested in seeing what kind of legal reasoning they came up with to justify that the law isn't infringing on 1st amendment rights. I suspect that if anyone had the time/money/motivation to challenge this law, it would probably fall on those grounds.
Brett
Interesting stuff, although I would argue that there is a significant difference between state interests in regulating content of a federally licensed broadcast facility and what Joe Schmo can utter in public.esday1 said:It might have something to do with this:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/F.C.C._v._Pacifica_Foundation
If you were going to challenge the law, you'd probably rely on this:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cohen_v._California
I think the VA beach law only applies to Atlantic Ave and the Boardwalk, so they might say that it's just a "time, place, or manner" restriction that the Supreme Court has been willing to uphold in other contexts (e.g. laws prohibiting strip clubs within a certain distance from schools). So, in this case the law would be restricted to the big tourist areas where there would likely be kids around. Apparently you can still say whatever the fvck you want elsewhere in VA beach.