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Pornography

Supreme Court Won't Stop Texas Porn Law From Taking Effect

"We will continue to fight for the right to access the internet without intrusive government oversight," says the group challenging the law.

Elizabeth Nolan Brown | 5.1.2024 11:55 AM

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Man watching pornography | 	Marcus Brandt/dpa/picture-alliance/Newscom
( Marcus Brandt/dpa/picture-alliance/Newscom)

The Supreme Court won't intervene to stop an anti-porn law from taking effect in Texas.

The law—H.B. 1181—pertains to websites publishing "sexual material harmful to minors," a category defined to include virtually all depictions of nudity or sexual activity. Sites where more than one-third of the material falls into this category must make visitors provide government-issued identification or verify visitor ages in some other way.

Under H.B. 1181, such platforms must also display a litany of absurd and unscientific messages. These include telling visitors—in 14-point font or larger—that porn can be "biologically addictive," that it's "proven to harm human brain development," and that it "weakens brain function." Such sites must also tell visitors that exposure to porn "is associated with low self-esteem and body image, eating disorders, impaired brain development, and other emotional and mental illnesses," and that "pornography increases the demand for prostitution, child exploitation, and child pornography."

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Compelled Speech and Court Rulings

Unsurprisingly, adult-industry trade group the Free Speech Coalition (FSC) and Pornhub's parent company sued over the law. And a day before it was scheduled to take effect last fall, a U.S. district court put a halt to enforcement.

But the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 5th Circuit then reversed course. (And Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton has since started enforcing it.)

The 5th Circuit ultimately kept the lower court's injunction on enforcing the public health warning portion of the law but vacated the injunction against the age verification mandate.

"The district court properly…ruled that H.B. 1181 unconstitutionally compelled plaintiffs' speech," held the 5th Circuit in an opinion authored by Judge Jerry E. Smith. But "the age-verification requirement does not violate the First Amendment….So, the district court erred by enjoining the age-verification requirement."

In April, the Free Speech Coalition asked the Supreme Court to take up the case, and to issue a stay of the 5th Circuit's judgment in the meantime.

Yesterday, the Supreme Court denied the stay request.

"No reason was given. No justices noted their dissent or even issued a statement respecting or concurring with the denial to explain the basis for the action," noted Law Dork's Chris Geidner. "And yet, the silence spoke volumes about the freedom that the Fifth Circuit has to ignore Supreme Court precedent when it wishes."

Supreme Court
(Supreme Court)

Ignoring Porn-Law Precedent 

Supreme Court precedent should prohibit the Texas age-verification law, argues Geidner.

In the 2004 ruling Ashcroft v. ACLU (known as Ashcroft II), the Court considered the Child Online Protection Act (COPA), which criminalized websites publishing content "harmful to minors" but provided an affirmative defense for platforms that took steps (like requiring a credit card) to verify that visitors were adults. Applying the legal standard known as strict scrutiny, SCOTUS decided COPA was not narrowly tailored enough to pass constitutional muster.

In the 5th Circuit's recent ruling on the Texas law, Smith noted the Court's Ashcroft decision—but dismissed it. "Though Ashcroft II concluded that COPA would fail strict scrutiny, it contains startling omissions," writes Smith, concluding that the Supreme Court "did not rule on the appropriate tier of scrutiny for COPA."

In other words, the 5th Circuit basically decided the Supreme Court was wrong and so it would ignore its precedent here.

And in declining to issue a stay of the 5th Circuit's ruling, the Supreme Court seems to be OK with this. It's wild.

Of course, this isn't the first time in recent years that the Court has allowed a very constitutionally questionable Texas law to take effect rather than pressing pause as the full case played out. But at least in the other cases, the Court attempted justification.

More from Geidner:

Back in 2021 when the Supreme Court allowed Texas's S.B. 8 vigilante enforcement six-week abortion ban to go into effect, the court twisted itself in knots to claim that the particulars of the law ("complex and novel antecedent procedural questions") made the high court's intervention at that stage in the litigation too questionable.

When the Supreme Court briefly allowed Texas's S.B. 4 immigration criminal enforcement law to go into effect earlier this year, some members of the court claimed procedural peculiarities counseled restraint from the high court to allow the Fifth Circuit to act ("an exercise of its docket management authority," Justice Amy Coney Barrett, joined by Justice Brett Kavanaugh, wrote).

In the current case, however, the high Court didn't offer a reason for its refusal to stay enforcement.

"Likely because a law regulating porn was at issue," writes Geidner, "the Supreme Court decided it didn't even need to put up the pretense of an excuse for allowing the Fifth Circuit to proceed with a ruling that explicitly disclaimed adherence to Supreme Court precedent."

What's Next for H.B. 1181?

There's still a chance that the Supreme Court could step in here. The Free Speech Coalition's petition for a full merits review by the Court is still pending.

"We look forward to continuing this challenge, and others like it, in the federal courts," the Free Speech Coalition commented. "The ruling by the Fifth Circuit remains in direct opposition to decades of Supreme Court precedent, and we remain hopeful that the Supreme Court will grant our petition for certiorari and reaffirm its lengthy line of cases applying strict scrutiny to content-based restrictions on speech like those in the Texas statute we've challenged. We will continue to fight for the right to access the internet without intrusive government oversight."

Meanwhile, Texas has sued Pornhub's parent company and other adult websites, alleging that they are failing to comply with the age verification component of the law.

More Sex & Tech News

• An "abortion trafficking" bill passed by the Tennessee Legislature "harms young people's ability to access the support of those they trust when they need it most and is an unprecedented attack on the First Amendment right to free speech and expression," according to American Civil Liberties Union of Tennessee Policy Director Bryan Davidson.

• A divorce case in Virginia is drudging up a debate about whether embryos can count as "property."

• The U.S. Court of Appeals for the 5th Circuit on Monday heard oral arguments in a case concerning Texas A&M University canceling drag performances."Whether it's a drag show, a political debate, or a Bible study, public university officials cannot silence protected expression based on their personal views," said J.T. Morris, a senior attorney with the Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression (FIRE), in an emailed statement.

• A piece of paper scribbled with "Buy Bitcoin" sold for $1 million in an auction. Christian Langalis—then an intern at the Cato Institute—held the note up behind then-Federal Reserve chair Janet Yellen during a 2017 Congressional hearing.

Today's Image

Austin, Texas | 2018 (ENB/Reason)

 

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NEXT: Weaponized Bananas

Elizabeth Nolan Brown is a senior editor at Reason.

PornographyFree SpeechFirst AmendmentSupreme CourtSexSex WorkChildrenTexas
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  1. MrMxyzptlk   1 year ago

    So now the religious right types need to explain how this isn't a form of censorship by a government. Something they insist Republicans aren't doing.

    1. Rick James   1 year ago

      Under H.B. 1181, such platforms must also display a litany of absurd and unscientific messages. These include telling visitors—in 14-point font or larger—that porn can be "biologically addictive," that it's "proven to harm human brain development," and that it "weakens brain function."

      Something something tobacco advertising.

      1. LIBtranslator   1 year ago

        God's looters say that about EVERYTHING the libertarian platform ever said to legalize. If the Gee-Oooh-Pee has its way, the Deep South will have to burn Beatles albums and books to generate electricity.

    2. Mother's Lament   1 year ago

      It is totally a form of censorship by a government, and the Republicans have always had a problem with wank material.

      But making it slightly harder to access your spank bank for you daily dose of stepmom pseudo-incest isn't anywhere on the same level as censoring political and medical speech.

      1. Nazi-Chipping Warlock   1 year ago

        Stepmom pseudo-incest? No way. Midget furry anal gangbangs or GTFO.

        1. DesigNate   1 year ago

          This topic would have been ripe for SugarFree.

      2. MrMxyzptlk   1 year ago

        German Dungeon Bondage Porn. If there isn't Shadenfreud it isn't spankable.

    3. Incunabulum   1 year ago

      The Left can start by explaining why its ok with tobacco and alcohol but not with porn.

      1. Gaear Grimsrud   1 year ago

        Yeah that's why I can't get too jazzed up about this stuff. In my lifetime tobacco, alcohol, strip clubs, adult bookstores, military enlistment, driving, tattoos, piercings, vaping, prostitution (where legal), age of consent and a whole lot of other shit have had age restrictions and vendors were required to enforce them. In the case of alcohol in the state of Michigan, where I grew up, the drinking age was lowered from 21 to 18 and back to 21 in the space of something like 4 years (I was legal at 18 and 21 before they raised it). It's all bullshit but I don't see why the internet should get an automatic pass because... it's the internet? Seems to me the circuit court got it right on compelled speech but otherwise let the state do what states have always done. If ENB is ready to make a full throated case for an end to state imposed age restrictions I'm onboard. But porn is the least of my worries.

        1. mad.casual   1 year ago

          If ENB is ready to make a full throated case for an end to state imposed age restrictions I’m onboard. But porn is the least of my worries.

          You're assuming ENB is making a case fundamentally in favor of consent or agency, just not strictly age-based. She's not.

          That is, if the law books said "You can drink at 16, you can consent to sex at 16, but someone over the age of 18, or 21, or 30 giving someone who's 16 a drink in order to ply them into sex still constitutes rape." they would deride it as a horrible criminal act if performed by a man on a girl and celebrate it if performed by a woman on a girl. And you don't have to be a mind reader to know.

        2. DesigNate   1 year ago

          It’s because people have gotten used to porn being free and they don’t want that genie put back in the bottle.

    4. American Mongrel   1 year ago

      Is compelled speech called censorship too? I don't feel like looking it up. That's the only unconstitutional part about this.

      Am an atheist. Porn isn't speech. Porn isn't art. Let's see how much of a live porn performance we can get away with during a city council meeting. Or on a playground. Zoom meeting? Thanksgiving dinner? Hell, at the drag queen stripshow?

      Gtfo with this stupidity.

      1. LIBtranslator   1 year ago

        Coercion through equivocation. Redefine everything as vice, then traffic, then crime, then get the pigs to shoot people and rob their belongings. That is how mystical brainwashees expand their power to increase the rate at which the Political State can convert voters into corpses. Power to statists is the time derivative of capacity to kill.

      2. MrMxyzptlk   1 year ago

        It would get more people to show up to city council meetings...

    5. JesseAz   1 year ago

      You first DoL. How is this equally harmful as government censorship of politics? Why do you think this is only Republicans? See California. Outside of a compelled speech ask, is it a speech restriction or market restriction? Do strip clubs have to ask for ID or not?

      Youre not very bright. The compelled speech is a problem. Market regulations like this have existed for decades. Moving a market online doesn’t make the market speech.

      Dumbass.

      1. MrMxyzptlk   1 year ago

        So, unless the new oppression is worse than what we already have then we don't worry about it.

        The water that frog in is getting pretty hot and you don't care unless the cook tries to put a bigger log on the fire. He can put all the little logs he wants and that's fine with you.

        Poor frog.

    6. DesigNate   1 year ago

      “…that porn can be "biologically addictive," that it's "proven to harm human brain development," and that it "weakens brain function." Such sites must also tell visitors that exposure to porn "is associated with low self-esteem and body image, eating disorders, impaired brain development, and other emotional and mental illnesses,"…”

      That’s the same anti-scientific shit that leftist spew about the evils of porn.

  2. n00bdragon   1 year ago

    So, how did State of Texas v. Yelp get dismissed? Is the state allowed to compel websites to display certain information or not? That's a district court opinion, sure, but it was so frivolous that it was dismissed with prejudice. Now compelled speech is A-OK?

    1. Social Justice is neither   1 year ago

      Given what they're calling compelled speech, seems so. I don't see the outrage over actual compelled speech like various consumer information or disclosures. What they're calling compelled speech is an auditable means of verifying they followed various other laws regarding children.

      If you're going to disagree here you need to be consistent and argue against all age or identity verification everywhere and removing a lot of consumer protection disclosures as well as various "corruption of a minor" type laws. But the rainbow mafia and their allies just wants to push perversion and confusion on children so none of the other topics are on the table, ever.

      1. MrMxyzptlk   1 year ago

        First off, I say get rid of government mandated Identity Papers. Second I say let parents keep their kids from drinking, smoking, getting tattoos, watching porn and all the other stuff we make people show ID for because it's a parents business what their kids can and can't do. Not the governments.

  3. Rick James   1 year ago

    Nick Gillespie... I mean Peter Boghossian interviews Mises Caucus VP for libertarian party, Clint Russel.

    1. LIBtranslator   1 year ago

      Very Christian. Observe the shift to ignore girl-bullying, hippie-shooting coercion as initiation of force. Hire vigilantes to lynch people and "the market" has silenced THOSE critics. Republicans cannot tolerate freedom. Mises is another word for invasive brood parasites. Redefine killing women as "saving" and that makes killing off skeptics OK. Religious fanatics hold individual women in bondage. The Anschluss caucus is about alienating women voters to save the GOP from LP spoiler votes.

  4. Sarah Palin's Buttplug 2   1 year ago

    When is ENB going undercover as a stripper to report on harassment by cops?

    #ENB-Freedom-fighter

  5. Sometimes a Great Notion   1 year ago

    Back to the Lane Bryant catalogs for you, Jr.

    1. Dillinger   1 year ago

      Glamour?!?!

      1. Nazi-Chipping Warlock   1 year ago

        Seventeen

        The American one, not the European one.

  6. Dillinger   1 year ago

    flew to Vegas last week for phish. tsa didn't alert me to my expired license but the Vegas dispensary did.

    1. Idaho-Bob   1 year ago

      Shows you who carries the most liability.

      Private company or Fed agency.

  7. Á àß äẞç ãþÇđ âÞ¢Đæ ǎB€Ðëf ảhf   1 year ago

    Oh, there's the key!

    Whether it's a drag show, a political debate, or a Bible study, public university officials cannot silence protected expression based on their personal views,

    But they can ban strip shows for kids, right?

    The fact that what they insist on is drag shows for kids ought to clue you in.

  8. Mother's Lament   1 year ago

    "pornography increases the demand for prostitution, child exploitation, and child pornography."

    No. Pedophilia increases the demand for child exploitation and child pornography. Just ask Buttplug.

  9. Nobartium   1 year ago

    Applying the legal standard known as strict scrutiny

    Does anyone want to tell ENB that strict scrutiny is on it's way out?

    This current court has been ruling that it's dead.

  10. mattwa   1 year ago

    Even Pornhub, et al, doesn't have a problem with the idea that kids shouldn't go to porn sites, and they don't see it as a free speech issue, as you would know if you tried to visit from one of the other states where they are already shut down and read their message.

    The problem they have is age verification is too onerous. Which is similar to various groups complaining that biology isn't fair - age verification on the internet is and always has been too onerous. It's a limitation of their chosen media platform. Verify ID every time, or establish some central age verification platform (that most people wouldn't want to use), or innovate (something the porn industry is famous for doing).

    No one is telling Pornhub they can't publish their content. They can. They just have to ensure kids don't have access, which is a community standard that has been in place nearly everywhere, for nearly everybody, for a very long time.

    1. Nobartium   1 year ago

      It would be easy to implement a lock for porn sites, and some do so already: subscribers only.

      That means killing the golden goose that is advertising (as well as free to access), but there isn’t a technical reason why they won’t.

  11. Incunabulum   1 year ago

    If the USSC is not stepping in - an institution that traditionally pretty fiercely defends freedom of speech - then maybe this isn't the cut-and-dried 1st Amendment issue that Reason keeps saying it is.

    Again - gotta show ID to buy porn IRL or on the internet. Gotta show ID to buy a gun. Don't like it, but don't see where, in the current legal environment, the 'its unconstitutional' comes from.

    1. Thoritsu   1 year ago

      RIGHT! Exactly Right!

    2. mad.casual   1 year ago

      Gotta show ID to buy a gun.

      Again, *in my State*, my sons cannot even handle ammunition in the store until they’re 18 and, even then, like I do, have to show their FOID. If I purchase a gun over the internet, it has to go to a Federally-regulated dealer who will check my ID and make me wait the mandatory waiting period before transferring it.

      And this is for a "shall not be infringed" right, not a "Congress shall make no law" right.

      1. MrMxyzptlk   1 year ago

        So instead of defending all individual liberty you prefer to take the rest of the bill of rights hostage until the 2nd is freed of all restrictions?

    3. DesigNate   1 year ago

      I think it could be argued that the required “safety label” is unconstitutional, but then I would argue that the government requiring those for everything else is also unconstitutional. Obviously the government has decided differently.

  12. American Mongrel   1 year ago

    If embryos are just clumps of cells, they’re obviously property. There is nothing special about them. They’re not even a living thing like a dog or a roach or a ficus. Right? And in this case people can shut the fuck up about their bodies and choices and slavery.

    And especially 1972 libertarian conventions.

    1. Thoritsu   1 year ago

      Yes, just clumps of cells, exactly. And "yes" a dog is more important.

      No idea what any of this has to do with making kids show ID for porn, which also seems like "who cares". Parents can always let them on if they like.

      1. Mother's Lament   1 year ago

        "And “yes” a dog is more important."

        Gotta be Jeffy.

        1. Stuck in California   1 year ago

          Whoever it is, it didn't bother to read past the headline. To, you know, that part specifically linking to a story about whether an embryo is property.

          You know, specifically the topic Mongrel addresses.

          So, yeah. Bears in trunks level of dumb there.

  13. Thoritsu   1 year ago

    This is about the least relevant libertarian topic to argue about. Who cares? This isn't any different than FCC rules on what can be on regular TV before 9pm, or kids drinking alcohol. If parents don't care, they can let the kids on.

    We have REAL significant government infringement on the First, Second and Fourth Amendments, and they are spending like drunken sailors. While people are red faced and distracted by this silly article, the Debt will increase another trillion, and another state will lose the right to have firearms unless they take a class on how many genders there "really" are.

    1. Longtobefree   1 year ago

      Drunken sailors stop spending when they run out of money - - - - - - - - - -

    2. LIBtranslator   1 year ago

      Thass kewl... jes as long as the Republicans can still get cops to kick in doors and shoot people over twigs and seeds, all is well, right? Voters WANT to have doors and bullets fly into their faces! Lookit how they quit voting libertarian once God's reepooblicans moved in and took that party over. Yew sockpuppet brood parasites gwine forfeit yo asses and LIKE it for Jesus!

    3. MrMxyzptlk   1 year ago

      Ever think you're not the target audience for these articles? The world does not revolve around you after all.

  14. Don't look at me!   1 year ago

    It’s almost like nobody ever heard of a VPN.

    1. Thoritsu   1 year ago

      Now that is awesome!!!!!!!!!

  15. Longtobefree   1 year ago

    "We will continue to fight for the right to access the internet without intrusive government oversight," says the group challenging the law.

    Does it really matter that anyone can access the internet NOW without intrusive government oversight?

    I think they mean we don't want others to know we are porn addicts.

    As long as "they" can pretend I need a full background check at my own expense, needless training at my own expense, and permission from the sheriff to exercise my constitutional rights, age verification is a minor annoyance.

    1. MrMxyzptlk   1 year ago

      One right being limited is not justification for all rights to be limited. All gun control laws are unconstitutional just like all limitations on individual expression are unconstitutional. Just because you prefer to exercise your gun rights over your porn rights doesn't mean one is less than the other.

  16. TJJ2000   1 year ago

    Seems most people are pretty happy about the status-quo?
    MORE ‘Government’ please…. More, More, More… /s

  17. LIBtranslator   1 year ago

    Texas brought back the Fugitive Slave Law, and the Trumpanzee Court lapped it up. FDR, the guy who repealed federal felony beer laws, inherited a Supreme Court packed with senile Comstock-era geezers. He finally got them to read the eye chart correctly. Ask Zack how that turned out.

    1. Stuck in California   1 year ago

      Oh, good. Third post in the last half hour, and nary a comstock in sight. I was worried ol' Hank had gotten hacked by an equally addlepated geezer with a slightly less pre-boomer historical focus.

      Good to see the original Hank, and that the black mold in his house is still affecting his cognitive abilities like a spray from a random bottle and a breath from a balloon in the parking lot of a Grateful Dead show in 1979.

  18. MrMxyzptlk   1 year ago

    So, looks like Lego is worried about new laws affecting their business online. I wonder what batch of internet censors triggered this response.

    On June 3rd 2024, the LEGO® Ideas Terms of Service are being updated. Starting from June 3rd 2024, the minimum age to create or have a LEGO Ideas profile, will be raised from 13 to 16 years old. 

    Why are we making these changes? 

    In light of new social media laws emerging in different regions, we're making these changes to ensure that LEGO Ideas remains a safe, inspiring, and legally compliant platform for our younger LEGO fans. 

    What does this mean for you?  

    If you're a member under the age of 16 by June 3rd, your LEGO Ideas profile will be closed on June 3rd. We know this might not be what you want to hear, and we’re really sorry for any disappointment it might bring.  

    If you're 16 or older after June 3rd 2024, you don’t need to take any action. Your profile will not be affected by any of these changes. 

    What happens now? 

    Because of this change, under 16 users’ submissions and comments will be deleted on June 3rd. If you want to keep a copy of your submission(s), you can save or download your pictures until June 2nd 2024. 

    Any product ideas supported by users under 16 will not lose votes. 

    If you have any questions or concerns about this update, please look at this Q&A for more information.

    Thank you all for being part of the LEGO Ideas community. We look forward to welcoming our younger fans onto the platform again when the time comes. 

    Thanks,

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