Wot, behind the rabbit? It is the rabbit.
Marking the one-year anniversary of the biggest breast-baring in the world, Frank Rich writes:
“That our government is now both intimidating PBS and awarding public money to pundits to enforce “moral values” agendas demonizing certain families is the ugliest fallout of the campaign against indecency. That campaign cannot really banish salaciousness from pop culture, a rank impossibility in a market economy where red and blue customers are united in their infatuation with “Desperate Housewives.” But it can create public policy that discriminates against anyone on the hit list of moral values zealots. Inane as it may seem that Ms. Spellings is conducting a witch hunt against Buster or that James Dobson has taken aim at SpongeBob SquarePants, there’s a method to their seeming idiocy: the cartoon surrogates are deliberately chosen to camouflage the harshness of their assault on nonanimated, flesh-and-blood people.
Should Sunday’s Super Bowl falter in the ratings, its creators will lure that missing audience back next year with wardrobe malfunctions that haven’t even been invented yet.
But gay parents whose “lifestyle” is vilified by a cabinet officer don’t have that power. They’re vulnerable even in a state like Vermont that respects their civil rights. “I feel sick about it,” Karen Pike of Hinesburg, Vt., told The Burlington Free Press, after learning that PBS had orphaned the “Buster” episode showing her, her partner and their three children. “I understand they get public funding, but they should be the one station we feel confident in, in knowing that what we see there represents our country.”
No one had told her that some stories are no longer welcome.”











