Bad Bill Would Let Arkansas Libraries Distribute Obscenity, Explicit Sexual Material

On Wednesday Rep. Andrew Collins (D — Little Rock) filed H.B. 1028. This bad bill would repeal Arkansas’ laws that protect children from harmful sexual material and prohibit public libraries from sharing obscene material.

Last year the Arkansas Legislature passed Act 372 of 2023 — a good law that prohibits giving or sending a child harmful sexual material that contains nudity or sexual activity.

Act 372 eliminated exemptions for libraries and schools in the state’s obscenity statute, and it clarified how library patrons can work to remove objectionable material from a library’s catalog. Unfortunately, some protections in this good law have been blocked in court .

Act 372 of 2023 was prompted by obscene children’s books that some librarians have placed on the shelves of their local libraries.

For example, the Jonesboro public library has been at the center of multiple controversies over its decision to place books with sexually-explicit images in its children’s section and for failing to adopt a policy that separates sexual material from children’s content.

The library in Jonesboro went so far as to post on Facebook that it isn’t the library’s responsibility to protect kids from obscenity.

Following the controversy in Jonesboro, voters opted to cut the library’s millage in half.

Other public libraries in Arkansas have included graphic children’s books in their catalogs and failed to separate sexual material from children’s material as well.

Some of the people who testified publicly against Act 372 last year indicated that they actually want to be free to share obscene material with children at a library. H.B. 1028 would do that.

H.B. 1028 effectively repeals Act 372 and the good protections for children that it contains. It also exempts public libraries from the state’s obscenity statute, and it requires public libraries to have “a written policy prohibiting the practice of banning books or other materials because of partisan or doctrinal disapproval” in order to receive public funding.

Public libraries are supposed to be for everyone. Families should be able to take their children to the library without worrying what their children might see, and taxpayers should not be forced to subsidize books that show explicit images of minors engaged in sexual acts.

Unfortunately, H.B. 1028 is a bad bill that would repeal important laws that Arkansas passed to protect children, families, and communities.

Articles appearing on this website are written with the aid of Family Council’s researchers and writers.

Mattel Apologizes After Accidentally Printing Address for Porn Site on Toy Packaging

The Wall Street Journal reports that toy company Mattel has issued an apology after the manufacturing giant mistakenly printed the web address for a pornographic website on packaging for some of its toys.

Mattel recently released a line of dolls tied to the new movie Wicked. The packaging for the toys was supposed to include the URL for the movie’s official website. However, Mattel accidentally printed the web address for Wicked Pictures, a pornography company based in California.

Mattel reportedly is advising parents to either throw the packaging away or obscure the web address to prevent children from visiting the website.

Obviously, what Mattel did was an honest mistake, but the story underscores how easy it is for young children to find pornography online by accident — and how important it is for parents and policymakers to protect children.

In 2023 the Arkansas Legislature passed Act 612 by Sen. Tyler Dees (R – Siloam Springs) and Rep. Mindy McAlindon (R – Centerton). This good law requires pornographic websites to use age verification to ensure their users are 18 or older.

The law took effect on August 1, 2023, prompting PornHub to disable access to its website from Arkansas.

Technology has given children unprecedented access to pornography, and Family Council is deeply grateful to Sen. Tyler Dees and Rep. Mindy McAlindon for sponsoring Act 612 and to the members of the Arkansas General Assembly for overwhelmingly supporting the passage of this good law.

Laws like Act 612 are one way we can help protect children from finding pornographic content online — even by accident. We look forward to continuing to work with parents and policymakers to protect children online in the future.

Articles appearing on this website are written with the aid of Family Council’s researchers and writers.

Protecting Kids Online: Guest Column

This summer, the U.S. Senate passed a pair of bills: the Kids Online Safety Act (KOSA) and the Children and Teens’ Online Privacy Protection Act (COPPA 2.0). Each garnered major bipartisan support, passing by an overwhelming margin of 91 to 3. If the bills are passed by the House, they will be the first major legislation aimed at protecting kids online in over two decades. 

The laws originally intended to govern the internet were passed over 20 years ago. These laws were mostly aimed at email exchanges and could never have anticipated the scope and scale of technology today. Not only is the internet used for everything from delivering groceries to running a business, but it is also the epicenter of our worst addictions, from social media to pornography, with algorithms that are incredibly effective at keeping people online. 

Heavy screen time has proven especially harmful for young people, with effects as varied as shortened attention spans, sleep problems, body image issues, depression, bullying, gambling, and addiction. Parents are left to themselves to protect their children online with somewhere between little help and outright animosity from tech companies. As CEO of the National Center on Sexual Exploitation Dawn Hawkins has rightly noted , “The parental controls do not work. … They’ve designed these platforms without parents in mind.”   

As current law stands, social media platforms, websites, and the companies that own them are not legally accountable for what happens to kids while on their sites. Despite additional pressure placed on these tech companies in recent years, there is still not any real incentive to keep children from their sites. Less kids means less money, both now and in the future.  

Despite the now obvious harms, young people have little incentive to pull themselves from what are their primary social and communication hubs. As Jonathan Haidt has argued, today’s situation represents a collective action problem. Many people stand to benefit by collectively coming offline. However, if only one person or small group of people chooses that course of action, it is not beneficial but costly.  

To be restricted from or to opt out of social media today comes at great social cost for individual tweens and teens. The vast majority of their peers own smartphones by age 12. The only way forward is some kind of collective action, so that the health benefits of turning off screens outweigh the social costs. 

This is where KOSA and COPPA 2.0 can help. As currently written, KOSA makes tech companies liable for the harms caused to minors on their platforms based on the platform’s design. It also makes them responsible for creating tools that safeguard minors when using their platforms—tools like protecting privacy, limiting autoplay videos and personalized recommendations, and blocking the distribution of unlawful materials.  

COPPA 2.0 is also a strong step toward incentivizing collective action. The original bill, passed in 1998, prohibited the collection of personal information of kids 13 and under. COPPA 2.0 raised this to any minor 17 and under. This is important because companies use this personal information for targeted advertising, which keeps kids online.  

Of course, these bills will never replace good parenting and collective community actions. Parents must be present with their teens and often in between them and their screens. They also must push their schools, home-school groups, or other educational alternatives to unplug together.  

It’s likely that more laws will be needed. In the battle between families and tech leviathans, families are outmatched. However, these two bills are a strong start. Parents, grandparents, teachers, mentors, and others should contact their representatives to help make sure KOSA and COPPA 2.0 get passed in the House and signed into law.  

This Breakpoint was co-authored by Jared Hayden. If you’re a fan of Breakpoint, leave a review on your favorite podcast app. For more resources to live like a Christian in this cultural moment, go to breakpoint.org.  

Copyright 2024 by the Colson Center for Christian Worldview. Reprinted from BreakPoint.org with permission.