Louisiana Passes Religious Republican's New Anti-Porn Law

Posted on Tue, 6 June 2023

BATON ROUGE, La. — The Louisiana senate on Monday unanimously passed new legislation creating more liability for adult websites, introduced by the religious Republican lawmaker behind the state’s controversial age verification law.

As XBIZ reported, in April the house had voted 101-1 to pass House Bill 77, which would “let the state attorney general pursue civil penalties against companies that do not comply with a law that requires pornography websites to verify the age of its users,” the Louisiana Illuminator reported.

HB 77 was introduced by faith-based therapist and local politician Laurie Schlegel (R-Matairie), the anti-porn activist behind Louisiana’s controversial Act 440, which took effect Jan. 1 and requires “age verification for any website that contains 33.3% or more pornographic material.”

Schlegel believes that “pornography is destroying our children and they’re getting unlimited access to it on the internet.”

HB 77 calls for “investigation and pursuit of actions for commercial entities that knowingly and intentionally publish or distribute material harmful to minors and that fail to perform reasonable age verification.”

When signed into law by Gov. John Bel Edwards (D), the bill “would allow the Louisiana attorney general to investigate and fine — up to $5,000 a day — pornographic websites that do not comply with the age verification law,” the Associate Press reported. “For entities that ‘’knowingly failed’ to follow the law, they face an additional civil penalty of $10,000 per violation.”

Gov. Bel Edwards’ signing of the bill — which was backed by Louisiana’s Democratic senators and most Democratic representatives — will capstone the second instance in a few weeks of Democrats backing potentially industry-crippling anti-porn bills created by a coalition of religious Republican politicians and powerful religiously-inspired pro-censorship lobbies.

Last week, the Texas legislature demanded that all adult sites post a warning asserting anti-porn propaganda points, with virtually every Democratic legislator voting alongside the sponsoring Republicans.

Republicans throughout the country are currently seeking to outlaw all adult content by overturning the 1973 “Miller Test” differentiating First Amendment-protected sexual material from illegal “obscene” material produced to appeal to “a prurient interest.”

To define “material harmful to minors,” Louisiana’s Rep. Schlegel expanded the Miller Test reference to “sexual conduct” into her own feverish fantasy of what such content might entail.

For the religious therapist and Republican politician behind the Louisiana bill, "sexual conduct" apparently involves “prurient interest in nudity, sex, or excretion” and “an actual or simulated sexual act or sexual contact, actual or simulated normal or perverted sexual acts, or lewd exhibition of the genitals.”

Main Image: Rep. Laurie Schlegel

Source: Xbiz


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