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EDITORIAL: A Dangerous Medium
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Just a reminder: A weekly
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edition of Slate is now available on paper, delivered through the U.S. mail, by
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subscription only, for $70 a year. Call 800-555-4995 to subscribe.
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We hesitate, frankly, to
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offer a paper edition of Slate. Why? Because paper is a dangerous medium, all
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too prone to misuse by pedophiles, political extremists, paranoid conspiracy
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mongers, and purveyors of bad casserole recipes. Hitler's Mein
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Kampf was written on paper. So were many of Stalin's most bestial orders
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for mass executions. Those of us at Slate who are parents must naturally wonder
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whether paper should be allowed into a house where young children can read
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or--worse--write on it.
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As many newspapers,
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magazines, and other timber-industry byproducts have pointed out in the wake of
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the Heaven's Gate mass suicide, Slate's preferred medium of the Internet has
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some darker byways of its own. That's true. But this anti-Internet alarmism is
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a heavy-handed attempt to distract attention from the really dangerous medium:
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paper. J'accuse. Quis custodiet ipsos custodes? Et cetera.
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The earliest users of paper
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were ancient Egyptians, with their bizarre worship of the Sun God, Ra. (A
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distant relation, perhaps, of the Heaven's Gate cult leaders, Do and Ti?) In
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the modern era, the practice of writing on paper was first taken up, and
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monopolized for centuries, by Christian monks, all of whom had taken vows of
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celibacy. Even today, reading paper products is a lonely habit whose
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practitioners often spend hours or even days at a time silently and obsessively
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turning pages, immersed in a world of fantasy, isolated from normal society. No
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wonder some of them lose all grip on reality. Charles Manson was a known book
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reader. So was Attila the Hun (according to his former political consultant,
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Dick Morris). Yet society ignored the clues until it was too late.
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Mere words cannot describe
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the vast range of content now available on paper. Much of this, to be sure, is
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harmless nonsense, such as the installation instructions that come with popular
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software products. But paper is by far the favorite medium of pornographers.
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Ransom notes use paper as well. Several years ago a scientific journal
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published instructions for building a nuclear bomb. Where? On paper!
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In a culture where Internet
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reality is dismissed as "virtual," the appearance of words on paper lends them
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instant credibility--credibility that may not be deserved. An irresponsible
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rumor can be set in type, and then printed and distributed by the millions,
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with no guarantee whatsoever of its accuracy. And yet people say, "I only know
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what I read in the papers." At best, paper's materiality creates an unjustified
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impression of trustworthiness; at worst, paper can be folded into an airplane
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that can poke someone's eye out.
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Paper poses a special peril
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to children. Unlike a computer, a filthy magazine can easily be snuck into the
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house in an innocent-looking lunchbox. It can be hidden under a pile of sweat
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clothes in the bottom dresser drawer. Any page can be folded, placed in a
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pocket, and secretly transported or shared with other children. Books can even
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be read by flashlight in bed, long after Dad has requisitioned the family
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computer and is trying to log on to AOL, naively believing that junior is safe
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from corruption just because he is tucked in and offline.
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It is fine to say that
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parents are responsible for what their children read. But no parent can
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realistically patrol a child's access to paper. It's everywhere--even at the
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library and other taxpayer-supported institutions. Rating systems do not exist.
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Filtering software is not available.
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What is the moral? The first
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moral is that children are never safer than when staring at a computer screen.
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At least you know they're not reading a book or anything. Second, government
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regulation of paper is clearly needed. We look to Congress for a Paper Decency
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Act, to close the giant loophole left open when last year's Communications
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Decency Act was limited to electronic media. Third, the recent ruling of the
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United States Parole Board forbidding paroled federal prisoners to use the
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Internet must be extended to forbid books, magazines, and newspapers as well.
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Corrupting influences are everywhere.
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Finally,
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read Slate online. Or subscribe (free) to our e-mail edition. If you
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must use paper, please do so with extreme caution. Thank you.
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Correction
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"The Gist:
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Zaire," posted Saturday, March 22, now in "The Compost," inaccurately
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identified Paul Kagamé as president of Rwanda. He is vice president and defense
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minister. The mistake has been corrected in the archived article but, as is our
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policy, we note the error here for purposes of self-flagellation.
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--Michael
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Kinsley
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