ithaqua wrote:I fail to see how allowing Steven Seagal movies into your country is progress.
It's not so much that they have them now and it's cool that they do (far from it) - it's that they banned movies for 90-some years. Basically, the government said "We don't want our citizens watching these movies" - implying, in a sense, that the government doesn't respect the ability of its citizenry to think for itself.
On another hand, this can have implications, in a "Bowling For Columbine" sense, for the US and our level of crime - is Norway, with one of the highest per capita ownership of firearms rates, better off without the contested bad influence of these movies (in that, the tools are there, but people don't use them in an inappropriate manner, such as murder, because the movies haven't influence their actions)?
And is the US, with a high level of firearms ownership, perhaps worse off for having these movies (indeed, being the biggest producer of them), and the potential bad influence they might have on people?
Anyhow, at heart, I guess the main point of this thread is that:
1. I don't think Europe is
that much more progressive than the US, naysayers aside.
And...
2. I don't like government censorship.
I'm out...