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Child Pornography is Going Mainstream     9/12/2008
What you can do to stop this from happening in your community
By Leslie Smith

Concerned Women for America (CWA) of North Carolina is calling all citizens to take action to stop the distribution of Hounddog, a film depicting child rape. CWA of North Carolina created the "No More Child Porn" campaign in July after learning that the North Carolina Department of Commerce gave $387,000 in taxpayer money to producers to shoot the film in North Carolina. This is not an issue exclusive to North Carolina; this movie will debut in theaters nationwide on September 19.

Donna Miller, a CWA Prayer/Action Chapter Leader for the Fayetteville area and No More Child Porn Campaign Director, will attend the 2008 Values Voter Summit, a prominent conservative voting rally in Washington, D.C. this weekend, to spread the word about Hounddog, in hopes that concerned citizens will halt the distribution of this film in the mainstream media. Donna will distribute a list of actions that citizens can take to fight this graphic movie from being shown in their local theater.

Donna says, "We hope to educate the media and those attending the conference about the CWA of North Carolina 'No More Child Porn' campaign. Our goal is to bring awareness of the mainstreaming of child pornography that is being achieved through the release of this movie."

Hounddog features child actress Dakota Fanning, who portrays a nine-year-old that is raped by a man in his late teens, after he tricks her into dancing naked to get Elvis Presley concert tickets. Deborah Kampmeier, writer and director of Hounddog, wrote in the film's press kit, "… she [Fanning's character] is simply and innocently experiencing and relishing the aliveness of her being, the life force pulsing through her body, celebrating the power and creative force of her sexuality that is her birthright."

Donna responds, "This movie is about a nine-year-old girl, not an adult woman. She should be outside skipping rope or riding her bike, not 'celebrating the power and creative force of her sexuality.'"

On the original release date of July 18, 2008, CWA of North Carolina called for an investigation by the North Carolina General Assembly to determine why the North Carolina Film Office approved the making of the film and whether law officials were consulted.

They also requested that the Assembly "provide information from the North Carolina Department of Commerce (which oversees the North Carolina Film office) as to how three movies dealing with the subject of adults having sexual encounters with minors (Hounddog, Bastard Out of Carolina, and Lolita) were filmed in North Carolina. Hounddog was so controversial that it did not receive distributorship until very recently.

The reaction from North Carolina officials has been nothing short of baffling. Though he acknowledged the public outcry surrounding this film, the District Attorney of Bolivia, North Carolina, where most of the film was shot, told WorldNetDaily that the movie was saved by its "artistic value." North Carolina Attorney General Roy Cooper has been silent on the issue and has offered no explanation as to why his state allowed a 12-year-old child to endure simulated pedophilic rape.

North Carolina is one of many states to offer financial incentives, such as tax credits, in hopes of wooing film companies into shooting footage on their land. The production of a film can significantly boost the local economy in a myriad of ways, such as crews lodging in local hotels and hiring local catering services.

Donna says, "Our concern is that this film would say to other children that this behavior is acceptable. As taxpayers here in North Carolina, we're not happy about this."

Three actions that you can take as a concerned citizen are:

1) Please contact the United States Attorney General's office and ask him to review this film to determine whether or not federal child exploitation laws have been violated. Tell him that you have grave concerns that this film, with its visual representation of a child engaging in sexually suggestive behaviors and being sexually assaulted, opens the door for child pornography to be mainstreamed into the entertainment industry.

Attorney General Michael B. Mukasey

U. S. Department of Justice

950 Pennsylvania Avenue, N.W.

Washington, D.C. 20530-0001

Office of the Attorney General: (202) 353-1555

2) Hounddog is set to be released nationwide at theaters in America on September 19. Please call your local theater and respectfully ask them to not show the film.

3) If you would like more information about this issue, or would like to stay updated on the progress the No More Child Porn Campaign is making, please contact us:

Donna Miller

P. O. Box 58002

Fayetteville, North Carolina 28305

Phone: 910-308-7619 (C)

E-mail: wap_dm@hotmail.com

Mary Frances Forrester

P. O. Box 758

Stanley, North Carolina 28164

Phone: 704-263-1774

E-mail: mmax837621@aol.com

To get involved in CWA of North Carolina, go to northcarolina.cwfa.org or e-mail inquiry@northcarolina.cwfa.org. If you would like to get involved with one of our other fine state organizations, please visit the CWA in the States site.

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Concerned Women for America
1015 Fifteenth St. N.W., Suite 1100
Washington, D.C. 20005
Phone: (202) 488-7000
Fax: (202) 488-0806

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