Texas = Sodom!


And it’s a good thing! The Texas ban on sale of sex toys has been ruled unconstitutional. There will be a lot of people smiling in that state in days to come — I’d like to think that flooding the state with vibrators would have a salutary effect on the repressive prigs who are also responsible for the promotion of creationism.

So, Texans, you know it’s Valentine’s Day … does this give you any gift ideas?

Comments

  1. October Mermaid says

    Oh, yeah, Texas is awesome. You know those pro-life and “God” billboards everyone likes so much? There are three of them to almost every street here.

  2. Ed says

    You could buy all manner of dildoes and vibrators in Texas before, they just had to be sold for as “novelty items.” Although, living in Austin, it’s hard to say whether that was the case everywherei in this big state. Still, a victory for reality.

  3. says

    From the article:

    The state also argued in a brief that Texas has legitimate “morality based” reasons for the laws, which include “discouraging prurient interests in autonomous sex and the pursuit of sexual gratification unrelated to procreation.”

    Sex is sinful if it’s not for making new li’l Christian soldiers!

  4. Shirley Knott says

    They had to rule this way — how could Texas function after losing it’s biggest dick to DC?

    hugs,
    Shirley Knott

  5. October Mermaid says

    “I’m sure lots of people are gonna have a celebration today! ;)”

    It’ll be as if a thousand li’l Christian Soldiers cried out and then were immediately silenced…

  6. Bill Dauphin says

    Sex is sinful if it’s not for making new li’l Christian soldiers!

    Yup.

    You know, it’s easy to bag on Texas (and don’t think I don’t know they deserve it)… but I see this as just the most obviously stupid instance of an underlying prejudice that permeates our whole culture: the notion that all physical pleasure is morally wrong unless it is redeemed by a “higher purpose.” It’s my belief that this notion forms the basis for almost all of our laws regulating not only sexuality but other physically pleasurable activities (e.g., drinking and drug use), even though other factors (public health, economics, etc.) would form a more rational basis for law.

    I also think this equation of pleasure, per se, with evil is always an expression of religious values. Can anyone think of a secular argument that pleasure for its own sake is a bad thing? I can’t.

    As for me, I hold with that eminent 20th century moral philosopher Sheryl Crow: If it makes you happy, it can’t be that bad!

  7. Ahcuah says

    This has the potential of going to the Supreme Court, since the 11th Circuit, in the Alabama case, ruled the other way. Having a split in the Circuits is one of the things the USSC looks at when it decides whether to take a case.

  8. ildi says

    It would be funny if it weren’t so sad that the U.S. Supreme Court would have to waste time protecting my right to a prurient interest in autonomous sex. Nope, nobody’s religious beliefs being imposed on me here!

  9. stogoe says

    Quimby: Fat Tony, how long will it take you to flood our streets with [dildos]?

    Fat Tony: Four minutes.

  10. Miles says

    I live in Dallas and it’s funny when you’ve lived outside of Texas and move back.

    When I lived in Seattle, a very sexually liberal area, they had a small handful of strip joints and you’d find very few ads for escorts in their alt weekly papers. Sex is not a big deal.

    When I moved back to conservative, god fearing Texas I found some irony in that in Dallas you have a strip joint on every block, huge provacative billboards along all the freeways advertising them, and the alt papers literally dedicate 50% of the pages to escort and stripper ads. You’d think people in Texas seem to be obsessed with sex.

  11. Michael Vieths says

    I was visiting a friend in Dallas a few years ago, and we stopped in a sex shop. Dildos had big stickers that said ‘novelty cake topper’, and the ‘napkin rings’ weren’t really designed for a formal dinner. ;) So they managed to get around it easily enough, but it’s absurd that they had to.

  12. says

    Can anyone think of a secular argument that pleasure for its own sake is a bad thing? I can’t.

    Obviously you’ve never read Aristotle.

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eudaimonia

    Granted, Aristotle never says that pleasure for it’s own sake is actively bad. He just argues that the pursuit of pleasure for its own sake is a life fit for barnyard animals, and humans should have higher aspirations than that.

  13. Matt Penfold says

    “I was visiting a friend in Dallas a few years ago, and we stopped in a sex shop. Dildos had big stickers that said ‘novelty cake topper’, and the ‘napkin rings’ weren’t really designed for a formal dinner. ;) So they managed to get around it easily enough, but it’s absurd that they had to.”

    It is more than just absurd, it bring the law into disrepute. If the law can be circumvented like that that then what is the point of having laws ? It is the same situation with the way psychics get around being charged with fraud by claiming they are offering entertainment not prophecy. If there is an argument for having a law (in the case of sex toys I would argue there is not) then it should be enforced. To allow such a silly way of avoiding falling foul of the law just makes those who make and enforce the laws look like idiots.

  14. Physicalist says

    @G (#23)

    There’s a big difference between saying that pleasure falls short of being the highest good and saying that it’s bad. In my reading of Aristotle, he’s pretty clear that pleasure is an end in itself, an intrinsic good.

  15. raven says

    The state also argued in a brief that Texas has legitimate “morality based” reasons for the laws, which include “discouraging prurient interests in autonomous sex and the pursuit of sexual gratification unrelated to procreation.”

    Pretty weird. What is the state of Texas doing regulating why and how often their citizens have sex?

    Or claiming to. They hypocracy and idiocy of their politicians is astounding. In the first place they can’t regulate this sort of behavior unless 1/2 of the citizens monitor the other half continuously 24/7. In the second place, I don’t believe too many of them only have sex for procreational purposes. The myth that one only has sex once for each child is not believable.

    Texas is the first US theocracy. Who in the hell voted these morons into power and why?

  16. says

    This has the potential of going to the Supreme Court, since the 11th Circuit, in the Alabama case, ruled the other way. Having a split in the Circuits is one of the things the USSC looks at when it decides whether to take a case.

    It would have been far better for this showdown to have happened before Roberts and Alito joined the SCOTUS. This is far from the same court that handed down the ruling in the Lawrence case, which was the basis for the Fifth Circuit’s ruling here. Unfortunately, I’m not even sure it’s the same Justice Kennedy who wrote the sweeping Lawrence decision, which relied on an expansive reading of the 14th Amendment’s liberty clause. His decisions of late have been far from the libertarian-leaning rulings of his earlier SCOTUS career.

  17. Todd says

    Crap.

    1. That should be “have reported”

    2. Jason Spaceman beat me to the punchline.

    Man that stresses me out. But on the plus side, now I can legally do something to releive it.

  18. Noturus says

    Here is some background on the situation from the documentary Dildo Diaries.

    Fun fact from the clip: Possession of 6 or more dildos was a felony. Fewer than 5 and you were merely a hobbyist.

  19. BruceH says

    In other news, sales of back massagers are predicted to plummet as sales of dildos skyrocket.

  20. Fade says

    I vaguely remember a drunken jaunt to the sex shop attached to a strip club outside the city limits here in Lubbock. My wife (at the time) and I bought a grab bag of various sex gag gifts and were then presented with a form we had to fill out. In order to buy the sex toys we had to check a box to indicate what we would be using the items for- (to “prove” it wouldn’t be for sex” Totally ridiculous.

    I can’t remember all the “Options” but the one I ended up checking off was for “Law enforcement.”

    NO SHIT. I thought it was hilarious at the time, but looking back, It kind of scares me.

  21. says

    This is actually a common fight in Texas in general.

    It may have been ruled unconstitutional but its the main topic of most city hall meetings.

    Every town is trying to locally ban them.

    Go figure.
    Religious legislation is alive and well in Texas.

  22. ndt says

    If there is an argument for having a law (in the case of sex toys I would argue there is not) then it should be enforced. To allow such a silly way of avoiding falling foul of the law just makes those who make and enforce the laws look like idiots.

    I see your point. But if anyone asks, my glass pipe is for tobacco.

  23. False Prophet says

    #15, I read The Technology of Orgasm a couple of years ago out of boredom and found it an extremely compelling read. I highly recommend it. Central thesis: the vibrator was developed in the 19th century as a cure for hysteria. It didn’t occur to physicians in that gynecologically-stunted era that women could experience sexual pleasure without male assistance.

  24. Bill Dauphin says

    Obviously you’ve never read Aristotle.

    Actually, I haven’t; I went to school in [wait for it]… Texas! 8^)

    [Aristotle] just argues that the pursuit of pleasure for its own sake is a life fit for barnyard animals, and humans should have higher aspirations than that.

    I see that Physicalist has beaten me to the response, but theres a difference between saying a life devoted to nothing but pleasure is a bad thing and saying that pleasure itself is a bad thing. (Actually, I’m not sure the former isn’t debatable, Aristotle notwithstanding, but in any case they’re different points.)

    I don’t dispute that life should have higher aspirations than pleasure alone, but I do dispute the suggestion that only “higher” aspirations can cleanse pleasure of some inherent stain.

  25. Molly, NYC says

    You’d think people in Texas seem to be obsessed with sex.

    That’s a reasonable assumption about the kind of people who thought it was a good idea to ban dildos in the first place.

  26. extatyzoma says

    reading the link it says that originally if you had 6 or more sex toys youd be seen as ‘promoting’ them, i thought 3 would have been enough for most women, and 2 for most men.

    talking constitutional sexual privacy I know of a young man who during a juvenile probation evaluation (in the US)was asked about his religious beliefs and his sexual orientation, and did he practice safe sex, i told the guy that was unconstitutional and almost certainly illegal, seems those guys have you by the balls though and it sounds to me like the interviewer was perhaps looking for a pair himself.

    Assuming this guy wasnt lying to me this is illegal yes?

  27. Bill Dauphin says

    When I moved back to conservative, god fearing Texas I found some irony in that in Dallas you have a strip joint on every block, huge provacative billboards along all the freeways advertising them…

    Your mention of billboards reminds me of my youth in Houston. Back in the day (i.e., late 70s/early 80s), Houston had a very restrictive ordinance regarding sexually oriented businesses, so the strip clubs, peep shows, etc., tended to gravitate to locations along the major highways just outside the city limits. One such cluster along US 59, which I used to drive past on the way to Intercontinental Airport (which was well outside the city limits at the time), was heralded by a veritable forest of huge, high-mounted billboards that could be seen for miles. Most of them used the usual euphemisms to trumpet their wares: “Exotic Dancers,” “Adult Entertainment,” “Gentlemen’s Club,” “Novelties,”….

    In the midst of all these signs was one that declared, with disarming directness, “Naked Ladies and Dirty Movies.” No matter what you think of strippers and smut, you’ve got to give those folks props for truth in advertising!

  28. says

    I think Texas may be one of the states examined in the documentary “the dildo diaries” that refused to acknowledge the anus/rectum as a sexual organ, so that even though dildos were illegal, butt-plugs and salestalk concerning butt-plugs as sexual devices remained legal.

    But maybe Texas wasn’t one of those states. Need to look into the documentary again and find the clip…

  29. says

    I’m currently living in temporary exile in Texas – specifically the Houston area. Yes, sex toys are readily available around here just as in Austin (there are even megastores selling ALL sorts of… uh… interesting devices and videos – at least, that’s what I’ve heard… ::cough, cough::). Yes, they are labeled “for novelty purposes only” – yet some of these things come with instructions that belied that little disclaimer. Silly laws were made mostly to keep gays and women from having fun. The porn isn’t banned (purchased mainly by men). Hardcore porn is OK but sex toys (mostly for women) aren’t? What utter rubbish.

    After all, one of Texas’ biggest dildos made it all the way to the White House. They make ’em bigger in Texas!

  30. the wild dildo rider says

    reading the link it says that originally if you had 6 or more sex toys youd be seen as ‘promoting’ them, i thought 3 would have been enough for most women, and 2 for most men.

    Sez you! This woman has, er, well… I seem to have lost count…

  31. Bacopa says

    Yes, there are sex toy shops all over the Houston area. I doubt anyone in Harris County has to drive more than 15 minutes to get to one. And yes, they have plenty to offer, but most is labled “novelty purposes only”. That makes it hard to market the serious slabs of silicone. Making a case for their sexual superiority is the only way to justify their price. As a result the cheap stff was just down the street and the good stuff came fro online.

  32. Bill Klee says

    The state also argued in a brief that Texas has legitimate “morality based” reasons for the laws, which include “discouraging prurient interests in autonomous sex and the pursuit of sexual gratification unrelated to procreation.”

    “discouraging prurient interests in autonomous sex and the pursuit of sexual gratification unrelated to procreation.”? WTF?

    My wife had her tubes tied during her previous marriage, so all of our sexual gratification (and I I do find it gratifying) is unrelated to procreation. Does this mean that had we lived in Texas, we wouldn’t have legally been able to have sex?

  33. Carlie says

    Central thesis: the vibrator was developed in the 19th century as a cure for hysteria.

    Yep, and not just as a cure, but because physicians were sick and tired of having to do the job themselves by hand (pun very much intended). It was a medical treatment, it took a lot of time, and it didn’t occur to them that the women could take care of it on their own. Hence, the vibrator.

  34. Matt Penfold says

    “After all, one of Texas’ biggest dildos made it all the way to the White House. They make ’em bigger in Texas!”

    What woman would to have that dildo inside her ?

    Come to think of it, maybe that is why Condoleeza Rice is so attached to Bush.

  35. Bill Dauphin says

    What woman would to have that dildo inside her ?

    Come to think of it, maybe that is why Condoleeza Rice is so attached to Bush.

    In the process of listening yesterday to the podcast of Rachel Maddow’s Air America show, I learned that W has a nephew (one of Neil’s sons, IIRC) named Pierce Bush.

    I can’t swear that’s true, but it wasn’t offered as a joke. The mind boggles, eh?