The Sigil
Mr. 3000 (Words per post)
That's a REALLY broad view of censorship - and kind of a silly one, IMO. Individuals are free to make purchasing decisions through whatever means they feel are right - be it price, convenience or morality. I don't expect (for instance) orthodox Jews to be out buying ham - and I don't try to convince people that they're trying exert their power to shut me out of my "right" to buy ham. Please don't trivialize censorship by crying wolf like that.Bendris Noulg said:Free speech is saying "I don't like this product." Not shopping in a store that carries it is an attempt at "Censorship via Boycott." These are not the same thing, since the later is a pursuit of pushing your free speech into what I am or am not allowed to do (when such action has absolutely no effect on what you do).
It's a time-honored principle of a free market economy that the customer has the right to - and is in fact, expected to - make purchasing decisions that tend to pressure sellers to cater to him - that shows up in the choice of where and when and how often he shops. As a consumer, I have every right to expect a seller to cater to my tastes if he wants my continued business. Similarly, you have every right to expect a seller to cater to your tastes.
Ultimately, then, the seller is pressured economically to provide products, services, and/or an environment that satisfies the desires of the customers that will provide him with the greatest amount of sales volume.
That the product in question happens to be a printed product instead of "ham" makes no difference in terms of the economic principles at work. I reject your argument that "boycotting" is somehow akin to "censorship." If the customer base will support a product, it will be carried. If not, it won't. End of discussion. There's no "censorship" involved here, only cold hard economics.
The situation would be different if, say, the boycotters physically prevented potential customers from entering, but that's not the discussion here. The discussion is simply that a person may attempt to persuade a seller to conform to a certain set of standards (which may or may not include "moral" ones) by his or her purchasing decisions, and that is not censorship - it is instead a free market economy at work.
You have the right to free speech. That right should not be interpreted to mean that you have the right to be heard. Similarly, you can publish what you want. You do NOT have the right to have that product carried by a particular seller. The seller makes that choice... and that choice is, in part, dependent upon the choice of his customers.
Censorship comes into play when people try to work outside the "natural selection" process of economics and make laws to impede, outlaw, or otherwise prevent the material from being published or carried in the first instance - in other words, to take away the choice of the publisher or the seller in the first instance. It does NOT come into play in a case like you outlined above. The publisher has the choice to publish. The seller has the choice to carry. The customer has the choice to buy. All of these carry inter-related consequences, though... if the seller chooses to carry and the customer chooses not to buy - or worse, take his business elsewhere, that is not censorship - that simply means that the seller must live with the consequences of his decision. If enough sellers decide that the negative impact on sales is enough to make them choose not to carry a product, the publisher takes a hit. Is he censored? No. He merely has to live with the consequences of publishing a product that people are not willing to carry because the consequences of carrying are too much lost business.
It's not even about what they want to see at their gaming table. It's about what they want to see as they walk into their FLGS. If such material makes someone uncomfortable, they have every right to ask their FLGS to remove it or to frequent another FLGS where they ARE more comfortable.Consider: Does a store carrying this product in any way, shape or form effect the availability of other material that you'd find as being more palpable and child-friendly (in so far as a game that uses comic-book justification for genecide, murder and theft can get, that is)? No, of course not. However, some folks seem to have a haughty opinion about what should be available for use at a gaming table even though your personal freedom allows you to completely ignore it.
Again, customers have the "right" to exercise economic pressure by "voting with their wallets" on ANY form of business to make it a more comfortable environment for them. That the product happens to be "Intellectual Property" instead of "fruit" or "meat" makes no difference.
But to keep it in an IP perspective, I'll ask you - should AMC, Century Theaters, et al be "forced" to carry small-budget foreign films along with the popular releases? Should they be forced to always run a certain percentage of "family-friendly" material? Movie theaters, like everyone else, carry stuff that they feel is going to make money... by your definition, that's censoring the foreign films and unpopular films! That violates the rights of the makers of those films! I'll contend that people should not boycott stores that carry material that they don't like the instant I hear that you have stopped boycotting movies that you don't happen to like by not attending them.

It seems to me that this is the crux of your concern - that other peoples' views are being pushed onto you (through your FLGS). I will ask you to please take one step back and ask you to acknowledge that by carrying such material, your views are being pushed onto other people. As I mentioned elsewhere, I think everyone probably thinks that their own views are "best" and I think they should exert as much persuasive power as they can to convince others to come around to their viewpoint. But at the end of the day, you are in the same view-pushing boat as those you complain against - you're just pushing in the other direction. Your views are neither inferior nor superior to anyone else's - just different.Seems rather hypocritical that you'd continue to hang-out and support this site but you'd push your views onto your FLGS.

Just had a funny thought, actually - one group is looking down on another for being "morally bankrupt" because of their views about sex (we're superior as we have sexual morals) and the other group is looking down on the first for being "morally bankrupt" because of their views about sex (wer're superior because we have candor). Such things only work in M.C. Escher paintings... which made for a really fun visual.

Now, most everyone knows where I stand with regards to this book. I think it publishing it is a choice that should not have been made - but I think that the publisher SHOULD have that chance to make that choice. Given the ad copy, I probably won't even look through it, much less buy it - because it not only doesn't interest me, but repels me. That choice not to buy is the only "punishment" I feel I need to inflict on the publisher for his choice. Where does my FLGS fall in this? Well, if I am uncomfortable with how they market/display it, etc. (e.g., if they put it right out front by the front door for passing kids to see), I may ask them to change the display ("would you mind at least movign that out of the sight of passing kids?"). If they do not, I will take my business elsewhere, because I will be uncomfortable in the store. I will *not* boycott a store just because they carry the book. I will boycott them if they seem to be trying to "push it down my throat" with their display - because now they're making me uncomfortable.
Do I like the idea of this book? No. But as long as it is kept "out of the way," it doesn't bother me - do whatever you want. Just like I know what goes on behind closed bedroom doors - but as long as I don't have to see it or hear people tell me all about it, it doesn't bother me - do whatever you want.
I think the following exchange sums it up nicely:
Friend: "So are you offended by lesbians?"
Me: "Yes and no. I have a stepsister who is a lesbian. She is nice, caring, and a great conversationalist. She likes to play cards and barbecue and hike. She happens to be lesbian. I'm not offended.
"I have an acquaintance who, when first meeting you, says, 'HI I'M A LESBIAN AND THAT'S WHO I AM AND YOU HAVE TO BE OKAY WITH THAT!' Her sexuality gets in the way of everything else. I'm offended. In the same way that I'm offended by the guy who says 'HI I'M A HYPERCONSERVATIVE REPUBLICAN AND THAT'S WHO I AM AND YOU HAVE TO BE OKAY WITH THAT!'.
In natural interaction with you, I am going to react to what common interests we have. I'll react to what we do together and what situations we see. But I truly, honestly don't care what your ideology is - that has nothing to do with how I perceive you - I judge you for who you are, not what you believe. Heck, I won't even think about it long enough to try to care. But I become forced to care when you keep ramming it down my throat every chance you get - and no matter what it is, you're likely to annoy me... that's right, your ideology won't annoy me, but YOU will annoy me because you can't get past it."
I think the same holds true in all of these discussions here (and I'm as guilty of putting my ideology out there as anyone, so maybe I'm a little hypocritical. Forgive me - I'm still trying to become the person I want to be)... I really don't give a darn what you do in your game or what you buy or what you want... so don't force me to care by ramming your ideology down my throat.

In summary - I don't think it's censorship to "boycott" a store or a product because I think that puts too broad a definition on censorship. You have the right to say what you want, but you don't have the right to make me listen to you. I probably won't look through, much less buy, the BoEF. I don't care what your ideology is until you start trying to force it down my throat. And I won't boycott my FLGS for carrying something I don't agree with unless THEY try to force it down my throat. There, I think I've covered all my bases. Valar has a right to publish this stuff (whether you think it is "great stuff" or "crap"). Bendris has the right to want to buy it. Others have the right not to want to - and the right to not want to be associated with a store that makes it available.
At the end of the day, I think it's a bad idea to do this product, and I don't like the moral direction it portends... but I also wouldn't particularly care if they hadn't made such a big deal of shoving, "this is the book of elf sex" down our collective throats in their press release.

--The Sigil