Commentary Oregon Daily Emerald Thursday, October 6, 2005 NEWS STAFF (541)346-5511 PARKER HOWELL EDITOR IN CHIEF SHADRA BEESLEY MANAGING EDITOR MECHANN M. CUNIFF JARED PABEN NEWS EDITORS EVA SYLWESTER SENIOR NEWS REPORTER KELLY BROWN KAIY GAGNON CHRISTOPHER HAGAN BRJTTNI MCCLENAHAN NICHOIAS WILBUR NEWS REPORTERS FOE BAILEY EMILY SMITH PART-TIME NEWS REPORTER SHAWN MILLER SPORTS EDITOR SCOTT |. 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Inc, at the University of Ore gon, Eugene, Ore. The Emerald operates independently of the University with offices in Suite 300 of the Erb Memorial Union. The Emerald is private property. Unlawful removal or use of papers is prosecutable by law. /ten tues. I College is Different... When your daddy is paying for it. Aaron Duchateau | Illustrator ■ In my opinion College students need to go with the flow and roll with it Once upon a time there was a rock and roll band called Oasis. Oasis once made a song called “Roll With It,” which, as cheesy and cliched as this is going to sound, is actually kind of inspiring. The reason for this inspira tion might seem obvious, but let’s look at the reason why nonetheless. Fact number one: You are a college student. That means by default you have a lot on your plate. A harsh regi men of classes with a few extra hours of homework tacked on to boot. If that isn’t enough, it’s entirely likely you have a job somewhere that is eat ing up even more of your time and putting added stress on your shoul ders. Factor in a thriving social agen da, like any good college student would have, and you’ve made a high tension, high-stakes cocktail of life. Fact number two: Life is now. They say that elementary school is prepa ration for middle school, middle school is preparation for high school, and high school is preparation for col lege. College is preparation for what? Life? Take a good look around: Your life is happening right now. It would be nice if college was just another form of preparation, but let’s be hon est, there’s just too much going on. The game has already started and the clock is running. Fact number three: There isn’t a written manual that tells us how to do this. You’re never going to find a carefully laid out diagram that ex plains what a good life looks like and what you can do to achieve this mys terious goal. And, what is that achievement? Do you get a gold star to wear on your lapel with the words “Great Person”? The bare fact of the RICHARD PRYOR LEFT OF THE MIDDLE matter is, we don’t know what a good life looks like, or how to lead one. If that doesn’t creep you out just a little bit, I don’t know what will. So, with all this in mind, it’s safe to say things can look pretty grim at times. You and everyone you know has got a tough life going for them selves, that’s just how it is. Life is never as easy as you’d like it to be and you’re always going to get tossed curve balls that you don’t know what to do with. That’s where the song comes into the equation. You just gotta roll with it. The whole thing sounds painstak ingly cliched, believe me I know, but some cliches exist for a reason. The sun is going keep coming up every morning, and you’re going keep wak ing every morning and having to live your life. None of that changes when the chips are down or things are stacking up. The only way to get by is in learning to deal with things as they come. This one I know applies to some one out there: Suppose your girl friend or boyfriend decides to dump you the night before a big test. You have to show up to that class and take the test. If you had a really bad night and you don’t want to go to work early the next day, you gotta just show up and make it happen. It’s probably the advice everyone wants to hear the least, but it’s the honest to god truth. Now, for the benefit of everyone reading this article, I’m not standing on a literary pulpit trying to preach to you that I have all the right answers, and that in this article I am going to impart to you my wisdom. If I know anything in the world, it’s that I don’t know the “right answers” any more than anyone else. Anyone could have come to this exact same conclusion; I’m just trying to get people to think about what’s going on around them. We all get dealt the difficult hand once in a while, and I’m sure anyone could have just as easily have figured this out, but sometimes we need a wake-up call. Sometimes we need to have someone grab us by the shoul ders and give us a good shake and a rude awakening. Figuratively speaking, of course. This is your wake-up call, world. Things are tough and they’re just go ing to get tougher. What are you go ing to do about it? Quit? No chance. You’re going to keep putting one foot in front of the other and get from here to there. You’re going to show up and do the things you have to do. No body’s coming to save you; you’re here to save yourself. All that said, you can take the ad vice, or you can call me crazy. Either way, it’s something to think about. You never know, maybe all it takes is for someone to just go with the flow and roll with it. rpryor@dailyememld.com OREGON DAILY EMERALD LETTERS POLICY Letters to the editor and guest commentaries are encouraged, and should be sent to letters@dailyemerald.com or submitted at the Oregon Daily Emerald office, EMU Suite 300, Electronic submissions are preferred Letters are limited to 250 words, and guest commentaries to 550 words. Authors are limited to one submission per calendar month Submissions should include phone number and address for verification. The Emerald reserves the right to edit for space, grammar and style. Guest submissions are published at the discretion of the Emerald ■ Editorial Sex acts for money are never OK The Oregon Supreme Court last month over turned a state law that banned live sex perform ances. It simultaneously struck down a Nyssa, Ore. city ordinance that required strip club pa trons and performers to maintain a distance of four feet from each other. The Oregon Constitution has a guarantee that “No law shall be passed restraining the free expression of opinion, or restricting the right to speak, write, or print freely on any subject whatever.” As members of the press, we value this protec tion. In fact, Oregonians are fortunate that our state law goes above-and-beyond the U.S. Consti tution, protecting expression that other states deem illegal because it’s “obscene,” even if it offends a portion of the population. In its rulings on these complicated cases, the court elaborates on a long-standing legal debate about just how far this constitutional protection extends today. It does so using a legal framework set forth by State v. Robertson (1982). In essence, Robertson requires the state to de fend laws restricting the freedom of expression by proving that the Oregon Constitution’s framers intended for that restraint to be an exception. In this case, the court assumed, for the sake of argument, that U.S. law generally prohibited live sex shows at the time the constitution was adopt ed and afterward. Yet the court decided anti-sex show laws were designed to protect the viewer from a certain message rather than prevent harm to individuals or groups; the court points out the law in question criminalizes sex acts “only when they occur in an expressive context, i.e., in a ‘live public show.’” Because the law was aimed at expression, the court held that the state must prove the framers wanted sex shows to be an exception to expres sion rights. Ultimately, the court found there was not sufficient evidence to warrant an exception. After careful reading of the case, we don’t dis agree with the court’s legal reasoning. The ruling is clear and logical; we agree the laws were in tended to prevent the message of live sex shows based on certain societal values of the period. Yet we, like many Oregonians, were initially shocked by the ruling. We oppose the legalization of live sex shows or other sexual acts involving payment. The court’s ruling is also something of a cop out; we’re fairly positive that the document’s au thors were not considering the issue of girl-on-girl mutual masturbation when they crafted our con stitutional right to “free expression of opinion.” Moreover, requiring someone to prove the framers were or were not thinking about strippers performing oral sex on one another is an unfeasible burden. The real issue in this debate should be the po tential harm that can arise from live sex shows. Business managers at clubs argue that those involved in sex shows are consenting adults who deserve their rights to free expression. Yet such a viewpoint ignores the slippery slope from nude dancing to prostitution. In a strip club, dancing on stage gamers less money than a lap dance, which gamers far less money than a private sex encounter with a John in a motel room. Such monetary earning patterns partially explain how strippers become gradually more comfortable with the idea of prostitution. As long as prostitution remains morally objec tionable in Oregon, the legality of live sex shows should not be validated by the court. The Oregon Legislature should address this issue by crafting laws that specifically prohibit the exchange of sex for money. The court’s decision to authorize private sex performances is in compliance with neither the values of constitutional framers, nor with the values of most Oregon citizens today.