• Home
  • About
  • Objectives
  • Membership
  • Donations
  • Activities
  • Research Reports
  • Submissions
  • Newsletters
  • Contact

SPCS

SOCIETY FOR PROMOTION OF COMMUNITY STANDARDS INC.

  • Censorship
    • Censorship & New Technology
    • Film Ratings
    • Films
  • Crime
    • Rape statistics
    • Television Violence
    • Violence
    • Youth Crime
  • Enforcement
  • Family
    • Anti-smacking Bill
    • Families Commission
    • Marriage
  • Gambling Addiction
  • Political Advocacy
  • Pro-life
    • Abortion
  • Prostitution
  • Sexuality
    • Child Sex Crimes
    • Civil Unions
    • HIV/AIDS STIs
    • Homosexuality
    • Kinsey Fraud
    • Porn Link to Rape
    • Pornography
    • Sex Studies
    • Sexual Dysfunction
  • Other
    • Alcohol abuse
    • Announcement
    • Application For Leave
    • Broadcasting Standards Authority
    • Celebrating Christian Tradition
    • Children’s Television
    • Complaints to Broadcasters
    • Computer games
    • Film & Lit Board Reviews
    • Film & Lit. Board Appointments
    • Human Dignity
    • Moral Values
    • Newsletters
    • Newspaper Articles
    • Recommended Books
    • Submissions
    • YouTube

SPCS revitalised campaign against gratuitous sexual violence in films – ignited censorship debate

October 5, 2014 by SPCS Leave a Comment

Prior to its application to become a registered charity with the Charities Commission, the Society for Promotion of Community Standards Inc. (SPCS) engaged in a “revitalised campaign” against gratuitous sexually explicit movies screened in New Zealand cinemas, focusing on those such as Baise-Moi (French = “Rape-Me”) which was scheduled as an opening show-piece in the now defunct Beck’s Incredible Film Festival (B.I.F.F.) directed by Mr Ant Timpson. The R18 classifications issued to this morally putrid film and others like the Japanese film Visitor Q, were appealed by the Society to the Film and Literature Board of Review, to test whether or not the Chief Censor Bill Hastings and his staff had correctly applied the censorship laws to safeguard the “public good”.

Both films were effectively shut out of Timpson’s B.I.F.F. and after protracted litigation through the courts, the Court of Appeal issued decisions upholding in large part the concerns raised by SPCS. The Society contended that the Chief Censor had well passed his “use-by date” as a competent censor, having become “desensitised” by excessive exposure to the injurious, corrupting and toxic impact of so many films containing explicit sexual content and gratuitous sexual violence he had had to view. The vast bulk of publications (films, videos, DVDs and magazines etc) he had “examined” over his lengthy career as a censor involved the degradation, dehumanisation and demeaning of women and are “injurious to the public good”. The Society’s concerns about the Chief Censor and his Deputy Ms Nicola McCully, were taken up by a number of MPs in the House of Representatives and eventually Hastings left the job.

Bill Hastings served as NZ’s tenth Chief Censor from October 1999 to July 2010. Prior to that he was Deputy and Acting Chief Censor from December 1998 to October 1999. He was a member of the Indecent Publications Tribunal from 1990 to 1994 and Deputy President of the Film and Literature Board of Review from 1995 to 1998. He played a key role as Deputy of that Board in issuing a highly controversial decision that banned the “talking heads” Living Word videos. This decision was subsequently overturned  by the Court of Appeal and the videos were classified as “unrestricted”. The Board was forced to concede the obvious – the videos contained nothing that remotely came within the five censorship “jurisdictional gateways” of the censorship Act – involving “sex, horror, crime, or cruelty or violence” – the basis upon which a publication can  be classified “objectionable”.

Download a high-resolution PDF version here.

David Lane SPCS - Revitalised campaign against gratuitous sexual violence in films
David Lane SPCS Revitalised campaign against gratuitous sexual violence in films

Share this:

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Email
  • Print

Filed Under: Censorship, Film Ratings, Porn Link to Rape Tagged With: Ant Timpson, Anthony Timpson, Baise-Moi, Beck's Incredible Film Festival, BIFF, Bill Hastings, Bully, Chief Censor, David Lane, Film and Literature Boiard of Review, free speech, Karl du Frene, Living Word videos, Paramount Cinema, sexual exploitation, sexual violence, Visitor Q

C.S. Lewis: God’s PR Man — by David H Lane

October 4, 2014 by SPCS Leave a Comment

David Lane SPCS. David H Lane recalls the life of C.S. Lewis, a literary giant of the 20th century, and the vision he sought so passionately to communicate through the witness of his life and writings.

Lane’s article “C.S. Lewis: God’s PR man” was published as a feature in New Zealand’s Christian Newspaper – The Challenge Weekly – on 5 December 2005 and on the website of the Wellington Christian Apologetics Society Inc. It was first published in the Evening Post (Wellington, New Zealand) on Thursday 26 November 1998 to mark the centenary of the birth of Clive Staples Lewis on 29 November 1898 in Belfast, Northern Ireland. See PDF: CS Lewis Evening Post

The article drew a number of responses from readers of the Evening Post in its Letters to the Editor columns, in the days following publication. C.S. Lewis died on 22 November 1963 and he was a novelist, poet, academic, medievalist, literary critic, essayist, lay theologian, and Christian apologist. (To view larger image of article below – go to right hand bar on this web page).

David Lane SPCS on C.S. Lewis: God's PR man

Share this:

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Email
  • Print

Filed Under: Celebrating Christian Tradition, Other Tagged With: Christian Apologetics, christian apologist, cs lewis, CS Lewis centenary, David H Lane, David H Lane spcs, David Lane, david lane spcs, David Lane Wellington, JRR Tolkien, narnia, Tolkien

Listed Chinese firm targets Lochinver and other NZ farm assets

September 27, 2014 by SPCS Leave a Comment

The National Business Review reported yesterday in its lead story:

The goal posts have shifted in the deal to buy Lochinver Station with a second Chinese company now involved in the overseas investment application process.

NBR ONLINE has learned Shenzhen-listed Hunan Dakang Pasture Farming is raising capital to acquire the New Zealand acquisition vehicle from Shanghai Pengxin Group.

The deal includes 16 Crafar farms and the 75% stake in Canterbury’s Synlait Farms, already acquired by Shanghai Pengxin, and also the potential acquisition of Lochinver, a 14,000ha property near Taupo….

Wellington man David Lane, who writes on the blog “Society for Promotion of Community Standards” [SPCS] says the recent delays lack transparency.

“The OIO [Overseas Investment Office] clerarly instructed Shanghai Pengxin to set up a wholly-owned subsidiary in New Zealand as an appropriate vehicle to purchase the Lochinver Station”.

Lane says if Dakang is now buying that subsidiary through An Yuan Dairy, the scheme runs counter to what the OIO requested.

‘Some 45% of the ownership of the assets will be in the hands of those who have not been scrutinised by OIO”.

Source: National Business Review. Story by Chief Reporter Duncan Bridgeman. 26 September 2014

For full article see: http://www.nbr.co.nz/article/listed-chinese-firm-targets-lochinver-and-other-nz-farm-assets-db-p-163047

Share this:

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Email
  • Print

Filed Under: Enforcement Tagged With: An Yuan Dairy, Crafar farms, David Lane, david lane spcs, Hunan Dakang Pasture Farming, Lochinver Station, Shanghai Pengxin Group, Shanhai Pengxin, Synlait Farms

« Previous Page
SPCS Facebook Page

Subscribe to website updates:

The Pilgrim’s Progress

Getting "The Pilgrim’s Progress" to
every prisoner in NZ prisons.

Recent Comments

  • John on The term ‘Homophobia’: Its Origins and Meanings, and its uses in Homosexual Agenda
  • SPCS on Corporate corruption in New Zealand – “Banning badly behaving company directors”
  • Anne on Corporate corruption in New Zealand – “Banning badly behaving company directors”
  • Jake on John Clancy: Troubled Global group costs Christchurch City Council another $37,000
  • Jake on John Clancy: Troubled Global group costs Christchurch City Council another $37,000

Family Values & Community Standards

  • Coalition for Marriage
  • ECPAT New Zealand
  • Family Voice Australia
  • Parents Inc.

Internet Safety

  • Netsafe Internet Safety Group

Pro-Life Groups

  • Family Life International
  • Right to Life
  • The Nathaniel Centre
  • Voice for Life
(Click here for larger image)

Copyright © 2025 · News Pro Theme on Genesis Framework · WordPress · Log in

loading Cancel
Post was not sent - check your email addresses!
Email check failed, please try again
Sorry, your blog cannot share posts by email.