



By Peter Vincent Pry
Hardening infrastructure will be key to minimizing the threat
Independent voices from the TWT Communities

Researchers have long known that the Internet has contributed to pornography addiction by making it so easily accessible. But that ease of access also has leveled the playing field between the sexes.

The geyser of oil escaping the Deepwater Horizon offshore drilling rig offers a metaphor for another sickening substance spreading through our land.
Congress must ensure that obscenity laws are enforced so that children are not exposed to pornography on the Internet, researchers and advocates of Internet safety said Tuesday.
It "only further hinders legal efforts to protect children from sexual exploitation," said Donna Rice Hughes, president of Enough Is Enough.
"Oregon took responsible steps to prohibit the use of sexually oriented or explicit speech with the intent to sexually arouse the minor or the furnisher," she said in a statement.

By Meredith Somers - The Washington Times
George W. Huguely V lied to friends about his whereabouts the night Yeardley Love was ...

By David Hood - The Washington Times
Reston-based LightSquared Inc. vowed Wednesday to continue its fight to establish a national wireless broadband ...

By Kristina Wong - The Washington Times
Defense Secretary Leon Panetta engaged in a testy back-and-forth with Rep. J. Randy Forbes over ...