Showing posts with label review and censorship power of religious tv programs. Show all posts
Showing posts with label review and censorship power of religious tv programs. Show all posts

Sunday, February 19, 2012

The Power of the MTRCB to Review and Classify Religious TV Programs : The Mendoza thesis


Among the various opinions filed in Iglesia ni Cristo vs. Court of Appeals, G.R. No. 119673, July 26, 1996, the  separate opinion of Justice Vicente V. Mendoza seems to me to be the most plausible. Because of that, I am posting a summary of his opinion apart from the rest of the opinions that I previously posted jointly.

Essentially, the Mendoza thesis says that “[c]ensorship may be allowed only in a narrow class of cases involving pornography, excessive violence, and danger to national security. Even in these cases, only courts can prohibit the showing of a film or the broadcast of a program. In all other cases, the only remedy against speech which creates a clear and present danger to public interests is through subsequent punishment. Considering the potentiality for harm which motion pictures and TV programs may have especially on the young, all materials may validly be required to be submitted for review before they may be shown or broadcast. However, the final determination of the character of the materials cannot be left to an administrative agency. That judicial review of administrative action is available does not obviate the constitutional objection to censorship.” 

Iglesia ni Cristo vs. Court of Appeals : The Power of the State to Review and Classify (Censor) Religious Television Shows


In Iglesia ni Cristo vs. CA, G.R. No. 119673, July 26, 1996, several pre-taped episodes of the TV program “Ang Iglesia ni Cristo” of the religious group Iglesia ni Cristo (INC) were rated “X” – i.e., not for public viewing – by the respondent Board of Review for Moving Pictures and Television (now Movie and Television Review and Classification Board). These TV programs allegedly “offend[ed] and constitute[d] an attack against other religions which is expressly prohibited by law” because of petitioner INC’s controversial biblical interpretations and its “attacks” against contrary religious beliefs. 

Petitioner INC went to court to question the actions of respondent Board. The RTC ordered the respondent Board to grant petitioner INC the necessary permit for its TV programs. But on appeal by the respondent Board, the CA reversed the RTC. The CA ruled that: (1) the respondent Board has jurisdiction and power to review the TV program “Ang Iglesia ni Cristo,” and (2) the respondent Board did not act with grave abuse of discretion when it denied permit for the exhibition on TV of the three series of “Ang Iglesia ni Cristo” on the ground that the materials constitute an attack against another religion. The CA also found the subject TV series “indecent, contrary to law and contrary to good customs.”