This included a controversial article on disability and sex in Larry Flynt's Hustler.
In the latter piece, Fish argues that, if one has some answer in mind to the question "what is free speech good for?" along the lines of "in the free and open clash of viewpoints the truth can more readily be known," then it makes no sense to defend deliberate malicious libel (such as that which was at issue in the U.S. Supreme Court case of Hustler Magazine v. Falwell) in the name of "free speech."
Billboard (magazine) | Time (magazine) | Vogue (magazine) | magazine | Esquire (magazine) | Harper's Magazine | Life (magazine) | National Geographic (magazine) | Mojo (magazine) | Fortune (magazine) | Variety (magazine) | Slate (magazine) | People (magazine) | New York (magazine) | Magazine | Stern (magazine) | Punch (magazine) | Elle (magazine) | PC Magazine | The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction | Spin (magazine) | Mad (magazine) | The Ring (magazine) | The New York Times Magazine | Mother Jones (magazine) | Scribner's Magazine | Penthouse (magazine) | PC World (magazine) | Maxim (magazine) | Hustler |
In 1999, Christopher Lamparello created a website to respond to and criticize the anti-homosexual statements of popular and sometimes controversial Christian evangelical preacher Rev. Dr. Jerry Falwell.
•
In 1999, Christopher Lamparello registered the domain name fallwell.com and used the affiliated website as a gripe site to express his negative opinions about the Fundamentalist Christian preacher Jerry Falwell's public statements against homosexuality.