Online Free Speech - Client, Adam Glickman
Adam Glickman started Condomania, the nation's first condom
store and a leading online seller of condoms and distributor of safer-sex
related materials.
Sixteen years ago, I
opened Condomania, America's first condom store, with the mission to
educate people and change the way they thought about condoms.
In 1996, we became one of the first sites on the Internet selling safer sex
products, and one of the leading sites providing comprehensive, frank
educational information about various issues surrounding sexual
health. The Internet literally opened the door to our stores for
people worldwide to benefit from our expertise.
Condomania is proud
of its outstanding reputation in the public health world, the national media and
among the general public. Notably, the Centers for Disease Control
regularly refers individuals to Condomania for information about condoms and
related safer sex issues. While many parents educate their children about
sexual health, millions more do not. And while some progressive schools
provide unbiased, non-political knowledge on sexual health to their students,
many more do not. Condomania regularly provides information to anyone who
needs it, no questions asked.
The potential impact
of COPA, in the midst of a public health crisis, cannot be understated.
Since Congress passed COPA in October 1998, there have been more than eight
million unintended teenage pregnancies in the
United
States; the
United
States has twice the teen pregnancy rate of any
other industrialized nation. In the same time period there have been 120
million new cases of STDs, including an estimated 320,000 cases of HIV.
Requiring age
verification will not only prevent young people – including many desperate for
candid, honest information they can understand – from accessing our site, but it
would inevitably deter others who are old enough. Whether due to the
hassles of registering, or the fear that our site contained “inappropriate”
information, the impact on Condomania's business would be severe. COPA
would result in tarnishing a valued brand, built up over years of hard work, by
grouping us with pornographers.
Like all parents, I
seek constantly to protect my young children from harm. But I disagree
strenuously with COPA's definition of “material that is harmful to
minors.” Restricting the ability of anyone, especially young people, to
access information that can save their lives is not consistent with the stated
objective of COPA to “protect[] the physical and psychological well-being of
minors.” I am quite proud of the information Condomania.com offers, and
the difference we have been able to make these past 16 years. And that is
why I am proud to participate in this important litigation.
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