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Hot Talk Magazine Back Issue, December 1999

Hot Talk Dec. 1999/Jan. 2000 magazine back issue Hot Talk magizine back copy hot talk magazine back issues penthouse erotic fiction naughty xxx stories reader writes phone sex p
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Hot Talk Dec. 1999/Jan. 2000 Magazine

ISSN: 0898-1086

TABLE OF CONTENTS

4 HOT AIR
Mail
8 ANATOMY
Wanna Take a Bath?
16 HOTBOX I
Sex & Variety
24 FICTION
Literary Lessons
30 PHOTOGRAPHY
Second-Hand
38 HOT TALK
Screwin' Around
44 REVIEW
Videos
48 REVIEW
Books & Music
52 PROFILES IN ART
Mick Rock
56 CONFESSIONS
The Continuing Education of Bebe
62 PHOTOGRAPHY
Hat Trick
72 HOT BOX II
Sex & Wives
80 SEX SURVEY
Ball 'n' Chain
82 PHOTOGRAPHY
Peek-a-Boob
90 ALTUNA COMIX
Review Lesson
96 PET PINUP
Jessica James
112 FETISH
While You Were Sleeping

EDITORIAL NOTE
We hear the same outcry from our self-appointed watchdogs every day: "Get rid of sex and violence in the media, and our country's problems will be cured. No longer will the minds of our youth be poisoned. Never again will any disaffected child, disgruntled employee or rejected lover resolve their problems by picking up a gun."
When it comes to photo ops and sound bites, sex and violence are lumped together as if they're the same thing. But behind the scenes they're mutually exclusive. At the same time the morality police coerce sixteen-year-olds into signing "virginity contracts," they work to debunk, deny and derail laws that would keep a gun from falling into the hands of that same teenager—or anyone else.
It doesn't take an analytical genius to realize that this equation is not only severely flawed and severely hypocritical, but severely dangerous as well.
None of us should be at liberty to pick and choose which parts of the Constitution are good or bad, outmoded or outstanding. How can conservative zealots tout the right to bear arms as sacred, yet claim that playing fast and loose with free speech is perfectly sound and healthy?
Ironically, these "true conservatives" miss the most basic cornerstone of what makes this country great: America is the strongest country on Earth because it is the freest. Pro-censorship fanatics don't understand that our country isn't the strongest because it's the biggest; China is bigger. Nor is it strongest because it's the richest; other countries have greater riches. No, we are strongest because we are the freest, and those who cry out for the protection of our moral purity are actually dragging this country down for the sake of their own power. The conservatism they embrace is based purely in the fact that America was settled by religious fanatics with guns.
They also don't seem to grasp that our freedom isn't the result of the will of politicians. We are "condemned" to freedom by the diversity of our population, its races, religions and philosophies. That's why the first amendment exists to begin with: to protect the speech, religions and assembly of everyone. Note that it's always those who would bend the country to their own will who condemn other races and religions. Also note that any regime that has passed "purity laws" began with what they called perverts, then moved on to other facets of society.
Once perversion is defined and outlawed, the same language will be used to outlaw anything else. It happened to the free countries of eastern Europe in the '30s; the fascist and communist powers that succeeded in censoring those they felt subversive broadened their scope to include many other social "deviants."
Keep in mind also that ours is a country with a constitution and government that has been incapable for over two centuries of defining the Vice Presidency. How can we ever hope to reach a viable definition of pornography?
Getting back to the media, I recently saw a list of the ten most often usEd Lines of movie dialogue. Number two was, "I'm going to kill you." Number three was, "I love you." What does it say when a fictional character is more likely to threaten someone with death than offer love? This should be an indication of where the zealots should really concentrate their initiative.
Incidentally, the most often usEd Line of movie dialogue is, "Let's get out of here."
—Brian Reich

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