Abusive "argumentation"
I'm making the pragmatic point that many people are fairly impervious to reason and more swayed by rthetoric, so if "winning" in the marketplace of ideas really was just down to using reason, I'd agree with you, but I'm saying it's demonstrably not.
So, I'm rejecting the implication as put here:
You see, in a free society, where free ideas are allowed to compete and the winners are those that are coherent, reasonable and consistent, Nazism would never be able to gain a foothold. — Harry Hindu
that the winners in the marketplace of ideas will be the ideas that are coherent, reasonable and consistent. It's more like the winners in the marketplace of ideas will be those of whoever is in power. To paraphrase Marx, the ruling ideology is the ideology of the rulers. And wrt to extremism, what determines whether it flourishes or not tends to relate more to the presence of social and economic turmoil that upsets the hegemony of the ruling class than levels of censorship etc. The power of the prevalent ideology tends to wane in proportion to how difficult it gets to put food on the table.
Of course, none of that is incompatible with the more philosophical point that, all other things being equal, the use of reason is, theoretically, the best way for each individual to search for truth. That's hardly more than a truism. And in any case, I'm in agreement with the principles of public free speech (with some minor limitations). What I reject is the idea that because it is desirable to apply this to society as a whole, it is desirable to apply it to every micro-environment in that society. What is more desirable in my view is that people are given a choice of environments of varying levels of free speech which they can freely choose to frequent in so far as it suits them to do so. What posters can't get here, they can get somewhere else, but if we all acquiesced to full free speech then this type of controlled environment, which is many people's preference, would be unavailable anywhere.
Exactly. That is why I said that we need to dispense with the labeling and engage in reasoning your way through arguments. Labeling does nothing other than reinforce your already deeply held beliefs (beliefs with emotional attachments). — Harry Hindu
But again, we're in a battle for framing as I've already alluded to. And labelling is to some degree unavoidable. So, the label you seem to want to put on someone like me is an "enemy of reason" or an "enemy of free speech". On those terms, you already win. And yes, it's true if I successfully label someone a Nazi or a racist, I already win (among the vast majority of people). So, if you can deprive me through an effort at framing of the legitimacy of taking advantage of explicit labels while you take advantage of implicit ones, you put me at a disadvantage (I'm using "you" and "I" in a generalized way here btw). All of that is just a matter of argumentative strategy. Where the ethical comes in is in terms of goals. What is the strategy aimed at achieving?