I will use a circle in the following example. Basically, I am saying that a circle is never the same as something that is not a circle. Saying that I am wrong is saying that a circle is sometimes the same as a square or something else that is not a circle, is that something you agree with? — elucid
When changes occur, the stuff that changed isn't the same after the change as it was before the change, sure. That's the whole idea of change. If it were the same, then it wouldn't be the case that it changed. — Terrapin Station
I am very sorry that you did not understand. My statements are extremely easy to understand, and, at the moment, I do not know how to get more clear with you. — elucid
What I'd think is, "Okay, those are your criteria." — Terrapin Station
Aren't you aware that different people think different things are "perfect sense"? — Terrapin Station
I'm not saying that's not a threat. It's not what I'd consider a criminal threat; it's not anything that should be legislated against. Merely making a verbal threat is not at all sufficient for that in my opinion. — Terrapin Station
Again, I feel that you did not understand my statements. — elucid
The statements, ultimately, are saying that a circle is always a circle, a square always a square, a man always a man, something existent always existent, and something non-existent is always non-existent, etc. — elucid
A man who posted neo-Nazi stickers on lamp-posts has been jailed for 30 months.
Nathan Worrell, 46, was found guilty of eight offences of stirring up racial hatred at Grimsby Crown Court.
During the trial, Worrell denied the Holocaust took place and said he had been a member of the Ku Klux Klan.
He was jailed for seven years and three months in 2008 for possessing bomb-making materials and waging a hate campaign against a mixed-race couple.
Worrell described himself in court as an "ethno-nationalist" and said he did not believe in "diversity or multiculturalism".
A police raid on his home in Scott Close, Grimsby found clothing, photographs, fridge magnets and pin badges bearing Nazi symbolism.
He posted his home-made stickers with highly offensive comments on lamp-posts and street furniture in Grimsby and Hull.
'Abhorrent'
Worrell defended his actions in court as freedom of speech.
Sentencing, Judge Paul Watson QC said Worrell was "wedded to the cause of far right nationalism and national socialism".
The judge made it clear he was not sentencing for political views "however abhorrent they may be".
He told Worrell: "Your conduct went far beyond the limits of freedom of opinion and expression which the law permits."
Det Ch Supt Martin Snowden from Counter Terrorism Policing North East, said: "These offences clearly show that Worrell has not learnt or changed his behaviour despite serving a previous prison sentence.
"By obtaining and distributing these hateful messages Worrell is inciting hatred, potentially threatening public safety and security as well as the stability of the local community." — BBC News
This seems really familiar, but wasn't there something about a frog? — T Clark
There are reasons why Terrapin and the German lawmakers choose to include some form of communicative act in the definition, but not the mode of locomotion. There is also a reason why we have a category for laws that restrict speech, but not for crimes that restrict what gait you may adopt. This is obvious, right? — Echarmion
If you have the “freedom to hold opinions and to receive and impart information and ideas without interference by public authority and regardless of frontiers”, surely you can read ISIS’s propaganda magazine Dabiq. Surely you can retweet a limerick about trans-people without getting investigated by police. But we already know this is not the case. — NOS4A2
I'm saying that if someone says, "I'd consider certain things 'criminal insults,'" and they give you a specific outline, specific criteria for what they're referring to by that term, then trying to argue from a broader perspective based on other conventions isn't going to work. You'd need to just look at the criteria they spelled out, and the criteria could be anything. It's possible for their criteria to not even be about speech at all. — Terrapin Station
"Reasonable" is subjective, "common sense" is often nonsense and appeals to it are one of the lamest rhetorical tactics, and when we're talking about normatives, we're not dealing with things that are true or false.
But at any rate, sure, you're not interested. That's fine. There's probably no reason for us to go back and forth with each other about it then. Let's move on to something you're interested in. — Terrapin Station
I was asked about my view on it. I pasted what my policy would be. If you're not interested in that, then don't read (or bother commenting on) the post. The idea isn't to capture some common notion of the term (or rather some common notion of when it's morally or legally problematic). — Terrapin Station
But the threat can be speech. — Echarmion
No, that wouldn't be at all sufficient. I have specific conditions that need to be met that I make explicit. — Terrapin Station
Many find the deliberate belittling of another to be funny. Doesn't make it hate speech. — creativesoul
Everyone deserves a certain modicum of respect(dignity, worth, value) simply because they are human. — creativesoul
Don't quit your day job. The comedy needs work. — creativesoul
Of course. They are extremes intended to show a general principle. — khaled
They don't "rely" on analogies. Analogies just make them easier to understand, extreme as the ones I chose were — khaled
I never thought someone would ask for evidence for this but sure. Here is one: You are never allowed to buy something with other people's money even if you think it's good for them as long as you can't ask them first. — khaled
Death is the least risky option? Really? There is absolutely no chance that unconscious person wouldn't have wished to die? There is very little risk in killing them? Are you listening to yourself? — khaled
Death has a massively negative value for those living. Remaining non existant doesn't have a negative value for those who don't exist (if it even makes sense to say that, the point is no one is harmed by not existing but people are harmed by dying). That's why your analogy doesn't work. — khaled
Doesn't matter, in the case of a subconsious person, they had the ability to express a desire to live. Knowing that most people express a desire to live means you don't have a right to kill them even if you think it would be better for them. — khaled
The implication is: As long as someone can kill themselves to leave an unpleasant situation, that justifies putting them there. I don't think either of us agree with that. — khaled
Looks like ridicule to me. It's related to hate speech in that they are both founded upon a personal value system which devalues others for irrational reasons. — creativesoul
Again, criminal threatening as I describe it isn't a speech act. — Terrapin Station
Nor in the eye, for which design we'd flunk our engineering course. — PoeticUniverse
Where is the Intelligence in the Design? — Jacob-B
But it seems to follow that "speech acts can never be illegal" is not a tenable position then. The question that follows is what benefit does a dogmatic adherence to "free speech absolutism" have? — Echarmion
Yeah, I hold the conception found in Article 19 of the UN declaration of human rights. These are not fanatics.
You’re speaking of the censorship and regulation of free expression as defined by law. — NOS4A2
What do you think of the mainstream religions that are homophobic and misogynous? — Gnostic Christian Bishop
You presuppose it is impossible the bill wouldn't receive Royal Assent without the Monarch refusing assent. — Galuchat
I’m talking of free speech, not UK law and their fevered and infantilizing censorship. It’s becoming more apparent you do not even know what free speech is. — NOS4A2
No I’m not. Free speech is the same everywhere, it’s just that the degrees of censorship are different. So yes, he would be defending free speech, as other human rights defenders always have. You would be defending censorship. — NOS4A2