I'm confused that the thread got merged, especially when the other thread specified that he didn't want to get into the typical antinatalist stuff. — Terrapin Station
I asked him about rights realism because he was framing his discussion in terms of rights. — Terrapin Station
Straw man? — NOS4A2
If the news shows a swastika or racial vandalism, for example, I don’t think a bunch of neo-Nazis are going to rise from the ground and start attacking people. — NOS4A2
I said I didn’t want hate speech censored, not that I’d “rather have his speech published to a wide audience”. I don’t know how you leaped from what I said to your interpretation. — NOS4A2
When we talk about rights, at least in the American context, there is the claim that they are endowed by our Creator, which is a religious reference. Atheists also believe we have all sorts of rights, but I think it's harder for them to establish a basis for them. — Hanover
What if we're not realists on rights? — Terrapin Station
Forget it. I thought there was an opportunity to do some actually philosophy here. But it seems you aren't interested in that. — petrichor
Haven't you ever read Plato? I was trying to draw you into something a bit like a Socratic dialogue, my role being that of gadfly. You clearly don't want to examine your beliefs. And that's fine. I'll go play elsewhere. — petrichor
I already made clear my reason for asking you what rights are. — petrichor
I don't think you can justify your claim that we are entitled to have children. — petrichor
You accused someone else of not understanding entitlement. — petrichor
I suspect that you don't understand what you're accusing that person of not understanding. — petrichor
Just a flat assertion that we have a right to X and then a "defense" of that claim by just accusing people of not understanding rights is not going to fly in philosophy circles. — petrichor
I don’t think hate speech should be censored. If the news shows a swastika or racial vandalism, for example, I don’t think a bunch of neo-Nazis are going to rise from the ground and start attacking people. — NOS4A2
So you'd rather have his speech published to a wide audience, which is exactly what he wants. And if, out of that audience, a number of people are converted to his ideology, and maybe even go on to commit serious crimes in the name of that ideology, then that's alright with you. — S
As mentioned earlier, the case of Anjem Choudary.
It says that he was convicted of terrorism offences, because they were obviously going to nail him for a more severe crime if they could, but it's hate speech.
It’s well worth reading the remarks delivered by the judge in Choudary’s sentencing. Despite only finally falling foul of the law after being found to have pledged support to Isis, Holyrode points out that Choudary used his platform to spread his messages of division and violence long before he was arrested. Choudary is said to have “taken every opportunity to address audiences by various means”. He said to Choudary: “You wanted to address a large audience because you know that you were held in high regard by your followers, and that they could therefore be expected to be influenced by what you said.”
“Those who already held views in favour of Isis would no doubt have been encouraged and strengthened in those views by what you said, and that in itself makes your offending serious; but you were also aiming at a wider audience,” the judgment continues.
Choudary’s views, and more importantly his ability to communicate and share them, led to his extremism being propagated. What’s more, we know they contributed to encouraging others to engage in acts of indiscriminate, abhorrent violence. He was linked to one of the men who killed the soldier Lee Rigby, and the London Bridge attacker, Khuram Butt. His words are said to have influenced at least 100 British jihadists.
— The Guardian
From here.
And from the same article linked above, with regard to Darren Osbourne, perpetrator of the Finsbury Park mosque terrorist attack:
Police say it took just three or four weeks for Osborne’s extremism to emerge – evidence from devices he used show that he accessed posts by Tommy Robinson, Britain First and others.
— The Guardian
And oh, look:
Tommy Robinson banned from Facebook and Instagram over hate speech
Jayda Fransen: Ex-Britain First deputy leader convicted over hate speech — S
I just looked it up in the dictionary. Basically it says that entitlements are rights. And if I look up rights, basically it says they are entitlements. Each is even listed as a synonym of the other. Not very helpful! — petrichor
What a convoluted word salad. — NOS4A2
I wouldn’t mind if the media showed us hate speech, if that’s what you’re getting at. — NOS4A2
As has the press coverage in the UK. The reality though is that Corbyn is not remotely radical, and has not proposed a single policy that goes beyond what has already been implemented in the country and then dismantled. Some public housing, a national railway and power system, a national post, a national health service, and some workers' rights. It's all so mainstream that only Americans and propagandists would even call it unusual. — unenlightened
I am in a safe Tory seat unfortunately and will vote for the remain alliance, which ever party represents this. — Punshhh
Bratwurst. — T Clark
There's only one letter in your name. — T Clark
Would you knowingly hop on a perpetual roller coaster though? Obviously not. Then it’s not worth starting is it? — khaled
You did when you claimed that life being enjoyable makes it (guarantees it is) worth starting. — khaled
I was pointing out that life being worth living through doesn’t guarantee it being worth starting. — khaled
Agreed. People who are alive have an interest in continuing living. That doesn’t guarantee the experience is worth starting as I’ve said. — khaled
Arguing from popularity is a fallacy first of all. — khaled
So I’m going to ask YOU this: do you think every experience worth living through is worth starting? — khaled
Now the burden of proof is on you to show that life is worth starting. Because it being worth living doesn’t logically guarantee that. — khaled
No. — khaled
It would be to suggest those lives are not worth starting. — khaled
Let me ask an alternative question then: is genetically modifying children to blind them ethical? — khaled
And if not why not when you’ve said that having blind children is ethical. — khaled
A cat with no arms or legs isn't a snake. It's a doorstop. — Hanover
faust handschuh. — T Clark
If you could just grab that domain name before someone else takes it. :up: — Baden
That’s not reasoning that’s just your intuition. — khaled
Every experience worth starting is worth continuing (at least I can’t think of a counter example) but not vice versa. — khaled
guarantee — khaled
I agree. Having your skull folded and bent as you scream in pain is much worse. Childbirth is a painful experience for both mothers and children. So my analogy is apt this far. — khaled
I don’t understand what this has to do with anything. It’s almost as if you’ve already declared starting life the goal when that is exactly the topic of debate. — khaled
I think you’re misunderstanding what I meant. I was saying that life being an experience worth living through doesn’t mean it is worth starting. — khaled
I understand that the gouging eyes out example isn’t the best. — khaled
How about: having a child knowing they will be blind. Is that ethical for you? — khaled
What is a right? — petrichor
Anyway, so we're talking about a newspaper article? What was the link to it again? — Terrapin Station
Whether or not the living think life is worth living has nothing to do with whether or not they can add more people. — khaled
Because there is a difference between an experience worth living through and an experience worth starting. Example: blindness is an experience worth living through but that doesn’t make it ok to go around hacking people’s eyes out does it? — khaled
Similarly, life is worth living through but that doesn't necessarily justify adding more people to it does it? — khaled
Even though in both cases the person in question will likely get over the difficulties of blindness/life and come to enjoy it later. — khaled
To reject my argument we must resort to a utilitarian calculus dependent on an improbability of the consequences I described or balancing suffering with happiness. However these are all, as you know, probabilities and we can never be sure of them to the degree required to allow us to make a decision. — TheMadFool
I don't think it'd be good advice to avoid being hurt at all costs. Some experiences in life require you to get hurt. That doesn't make being hurt a good thing somehow, but it does mean I don't really want my children to never get hurt. — Echarmion
In very simple terms either your child will hurt or get hurt. — TheMadFool
I asked you twice now if we were talking about his written decision in the case. You never answered. — Terrapin Station
And then I asked if you had a link to the decision (or whatever you would have been referring to if not his decision). i said I was only finding articles about it. You never responded to that. — Terrapin Station
You did say that the judge didn't explicitly claim that hate speech legislation has a connection to controlling terrorism. — Terrapin Station
I think ethics is more important than entitlement. I'm entitled to eat meat but is it ethical to kill animals? — TheMadFool
Of course people are free to choose. That's not the issue. It's about the ethics of having children and clearly, if you don't want your child to hurt anyone or get hurt, both of which are inevitable and unethical, then people should NOT have children. — TheMadFool
Is there any academic source that suggests that hate speech legislation would have something to do with controlling terrorism? — Terrapin Station
It just doesn’t follow that me defending his free speech means I’d rather his speech published to a wide audience. — NOS4A2
Bandwagon fallacy? :broken: — TheMadFool
I’d like to hear those. I don’t mean this in a challenging or standoffish way, I’m just curious if there’s any I haven’t heard before. — khaled
See argument — Bartricks