• Free speech plan to tackle 'silencing' views on university campus


    You're granting exclusive censorship rights to owners of media platforms(which is to say that ownership is adequate reason to grant censorship rights), and simultaneously claiming that all censorship is unwarranted(which is to say that there are no adequate reasons for censorship).

    Either you know this or not. Either way, it's unacceptable even before getting into all of the absurdity of granting exclusivity of censorship rights only to owners of means of discourse; even before getting into the absurdity of the very idea that anyone owns a means of discourse.

    And...

    You're claiming that there is no power in freedom of speech.

    :brow:

    Why then, is it so important???
  • Free speech plan to tackle 'silencing' views on university campus
    I don't know what policy changes you have in mind, but if they are based on rejection of the idea of human agency and responsibility, they won't fly, in my opinion; and nor should they.Janus

    Do you think that people ought be held responsible for the effects/affects of their speech?
  • Free speech plan to tackle 'silencing' views on university campus
    Edit - just to be absolutely clear - this is the grounds on which I don't believe your false virtue signalling about 'free speech'. If you really believed words were powerless, then banning all of them would be a trivial matter, like banning hats. Stupid, pointless, but ultimately harmless. We'd all just get used to wet heads and have done with it. No. The reason why you don't want certain words banned is because (despite your phoney nonsense to the contrary) you know perfectly well that words have the power to influence people and you don't want influence in your chosen direction to be taken away from you.Isaac

    A good point to make...
  • Free speech plan to tackle 'silencing' views on university campus
    I never said censorship was warranted. I said that they can censor if they wanted to. This is because it is their property.NOS4A2

    You did answer "I do" earlier when asked if you found all censorship unwarranted.

    So, on pains of coherency alone...

    If all censorship is unwarranted then even in situations when an individual owns the means of discourse - say television, radio, or other social media outlet - that ownership does not provide warrant for them to censor.



    More importantly, they also should not be granted completely unrestricted freedom to say whatever they so chose for whatever reasons they deem necessary, simply because they own the means of discourse, unless of course, they also bear responsibility for the effects/affects of what's said.
  • intersubjectivity
    Yeah... omniscience is not required for knowledge. We need not know everything in order to know some things. Just because we do not see everything as it is does not mean that we cannot see anything as it is.
  • Free speech plan to tackle 'silencing' views on university campus
    Not all individuals' speech is equivalent in it's power. The restrictions placed upon one's freedoms(speech notwithstanding) ought be determined in light of the known, observable, sometimes quantifiable effects/affects that that freedom has upon others when fully exercised.
  • Free speech plan to tackle 'silencing' views on university campus
    When freedom of speech is being used to excuse deliberately defrauding the American public, it is an admission of guilt.
  • Free speech plan to tackle 'silencing' views on university campus
    I am not so fearful of falsity nor doubtful of truth...NOS4A2

    Good... because, when discussing a representative form of government such as the one The United States of America is supposed to be, a well informed electorate is necessary for free and fair elections.




    In fact, I cannot think of any man or group of people in history with the ability and moral superiority to decide what others cannot say and read. Can you?NOS4A2

    Not very good at history, I see...

    :brow:

    Um....

    Errrrr....

    Sigh.

    All of 'em.
  • Free speech plan to tackle 'silencing' views on university campus
    I am opposing the idea that some words, certain combinations of letters or articulated guttural sounds, are more dangerous than others.NOS4A2

    Well you'd better take that up with world around you, because it contradicts your belief about it.
  • Free speech plan to tackle 'silencing' views on university campus
    Despite saying some of the stupidest possible shit one could say about potential treatments for the pandemic, he almost fucking won anyway.

    How?

    Because people believed him and nothing - evidently - could be done to stop him from dominating the discourse by defrauding the American public.
    — creativesoul

    But why? Why did so many people vote for Trump despite all his lies?
    Number2018

    The question doesn't lead to anything remotely useful.

    When we ask "why" someone votes for Trump despite all his lies, we will not likely receive an accurate causal explanation of their actions.
  • Corporate neglect turned deadly -- is it 'just business' and not personal?
    But a corporate criminal stealing for years and doing magnitudes greater harm and damage may only lose a year or a few years, and in many cases preserve his life and prospects for a return to life and well-being, even if he has destroyed the lives, prospects, and well-being of thousands of others.tim wood

    We call those politicians around here...
  • intersubjectivity
    ...no one has "an experience of red", they merely experience things as red, or as not red...unenlightened

    Which requires knowing which sorts of things we call "red"; knowing how to use "red". Such experience cannot rightfully be called "subjective" or "private" in any sensible way for experiencing red things as such cannot even happen without intersubjective public language use. If personal experiences are to count as subjective and/or private, then they cannot be existentially dependent upon intersubjective and public things like knowing how to use "red", and/or knowing which sorts of things are called "red".
  • Free speech plan to tackle 'silencing' views on university campus
    The 2020 president of The United States of America based his own policy making decisions and all of his public speech regarding a worldwide pandemic upon the sound advice of many - perhaps most - of the world's best epidemiologists. <---------That's an accurate report of brute facts. He most certainly believed what they(Fauci, for example) said about the danger Americans were about to face... well he believed it at first anyway. That much is clear by his own account. It's a matter of public record.

    It's the subsequent actions taken as a result of learning about the dangers that are criminal. Defrauding the American public is certainly a criminal act. When that fraud played an instrumental role in a few hundred thousand(and still counting) unnecessary deaths, then the perpetrator must be held responsible for the harm caused as a result of their behaviour. There are hundreds of thousands of dead Americans that would still be alive had their lives and livelihoods been put first.

    In or around February of the year 2020, upon beginning to understand the horror of what was about to happen to US citizens - even if we took every possible precaution to mitigate the harm - this foolish man, this so-called leader, this crass inconsiderate fuck of a president of The United States of America deliberately and knowingly misrepresented the danger that he had just learned lie immediately ahead in Americans' future.

    He lied about covid19 in every conceivable way that one can lie. Stating known falsehood. Omitting relevant information. Saying stuff that he himself did not believe. He also immediately attacked all others who said anything to the contrary of what he said publicly. Anyone who Trump did not believe had his back was undermined in the public arena. Again, all this is a matter of public record.

    Instead of doing everything in his power to reduce the amount of harm suffered by American citizens as a result of covid19, he became more and more concerned with how the pandemic was effecting/affecting American voters. He was, in fact, beginning to believe that the pandemic was going to work against him by playing an influential negative role in an upcoming election. He strongly believed that taking the necessary actions to minimize the unnecessary harm that Americans would suffer would have negative effects upon the stock market. Given that the stock market(the 'American economy') was one of Trump's favorite things to point out and use for his own self-aggrandizement(an ace in the hole, so to speak), and given that Trump now needed to remain in the office of the presidency to avoid his own prosecution, that fat fuck would stop at nothing to remain in power long enough to disseminate all the evidence of his own wrongdoings both prior to and after winning the 2016 election.

    Trump did not expect to win the first election(that much is clear and is also a matter of public record), and publicly pronounced genuine regret for having done so in an interview not long after(again, a matter of public record). Nonetheless he most certainly needed to win the second, because he knew damned good and well that the aforementioned regret was very well grounded. He had good reason to worry. While that attention whore loves being loved and focused upon, he's also quite particular about the kind of attention he gets. He did not like the attention of the law. He did everything in his own power to stop any and all investigations into him and/or his election campaign. Again, this is all a matter of public record.

    Make no mistake about it though, the pandemic could rightfully be called a blessing in disguise, because had things been different, it could've been much worse. Hell, had that dumb fucker even considered the praise that would have been given to him had he just put American lives and livelihoods first instead of being paralyzed by the fear of losing the upcoming election, the uncontested incumbent re-election success rate of the office of the presidency of The United States of America would probably not have been tarnished. No, to quite the contrary, he was poised to win. In fact, he nearly did anyway, despite knowingly and deliberately defrauding the American public in very specific ways that had the very clear result of exponentially increasing the risk of unnecessary financial, physical, emotional, and/or biological harms to all Americans. Despite saying some of the stupidest possible shit one could say about potential treatments for the pandemic, he almost fucking won anyway.

    How?

    Because people believed him and nothing - evidently - could be done to stop him from dominating the discourse by defrauding the American public.

    So...

    I've a little different take on the notion of unfettered free speech.
  • Free speech plan to tackle 'silencing' views on university campus
    Nice examples of unwarranted censorship. Do you find all censorship unwarranted?

    I do. When I think about the sum total of linguistic expression, it pains me to think of all the history, knowledge, and art that has been stolen, suppressed, and destroyed because someone could not bear to look at it. I don’t envy the censors; they will forever be tied to what they stole from posterity.

    I do think, however, that if someone owns their own means of discourse they can censor at their whim and fancy, ironically, on free speech grounds.
    NOS4A2

    I wouldn't characterize your having written that as "ironic". I'd say it was, is, and will forever remain self-contradictory, untenable, inconsistent, irrational, illogical, unacceptable rhetorical bullshit.

    If all censorship is unwarranted, then none is warranted. <-------that points out the self-contradiction and/or untenability of what you've offered here.

    It's really pretty simple and easy to understand...

    If all censorship is unwarranted then even in situations when an individual owns the means of discourse - say television, radio, or other social media outlet - that ownership does not provide warrant for them to censor.




    A theatre owner yells "fire" in their own theatre and is somehow not responsible for what happens as a result, because... they own the theatre.

    Yeah, I'm not finding much moral/ethical value in your beliefs about free speech.
  • The Riddle Of Everything Meaningful
    You’re talking about meaningful as a way of being or becoming in relation to a creature.Possibility

    You're not getting it.

    I'm talking about how all things become meaningful.
  • The Riddle Of Everything Meaningful
    Causality refers to a temporal relation...Possibility

    Causality is not the sort of thing even capable of referring.
  • The Riddle Of Everything Meaningful
    I’m not suggesting we attribute possible meaning to your cat.Possibility

    :brow:

    That's exactly what we're doing when we're talking about what's meaningful to her.


    I’m saying that our awareness of the aquarium’s significance to your cat has meaning for us.Possibility

    Our awareness has meaning... for us, nonetheless?

    :yikes:

    Weird way to talk, if you ask me.

    How does our awareness become meaningful... for us?
  • Free speech plan to tackle 'silencing' views on university campus
    No greater excuse has been used to justify censorship than this action-at-a-distance, the magical thinking that words cause adverse effects on groups of people or society as a whole, as if it was poison, pollution, or a natural disaster. Examples of this are myriad. Whether expression is “corrupting the youth” in the case of Socrates, “adversely affect public health, safety, and morals” in the censorship of Bertrand Russel, or it leads to “disorder and mischief which were thence proceeding and increasing to the detriment of the Holy Faith” in the case of Galileo. In each case some fearful authority attempts to raise expression to a species of dangerous sorcery somehow capable of manipulating matter.NOS4A2

    Nice examples of unwarranted censorship. Do you find all censorship unwarranted?

    Is it okay - on your view - to yell "Fire!" in a crowded theatre, for example? Is it ok to spread falsehood after falsehood as a means to effect/affect deliberately taken action, say to... oh, I don't know... how about... stop the certification process of an American presidential election by virtue of taking over the building in which the elected officials certify the aforementioned results on the day of certification? Is that protected under free speech? Seems like that speech was an instrumental element, without which, the insurrection attempt would not have even been attempted.

    Trump did everything in his power to convince his followers that the election was stolen from him, and that if no one in the government would stop that from happening, that the people would have to stop it from happening.

    Do you find that Trump's words over the previous year regarding the election are protected under free speech?
  • Free speech plan to tackle 'silencing' views on university campus
    All lives matter...Book273

    Not if black lives don't.

    They get harassed for being white in the wrong area of town, at the wrong time. And they don't get over looked because their name is unusual, they get over looked because of the distinctly white name, and not allowed into certain programs as they are immediately disqualified due to being white.Book273

    Are you denying that what I've said is true, or are you just wanting to change the subject?
  • Friendly Game of Chess


    I hope that you play here. I like watching.
  • The meaning of life.
    The meaning of life is that life is used as a jail...

    ...used by some judge or another for punishment of our actions, protection of others from our actions, and for our own rehabilitation.

    This all presupposes that the actions we're being punished for, that others are being protected from, and that we're being rehabilitated for, were taken - somehow - prior to life itself.

    Gibberish.
  • The Problem Of The Criterion
    A. We can't know instances of truth without having a definition of truth/knowledge [methodism]

    B. We can't have a definition of truth without knowing instances of truth/knowledge. [particularism]
    TheMadFool

    I disagree.

    Language users can know when some statements are true or not long before they have a definition of truth or knowledge. That much is easily proven.
  • Free speech plan to tackle 'silencing' views on university campus
    The idea of "white privilege" is one of those contorted politically correct concepts, confected to cause offence, to divide people and incite the very racist sentiment it is purportedly intended to address. The white working class majority who struggle to make ends meet - cannot but be offended by such a concept, but that's precisely the purpose.counterpunch

    That's not what white privilege is. It's not an idea. It does not require being named. The name "white privilege" is used to pick out something that existed in it's entirety prior to being picked out by the name. Whites do not typically think about the fact that they are not treated unfairly because they are non white, because they are not... treated unfairly as a result of being non white. Whites are exempt from the liability of being non white in America. Being exempt from that liability is white privilege. There's no intent to cause offense. There's no intent to divide people. There's no purpose to offend poor whites.

    The intent, the purpose, is to shed some much needed light upon the ongoing mistreatment of non whites in America that stems from the racist foundations that America was built upon.

    White privilege is something that requires being discussed because it is something that is ingrained in American culture and needs to be corrected. Such discussions will enlighten those who do not realize the historical extent of the suffering that non whites have been forced to bear simply because they are not white. It brings to light the fact that racism still plays a pervasive role. It forces us to decide whether or not we will look the other way, or at the very least, take a stand against the unfair treatment of others. Make the conversation happen on all the levels that will effect/affect the necessary change.

    Trump tried to cancel such free speech, such academic teachings, by executive order nonetheless. It's an American history lesson that needs to be taught to each and every American, not just at the university level.
  • The Riddle Of Everything Meaningful
    There is a distinction between meaningful and meaningful TO someone.Possibility

    I missed this. I completely disagree.

    If we replace "someone" with "a creature capable of attributing meaning" there is no distinction between being meaningful and being meaningful to a creature capable of attributing meaning.

    Your notion of significance blurs the distinction between causality and meaning. Causality is always significant, but not always meaningful. That's part of my rejection of significance being equated to meaning. They are not equivalent.
  • The Riddle Of Everything Meaningful
    I’m not saying that Cookie attributes possible meaning, but that possible meaning is attributable (by us)...Possibility

    If we attribute possible meaning to my cat...

    Can we be wrong? How could we possibly know that we are? What standard of comparison could we use as a means to know what sort of stuff is meaningful to her, could become meaningful to her, and what sort of stuff cannot possibly be, or cannot ever become meaningful to her?
  • Free speech plan to tackle 'silencing' views on university campus
    People seem to have forgotten about all the horrible stuff that has happened to poor white people, usually done by other white people, so the concept of white privilege rings hollow to me.Book273

    It is quite possible to do both, talk about the injustices/plight of poor whites while noting that even poor whites do not have to worry about being shot and killed because they are black, unless that is, they are mistaken as such, which does happen. Poor whites do not get stopped and harrassed for walking black at night, do not get immediately overlooked for a job because their name is unusual, etc.

    There's an intersection here of being treated unfairly. Discussion of white privilege does not require ignoring the plight of poor working class whites. It's actually quite sad that so many poor white take immediate offense to the notion as well as Black Lives Matter.
  • Free speech plan to tackle 'silencing' views on university campus


    White privilege is what white people do not have to deal with on a daily basis that non whites do. It is injury suffered because one is non white that white people avoid suffering because they are not. It is the exemption from the liability of being non white. It's not a misnomer at all. Some folk misuse it, but some folk run stop signs and misuse free speech as well. The former president's team of attorneys has recently done precisely that, which is hypocritical on it's face given the former president's own speech and actions taken against peaceful demonstrations and Critical Theory.


    As white privilege pertains to matters of free speech in academia...

    Do you find anything at all wrong with universities teaching extensive in depth classes about the plight of Black people in America, with a particular focus upon the civil war era and afterwards? Dred Scott? Black Code in the south? Redlining? Segregation? Frederick Douglass? The lack of a path to American citizenship for black people(even those born here)? The sustained demonization of public assistance policies? The creation of mythical creatures like 'welfare queens'? The continued demonization of black men?
  • Free speech plan to tackle 'silencing' views on university campus
    it was synthesis that called you racist - so why bring it up with me and book273?counterpunch

    Yes. My apologies.
  • Free speech plan to tackle 'silencing' views on university campus
    If you agree that the term is a misnomer...counterpunch

    I do not.
  • Free speech plan to tackle 'silencing' views on university campus


    Yes, it was another who charged me with being racist. Have you looked at the link I provided? It's about privilege, and much of it is about the notion of white privilege in particular.
  • Free speech plan to tackle 'silencing' views on university campus


    Did either of you have a look at the earlier link provided?

    Since I've been called a racist here, do I not get my speech protected? You know... the speech that led you to believe I'm racist?
  • The Riddle Of Everything Meaningful
    When she’s thirsty, her limited capacity for thought gravitates towards this potentiality. If you empty the tank, she would still consider it, but it may eventually drop in this significance in favour of other water sources with more recently perceived potential to satisfy an allocation of attention and effort toward the relation.Possibility

    When she's thirsty she goes to the place where she drinks. She knows how to get there. If she found it empty, she'd go elsewhere.


    I have an overall relational structure in mind that is six-dimensional, with possibility or meaning as six-dimensional structure, value, potential or significance as five-dimensional and physical interaction, events or life as four-dimensional structures of relation. Each dimensional level allows a corresponding level of integrated awareness.Possibility

    I'm suddenly reminded of being charged with using an unnecessarily complicated framework.
  • Free speech plan to tackle 'silencing' views on university campus


    Leaves are elemental constituents of the process of raking leaves. A link of existential necessity. Where there have never been leaves, there could have never been leaf-raking.

    Leaves are to leaf-raking as some speech is to certain individual action taken.
  • Free speech plan to tackle 'silencing' views on university campus
    If we're unable to define a human right we shouldn't insist there is one.counterpunch

    Are you suggesting that there is no such thing as rights afforded to any and all individuals simply because they are human?
  • The Riddle Of Everything Meaningful
    My point is that possible meaning is attributed where we recognise variable significance, and potential significance is attributed where we recognise variable attention and effort.Possibility

    This looks like of those times where the narrative gets meta and the authors lose sight of the ground.

    The very notion of possible meaning is existentially dependent upon language use. Where there has never been language use, there could have never been anyone hedging their bets upon another's meaning. Possible meaning is only attributed within a language game. Cookie does not play such games.
  • The Riddle Of Everything Meaningful
    That’s how you recognise the significance of the relation...Possibility

    'The' relation? As if we've only been discussing one. Clarity... please.

    :brow:

    There are a plethora of different relations between the aquarium and the cat. Some are meaningful to the cat. Some are not. Some are significant to her. Some are not. Some are both, significant and meaningful to her. Some are significant but not meaningful to her. All things meaningful to her become so by virtue of becoming a part of some correlation or other that she draws between different things. Some meaningful things exist in their entirety prior to ever becoming a part of a correlation she draws between them and other things(prior to ever becoming meaningful to her). Some do not.



    WE recognize the life-sustaining relation between water and her(this harks back to the aforementioned "role" that the aquarium plays) as well as a place for her to get a drink. One of these two relations she is aware also of, but the other... not so much. The aquarium is meaningful to her as a place to get a drink. The aquarium is significant to her as a place to get a drink and as an elemental constituent in/of that process. She recognizes the aquarium as a place to get a drink, not as a life sustaining source of drinking water. Not all things that have a significant impact upon her life are meaningful to her as such.

    The cat's aquarium is becoming more and more the perfect example for us to use.
  • The Riddle Of Everything Meaningful
    Fair enough - not consciously recognised as significant, but nevertheless manifest in her attention and effort towards the aquarium. That’s how you recognise the significance of the relation - because her attention and effort (her integration and manifestation of significance) is not just meaningful but significant TO you. It is not, however significant TO me, although I recognise its potential significance, and that is meaningful to me.Possibility

    The cat is neither you nor I.