Everyone agrees that free speech should have some limits, the one which is pertinent here is the exception of violence and oppression. — Judaka
Trump talking about banning Muslims is a rich, white, powerful male using his free speech to oppress and disadvantage Muslim minorities. — Judaka
Postmodernism says that rather than our rationality being imperfect, it's a product of our race/gender/wealth and our rationality just reinforces convenient logic. — Judaka
I would argue that any speech, no matter how odious, should be permitted if it is both meaningful and not a clear and direct incitement to violence. — ToothyMaw
Your feelings on the Westboro Baptist Church and its practices? And, "no matter how odious"? Speech can get pretty odious. — tim wood
who is to judge what incites - or who is to say the incited were not incited? — tim wood
There appears also to be a street standard, the "Coke upon Littleton of the fist." And that will vary depending on the street. — tim wood
The nub of the issue is you need good people to speak but for that to happen you need to let bad people speak (free speech) and, conversely, if you don't want bad people to speak, you can't let good people speak as well (cenorship). — TheMadFool
explain the reasoning behind your claim that death threats should obviously not be allowed — Pinprick
But whenever and wherever they want? I suspect there will never be a clear line, but in place of that reasonable lines.And yes, even the Westboro Baptists should be allowed to spew their bile. — ToothyMaw
On Sunday mornings in a neighborhood not too many miles from me, a fellow used to preach on a street corner in a housing development from an improvised stand. He's loud and objectionable and uses loudspeakers - but I live a town-and-a-half away. — tim wood
But whenever and wherever they want? I suspect there will never be a clear line, but in place of that reasonable lines. — tim wood
This definition might seem a little presumptuous; suppression of speech occurs even not in the context of furthering a good — ToothyMaw
I would argue that any speech, no matter how odious, should be permitted if it is both meaningful and not a clear and direct incitement to violence. — ToothyMaw
To the lefties in favor of suppression of speech: what if it gets turned around on you? — ToothyMaw
Well that's fine. Suppression is censorship when it serves the common good. But I'd also dispute the "of the common good" since that could cast mere censorship as broader suppression when in the defense of minorities, for instance. — Kenosha Kid
Much hate speech is not clear and direct incitement: it is rabble-rousing against a particular person or subset of people. — Kenosha Kid
Another poster here recently pointed me in the direction of an anti-trans website dedicated to giving the impression that trans = criminal, and not caring too much for facts in its efforts. it's not outright calling for violence against the trans community, but it's certainly doing its utmost to generate that sort of hatred. — Kenosha Kid
Trump, who persecutes and vilifies anyone who disagrees with him while going out of his way to harm others with his free speech, is a hypocrite and a douchebag. — Kenosha Kid
Reciprocity is key. What you should and shouldn't say isn't an objective set of rules, it's consensual politics: I don't want my feelings hurt and I don't want to hurt yours. And it mostly works. The problem is the people who don't want their feelings hurt but want to hurt your feelings, and have an inconstant relationship with censorship as a result. — Kenosha Kid
We can't have people living their lives in fear, can we? It can be traumatic for someone to get doxed and have their life threatened. It directly causes undue suffering and doesn't constitute the imparting of any ideas, so I wouldn't want to see something like that protected. — ToothyMaw
Modern technology has created a situation were there aren't the old limits to public speech, but also tech has created new methods for censorship, surveillance and propaganda. — ssu
Suppression of speech on the basis of protecting minorities would count as suppression serving a greater good - at least for those in favor of it. — ToothyMaw
Sorry if that's a little pedantic. I think we mostly agree. — ToothyMaw
I think hate speech should be allowed, along with things like Holocaust denial. — ToothyMaw
Banning it just adds to its draw and validates purveyors of hate — ToothyMaw
I personally have little regard for people's feelings - and maybe that is a fault - but I also have little in terms of feelings to be hurt. So, overall, hurt feelings is a pretty crappy reason for censorship, imo. — ToothyMaw
Why?Yeah, I'm having trouble with this one. — ToothyMaw
Defending free speech as a principle sounds nice but what is actually being defended? There are consequences on both sides of the issue and it's an evolving issue because technology evolves and changes the game. You use slippery slope fallacies to defend a hardline stance which doesn't actually make much sense. — Judaka
Since the emergence of the idea of "Free Speech", the limits and the abuse of this right has been debated and thought about. It's shouldn't come as something new. — ssu
I don't really buy that leaving a website running that promotes hate of oppressed minorities is less harmful than removing it. I've heard this argument many times, but experiment, measurement, can and has put it to the test. Social media is proof positive that platforming vile crap just makes more suckers that believe it. — Kenosha Kid
I was specifically referring to death threats. I don't quite know what I think about them yet — ToothyMaw
But yes, I think the Westboro Baptists should pretty much be able to speak wherever and whenever - even if it might turn out to be dangerous for them. They should be warned, but they can make their own decisions. They're adults. — ToothyMaw
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