DingoJones
Punshhh
As they are by the authorities. Unfortunately the tabloid press and the populists don’t operate to the same high standards.Yes, incitement is a bit murky. Any laws surrounding it should be carefully considered.
DingoJones
This is the issue which keeps coming up in this thread. That the row over free speech takes situations where incitement and racial prejudice are occurring in a public arena insisting that it is a free speech issue. It isn’t, it’s a public order issue. — Punshhh
Where it occurs in private, not in a public arena it is allowed (within reason) and there are no restrictions on what you can say. But in a public space, it can be amplified by group activity and bad actors can use it to stir up a crowd. — Punshhh
DingoJones
I think he was suggesting I was acting in bad faith, not you. — Punshhh
DingoJones
As they are by the authorities. Unfortunately the tabloid press and the populists don’t operate to the same high standards. — Punshhh
Punshhh
Quite, so it’s not applicable in the case of the U.K. then.Bad actors in the press and in positions of authority are exactly the reason free speech is so so so important. Free speech protects all other rights and authoritarians, dictators etc always come for language and speech first.
DingoJones
Punshhh
Not snuck, it’s also a public order issue, because it spreads easily and once embedded is very difficult to dislodge. Take the case of the Southport riots, everyone rioting had strong feelings of racial prejudice. Racism has a peculiarly visceral, or primeval effect on people.You snuck racial prejudice in there.
Punshhh
It isn’t, it’s a culture war fabrication whipped up by the tabloid media and populists.The UK is fucked on free speech. It’s insane so many refuse to even admit there is a problem, but humans are gonna human what can you do?
DingoJones
Alexander Hine
↪Alexander Hine put away the thesaurus dude. — flannel jesus
Punshhh
And the riots were incited through social media groups and the tabloid press. Now what are the police supposed to do about that? Just sit back and let the mob just roam around on the streets?Riots are the “public order” issue. Peoples feelings do not justify violence. Public order is maintained through laws other than free speech laws, like no rioting and violence and looting.
Punshhh
That’s not what I’m saying, I’m saying it isn’t about free speech, but rather about public order and the authorities grappling with the recent developments in social media. While trying not to get drawn into political rows.So…no problem to see here.
Punshhh
I answered that earlier in the thread;So…no problem with free speech to see here.
As a person on the ground I can’t think of any speech, which wasn’t already taboo, being restricted in the population. What there is is some cancellation in University speaking events around sensitive issues such as gender, transsexuality, issues which have been exploited by the populists and some political correctness around these issues in institutions. These are limited circumstances and forums, while the public at large has no restriction at all on their free speech.
AmadeusD
You want to learn how to actually combat racism? Google Daryl Davies. Single handedly done more to combat racism than all the speech control efforts combined. — DingoJones
DingoJones
DingoJones
If you can give an example of speech which is becoming more restricted I’d be interested to know. Then we would have something to debate. — Punshhh
Punshhh
AmadeusD
DingoJones
You can say anything you like, or teach your dog anything you like in private, or in a non public space. When you do it in a public space there may be a risk of incitement, or abuse, of others, such as vulnerable groups sharing that space. The authorities will police those spaces with an eye to public order. On most occasions the risk is low, so the authorities will not intervene.
When it comes to publishing the law is more strict because the extent of exposure could increase exponentially and is unpredictable. — Punshhh
Punshhh
Cool, that’s your prerogative. I didn’t see an issue particularly when I first took to social media. But then I kept hearing stories of posters being sued for defamation. Then I realised that posting on social media is legally a form of publishing. To publish speech is to amplify it, meaning that large numbers of people will hear it. This makes it a special kind of free speech, the freedom to communicate what you have to say to large numbers of people. It’s like walking around in a crowd of people with a loud haler shouting everything you’re thinking, so that everyone there has to hear it.I just dont buy the distinction as I’ve already stated
Well the police have a role to play in society, they are experts at their job and that job includes maintaining public order, amongst many other things.“May” be “risk” of incitement or abuse (huh?) is flimsy and weak as a basis for authoritarian control.
DingoJones
Cool, that’s your prerogative. I didn’t see an issue particularly when I first took to social media. But then I kept hearing stories of posters being sued for defamation. Then I realised that posting on social media is legally a form of publishing. To publish speech is to amplify it, meaning that large numbers of people will hear it. This makes it a special kind of free speech, the freedom to communicate what you have to say to large numbers of people. It’s like walking around in a crowd of people with a loud haler shouting everything you’re thinking, so that everyone there has to hear it. — Punshhh
Well the police have a role to play in society, they are experts at their job and that job includes maintaining public order, amongst many other things. — Punshhh
Punshhh
For the analogy to work, it only has to demonstrate that more people will be exposed to the material than if it were expressed in private. It is self evident. Or are you saying publishing speech doesn’t reach a wider audience?Its not like that at all, no one is forcing people to read and listen to published material so your analogy fails.
Yes and the police will do their job. I would think that the police would only look into it after a specific public order issue has been brought to their attention.Not opinions, jokes or pugs doing the nazi salute (yes, even to a wide audience) are not. Indeed the police have more important things to do, such as preventing murder or rape.
AmadeusD
DingoJones
For the analogy to work, it only has to demonstrate that more people will be exposed to the material than if it were expressed in private. It is self evident. Or are you saying publishing speech doesn’t reach a wider audience? — Punshhh
Yes and the police will do their job. I would think that the police would only look into it after a specific public order issue has been brought to their attention.
I agree that some content on social media is harmless when it reaches a wider audience. But there is a spectrum of material and there is a clear phenomena of populists, or bad actors, for whatever reason exploiting the process. This is also on the police’s radar.
There is also a pattern emerging in these debates. It only seems to be issues given publicity by the right wing press, or populists groups where there is a free speech concern. When the speech doesn’t not fit these agendas, it is of no concern. Indeed it is often the same people who might start saying this other speech should be restricted. It’s odd that, isn’t it? — Punshhh
Punshhh
Yes, agreed. There probably does need to be a distinction made between the two.In either case though (lets assume that every case is a publication issue) that is still clearly wrong in a democratic, adult society. Particularly one where, increasingly, use of social media is akin to talking shit with at the pub. It’s a bit of a category error to capture social media posts by non-public figures with that i think (but this is just my opinion).
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.