I think the distinction is meant for a political setting. Regardless,That said, the distinction probably works better in a political setting — StreetlightX
In real politics, whether someone loses the right to speak or not depends on how dangerous they are, and how willing they are to disrupt the victor using that right. If they are both dangerous and willing to disrupt the victor (openly), then they will lose the right to speak. Otherwise obviously they won't. This is so regardless of whether we function under the system of democracy, or under the system of monarchy, or any other system. The mechanisms by which one loses this power is different in democracy compared to, say, monarchy. But it still exists.because there are more obvious criteria by which to judge which is which (which side's policy gets implemented? (adversaries) vs. who get vanquished and loses the right to speak (enemies)). — StreetlightX
What is the culprit that turns a philosophical argument into a merely squabbling argument? — 0 thru 9
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