It’s just so tiresome. — Fire Ologist
Please do. — Fire Ologist
But if all conservatives must be racist sexist pigs, what’s the point of asking their opinion on anything anyway? Right? — Fire Ologist
The left and the right can both be tyrannical, — Fire Ologist
Trump in his own way is just as bad as Reagan, Clinton, Bush, Obama and Biden when it comes to this bullshit. — Fire Ologist
Question is what, and are the checks and balances in place. I wasn’t afraid with Obama and Biden, and I’m not afraid with Trump. — Fire Ologist
But you can lie and say I turned off Electrical Grid B to an electrician, perhaps in theory even just walking by without being employed by the company, and an electrician goes to work on it and gets killed. That's illegal. Or, you can stand by a bridge you know is dilapidated and cover leaves over it and if a person asks if it's safe, you can say "Sure", and they are also killed. That's quasi-legal, simply because no one can prove you did anything. So, no, this idea that speech cannot lead to real human death, possibly mass causality has already been legally codified. That ship has sailed, mate. So, that realization hitting you (or anyone who was ignorant of such) aside. What are you truly hoping to proliferate?
It’s just so tiresome.
— Fire Ologist
I agree. — javra
Question for you (that we should all know the answer to): is a black, lesbian voting against her own interests by default, if she votes republican? — Fire Ologist
hate speech as "speech that demeans or promotes violence against groups based on attributes like religion, race, ethnicity, gender, or other identity factors". — javra
"Death to all [people of your ethnicity]" such that group A greatly outnumbers the group to which their chanting "death to", — javra
I too now self censure myself in this political environment, just sitting on the fence with my mouth such watching what's unfolding. — javra
Then why did you ask me if I think Hitler was a bad guy? Is it because I’m a conservative republican - is that why you needed me to confess my true feelings for Hitler?
Hitler was a national socialist. He seems to me to have much more in common with the tactics and goals of the left (state control and power, hating groups of people like republicans, censorship and cancellation/extermination) than with conservatives. But you had to ask me anyway. And you didn’t say anything about my answer. — Fire Ologist
I'm glad we do agree the Hitler was no angel. With this tinny little background given, I will contend that what makes Hitler guilty of mass murder and genocide is exactly the hate speech he engaged in. First paving the way for what eventually happened and then, or course, ordering the events.
Do you have a different explanation for why Hitler is morally culpable for unjust deaths?
Again, he never did anything else but speak. — javra
Question for you (that we should all know the answer to): is a black, lesbian voting against her own interests by default, if she votes republican? — Fire Ologist
You want to answer that? — Fire Ologist
I too now self censure myself in this political environment, just sitting on the fence with my mouth such watching what's unfolding. — javra
That is what most repubs have been doing for 30 plus years. Fearing cancelation for being racist and sexist because you think male and man are basically only biological terms and “he” points out anyone born with a penis. — Fire Ologist
As far as not saying anything about your answer, what on Earth was this:
I'm glad we do agree the Hitler was no angel. With this tinny little background given, I will contend that what makes Hitler guilty of mass murder and genocide is exactly the hate speech he engaged in. First paving the way for what eventually happened and then, or course, ordering the events.
Do you have a different explanation for why Hitler is morally culpable for unjust deaths?
Again, he never did anything else but speak.
— javra — javra
the gender always perfectly fits biological sex, I've been around for over 30 years and have been hearing this throughout - never once hearing a rebuttle of "you're racist and sexist" because you think this. — javra
But then Hitler became Chancellor, and at that point his speech was commands and orders, and enforcement of law, and setting of policy - not debate. — Fire Ologist
But how about whether the policies are effective at achieving some sort of goal? Repubs or Dems effective policy makers? How about that discussion. — Fire Ologist
Because I wonder if Trump thinks Hitler is culpable for murder? Hmmm… good question. How could anyone actually like Trump? He must sympathize with Hitler. Right? — Fire Ologist
have a good deal of resentment toward everything that is not conservative. — javra
Trump, the person who recently announced that it should be illegal for news outlets to speak negatively of him, not of an authoritarian mindset? — javra
When it comes to economy, I am all for capitalism when it stand up to its ideal of meritocracy: each benefiting economically based on their earnest deserve (rather than based on the goal of maximizing corruption so as to make the biggest buck). And, I am likewise for the existence of an economic social net to protect from devastating accidental events which can befall us all - welfare as its typically called - seeing absolutely no entailed contradiction between the two. Does that make me a conservative Republican, a liberal Democrat ... this stringent dichotomy is a bit bipolar for me. To me the discussion should not be about either or but about discussion what is best — javra
if "conservatism" to you basically means the preservation of traditional values, do you then take all traditional values which are to be preserved to be non-authoritarian? (I've, for one example, grown up learning in church that the husband is the metaphorical head of the family and the women is the metaphorically subservient body - which must obey the head without question if things are to be in order. So I so far find this to be a traditional value in western culture. And I don't deem it an egalitarian, hence non-authoritarian, mindset, at least as regards the interaction between the sexes. Please do correct me if you think I'm wrong.) — javra
"Death to all [people of your ethnicity]" such that group A greatly outnumbers the group to which their chanting "death to", — javra
Sounds like a free Palestine, or BLM. rally. Wasn’t there chanting about killing all pigs, meaning cops? — Fire Ologist
I think modern society has a diseased view of authority, tradition and things like dogma. They seem unavoidable to me, and in need of integration into our lives, not mere resistance. — Fire Ologist
Men and women range themselves into three classes or orders of intelligence; you can tell the lowest class by their habit of always talking about persons; the next by the fact that their habit is always to converse about things; the highest by their preference for the discussion of ideas. — Attributed to Henry Thomas Buckle
Can the issue of hate speech be addressed without embarking on perceived issues of political victimization? (e.g. the victimization of conservatives by the left and the victimization of liberals by the right) — javra
And the stuff I’ve heard from them regarding the left, as I previously mentioned, has often times been quite hateful in what I took to be unjust ways—sometimes a hell of a lot more than others (this without hearing anything alike in turn from the left toward the right). Shit, a small portion of these have even welcomed me into their house with a Nazi salute or else championed fascism (and Hitler) while visiting — javra
the loudmouthed extremists do not represent the majority on either side, at least not by my current appraisals. — javra
- Hate speech—when interpreted in the spirit of what the UN intended, this being the spoken prelude to active genocides—is bad/immoral/wrong. — javra
I agree hate speech is morally wrong even if it isn’t spoken as a prelude to murder. But if you want to make it legally wrong, it needs to be more directly connected to things like murder and legal badness. It needs to be connected to harrassment, or obstructing the right of way, or trespassing, or fraud or libel or slander and leading to physical measurable harm. It can’t just be offiensive to my ears and heart. We have to be able to say anything we want when the adults are talking about policy and laws and priorities and what is crime, and who is good for political office. The only way to protect that type of speech is absolutely - in a political debate context, absolutely anything and everything must be allowed. If it sounds like hateful shit, great, we call it hateful shit and tell the speaker now that they are done to piss off.
And instead of regulating speech, we regulate harrassment, obstructing the right of way, trespassing, fraud or libel or slander. If hate speech is a prelude to more badness, it is conspiracy to commit a crime, it is evidence of a criminal enterprise, it is incitement to criminality. So in that case, it is not the content of what is hated in the hateful speech that should matter to the government, it is the criminality of what the speech directly leads to that should matter to the government. We don’t want the current administration judging speech for criminality. Right? — Fire Ologist
speech that dehumanizes others and incites physical violence against them — javra
…speech that dehumanizes others and incites physical violence against them.
the lowest class…always talking about persons. — Attributed to Henry Thomas Buckle
So if we take away all political correctness, what checks and balances remain to prevent speech that can easily lead to mass murders and genocides?
If you haven’t yet caught on to what I’ve been saying in my posts, I agree that making laws against hate speech in the US can easily become utterly dystopian. — javra
Should there be a system of checks and balances within society to mitigate speech which dehumanizes and incites violence against others? And, if so, what ought these checks and balances within society be? — javra
hate preachers, holocaust deniers, and racists of all types are viewed as cranks in American culture. Chomsky makes this point, that anyone can publish works of holocaust denial in the US and no one really pays them much notice. If you do that in Europe, where it is often illegal, their work gets all sorts of press. — NOS4A2
So incitement is possible? Glad you came around in the end. — Michael
…speech incites violence… — NOS4A2
I have a few questions up above, so, I appreciate your time. — Fire Ologist
Do you think speech IS violence when it is hate speech? — Fire Ologist
I am curious if you agree that “dehumanizes” is superfluous to how a proposed hate speech law would be enforced. — Fire Ologist
Or that giving the government the power to adjudicate what is hateful and what isn’t creates the dystopia you just referenced. You agree with those two things? — Fire Ologist
But you said speech “which dehumanizes and incites violence”. Why do you keep bringing up “incites violence”? If it “incites violence” it’s a legal issue again, and we already have a system to put the violence in check. — Fire Ologist
I think you are worried about this: “speech that dehumanizes and could possibly incite terrible violence”.
Is that more accurate? — Fire Ologist
[...] I’ve heard a lot of disparaging in my life of political correctness. The tyranny of such and so forth. So if we take away all political correctness, what checks and balances remain to prevent speech that can easily lead to mass murders and genocides? — javra
Do you think speech IS violence when it is hate speech?
— Fire Ologist
No. It can be quite harmful depending on subtext and context, but not all harm is violence. So, again, no. — javra
In Speech Acts and Unspeakable Acts Rae Langton consider an example elaborated from Austin:
Two men stand beside a woman. The first man turns to the second, and says "Shoot her." The second man looks shocked, then raises a gun and shoots the woman.
Do we say that, since the act of shooting was not constitutive of the utterance of the first man, that he bears no responsibility for the killing? I think not. The consequences of an act might well be considered as part of that act. — Banno
It's also worth noting that the argument is not that all hate speech causes violence - another rhetorical ploy being used here. It's more about the othering that is central to hate speech, together with the issue of the culpability of the speaker in subsequent violence. — Banno
Why would we have advertising, prayer, speeches or Fox News if language was powerless? — Tom Storm
I'm not talking about laws. I'm talking about what is right and beneficial. — javra
I'm partly concerned about speech that dehumanizes, in and of itself. — javra
physical defense against a physical assailant … and …a mass murderer shooting people on the streets ….. Both are perverse interpretations of what is ethical: — javra
The victim becomes “the victimizer” and the victimizer “the victim”. — javra
Something quite common in authoritarian systems and mindsets. — javra
is it anyone’s belief hereabout that more hate speech will mitigate the hate speech that might otherwise occur?
Here’s an analogy that I so far don’t find faulty: one rotten apple will spoil the bunch; — javra
can you then explain how hatred toward a dehumanized other (and an increased occurrence of it in opposing directions) can bring about greater equality of rights for all within the given community? — javra
does anyone hereabout endorse the use of hate speech as beneficial? — javra
[...] I’ve heard a lot of disparaging in my life of political correctness. The tyranny of such and so forth. So if we take away all political correctness, what checks and balances remain to prevent speech that can easily lead to mass murders and genocides? — javra
[...] what checks and balances remain to prevent speech that can easily lead to mass murders and genocides? — javra
Two men stand beside a woman. The first man turns to the second, and says "Shoot her." The second man looks shocked, then raises a gun and shoots the woman. — Banno
in response to assertions that utterances could not injure. You asked if Hitler injured people through his utterances. — Banno
I appreciate your continuing with this thread, Javra. I'd given it away, as on a par with the discussions of gun law and transgender issues - too fraught with high dudgeon to progress. — Banno
Do we say that, since the act of shooting was not constitutive of the utterance of the first man, that the utterance was not a violent act? Well, is the issue here whether the utterance is violent, or whether the utterer is culpable? What part does the man giving the order have in the death of the woman? — Banno
You presented an interesting argument earlier, in response to assertions that utterances could not injure. You asked if Hitler injured people through his utterances. I don't think you received an answer,. — Banno
Perhaps the account I gave, from Searle via Langton, avoids the offence while maintaining the point. Can we sidestep the rhetorical deflection, and focus on the function of language in the action described. Do we hold the speaker responsible for the killing, despite his not having pulled the trigger? — Banno
So now, this seems to me, would not be a political discussion but is a moral/ethical one. — Fire Ologist
Not sure I am following here. — Fire Ologist
But you are right. Political correctness is akin to simply being polite. If we took away all sense of political correctness, we would descend into verbal war, and likely incite violence. — Fire Ologist
Maybe the issue of whether Charles Manson should or should not have been incarcerated would likewise help out — javra
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.