Harm, impact, yes. That must be weighed against the harm and impact of restricting speech. — DingoJones
As the OP quoted, all your other freedoms come from your freedom to speak. Even the bad speech, because whatever harm that causes is a picnic compared to the alternative. — DingoJones
Words cannot enslave, this requires physical force — DingoJones
Words cannot maim, this requires physicsl force, or physical injury/harm — DingoJones
Retaliatory against other violence. Shoot if your shot at, hit when you are hit upon, yell when you are yelled at. Its pretty simple. — DingoJones
I know you have an idea of what kinds of speech should be responded to with violence — DingoJones
If you grant people the right to commit violent acts in response to speech then violence will become normal — DingoJones
To Terrapins point, you should be restricted to using your voice to fight back, not your fists unless you’ve been attacked with fists. — DingoJones
Honestly, I don’t see anything wrong with saying “sell the team” or “get down on your knees”. — I like sushi
If someone does use racial slurs at a sporting event they shouldn’t be surprised if they’re thrown out and banned.
Isn’t this obvious? — I like sushi
Usually people stressing that (free) speech has "consequences" are folks who support things like violence in response to speech in some instances, taking away or making it difficult for someone to earn a living, basically ostracizing or blacklisting the person, etc — Terrapin Station
Apparently if you're referencing me why not quote me? — Anaxagoras
I made a post, but for some reason it is not showing up. Your line about “fire in a movie theater” does not come from the First Amendment, was never binding, and the case it was quoted in was overturned in 1969. — czahar
For the latter, as I mentioned to another poster, the context can be perceived as racial. — Anaxagoras
Well in the first instance there is nothing wrong per se, but the owner is known to be quite "emotional." For the latter, as I mentioned to another poster, the context can be perceived as racial. If you're not of the demographic and do not share the collective experience of said demographic especially when it comes to historical racism you're in no position to define what is pejorative and what isn't. you're speaking as an outsider and for all intensive purposes, it's not a plausible position. That is like someone using the word homo in the context of a joke. Although you may find it funny someone who is homosexual may not, but you don't sit there and define that such and such speech using the word homo is not inflammatory. This is your position but by no means does it reflect reality. — Anaxagoras
Only by someone looking to be offended. — I like sushi
There is absolute NOTHING racist in the comment. — I like sushi
Using abbreviations is hardly enough to get you sacked, seriously? — I like sushi
Joking about homosexual activity is not “homophobic” and joking about cultural/ethnic/racial stereotypes is not “racist” or any other “-ist” unless it’s blatantly ironic and/or purposefullu derogatory. — I like sushi
. If someone is saying something publicly about their work then obviously, prejudice or not, they will be putting themselves in a position where they could lose their job. Note: this is if it’s AIMED specifically at a work colleague or the establishment itself. — I like sushi
The demographic business is more nonsense. We’re all, in some manner or another, a minority of some given group — I like sushi
Be it by the music we like, the clothes we wear, the length of our hair, our wealth, etc — I like sushi
Somehow I think you may change our opinion — I like sushi
Not just work, but people included. If you are a racist and use your Facebook to espouse your rhetoric while working at a hospital you most certainly can/will be fired in at-will employment states. Your free speech is not protected. — Anaxagoras
I'm in no business to change nobody's opinion and from I see a lot of opinions are not based on reality. — Anaxagoras
Even demographically when it comes to places where one resides then yes but by being a minority in regards to sports and district demographics this is minute compared to the other facets of society. — Anaxagoras
So, what you really mean is you learned it is pointless to have discussions with people who not automatically see things the way you do — DingoJones
You don’t seem willing to respond to my comments about your other thread — I like sushi
You don’t seem willing to respond to my comments about your other thread which could be interpreted as “islamophobic”? — I like sushi
given the fact that collectively, phrases of this kind were meant to harm African-Americans. — Anaxagoras
I asked if your position could be interpreted as “islamophobic — I like sushi
I’m not convinced that someone should be sacked from work because they are looked at as being some kind of “-ist” over a comment on a forum like this. — I like sushi
If someone says something crazy then I would eather ask them, try and underdtand why they think what they think what they think and challenge them. — I like sushi
People are most certainly looking to react and look for offense as it is the nature of most comments sections and the lack fo physical proximity causes people to act differently, and for people looking to their content viewed to make mountains out of mole hills in order to make money on the back of their myopic analysis that falls into whatever the latest “outrage” is. — I like sushi
What sort of empirical research have you done for claims like that, and logically, what do you believe the upshot of that fact is, assuming the empirical support for it is solid? — Terrapin Station
In the case where speech of this kind, in my own experience it is pointless to discuss with someone who has a perverse view of reality especially if they are dead set on it. — Anaxogaros
This is one of the many setbacks with internet. There is a project in Brazil where people who make pejorative remarks online get aired out on billboards, and by this I'm referring to their real names and faces. It begs the question whether if one would make hateful comments if their true identity was revealed? — Anaxagoras
But very often people misunderstand that contingency of free speech to believe that there is absolute freedom of expression and that their individual expression is absolved from punishment. — Anaxagoras
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