I was only joking. It amused me that you'd managed to summarise everyone else's position, as if you'd read mine and just shook your head slowly. There's nothing needs doing about it, I didn't mean for you to take that impression. — Isaac
I'd say it's an inherent part of a functioning democracy and basically acts as a safety valve. People are very adaptable and do quite easily adapt to censorship and self-censorship. And it shows, really. Without freedom of speach, people are different and behave really differently.It seems like 'free-speech' is being presented as some kind of unique pre-requisite to social reform — Isaac
Reviews should summarise everything relevant that goes on. I don't care if it was a joke. — fdrake
Without freedom of speach, people are and behave really differently. — ssu
In a society without free speach, which typically is a totalitarian society, this is a fact. People do behave differently. There is a genuine collective fear which stifles even ordinary debate.This presumes there is a binomial {with freedom of speech/without freedom of speech}. It's that framing which I dispute. — Isaac
An many go with the leftist line that anything beyond this or that and the people have to be white supremacist nazi bigots. — ssu
In a society without free speach, which typically is a totalitarian society, this is a fact. People do behave differently. There is a genuine collective fear which stifles even ordinary debate. — ssu
In the US (or the West) this whole debate isn't about existence of free speech, but it is about the Overton window in public discourse. And that is totally different. — ssu
From the comments after the OP, I guess.I don't know where you got that conclusion from in thread. — fdrake
What is the far right here? Is Scruton really a spokesperson for the far right? It is about the Overton window in public discourse.Especially when many of the comments have been about the weaknesses of the liberal interpretation of freedom of speech to cooption by the far right. — fdrake
I don't think everyone is. And besides, anyone saying that people should have the right of free speech obviously do then logically give the opening for different viewpoints.Yes, I'd agree with this, that's why I think claims of being "anti-free-speech" are weaponised. Everyone is anti free speech. — Isaac
I don't actually get your point here or perhaps I haven't read this part of the conversation. What's the fuss with this quick-speaking Jewish right-wing political commentator that resigned from Breitbart?All I'm arguing is that continually deferring to the democratic decisions that have already been established, with regards to where these lines are, is pointlessly circular. Either Shapiro and the like do not influence the voting public (in which case shutting them down is of no consequence), or they do. If they do, then one cannot expect the democratic system to deal with the effect they have by restricting speech appropriately. — Isaac
Ah, like the class enemy is to the communist? Sounds like authoritarianism.By the measure of the content of their postion, that conservativism is a problem. They, in many respects, reject the valuing of particular groups. — TheWillowOfDarkness
Oppression, really?To be an ordinary conservative, for example, who thinks having a penis means your a man and a vagina means your a women, constitutes a devaluing and oppression of trans people. — TheWillowOfDarkness
Yep, there's the smoking gun. In the critical way. But what are the nazi like positions, really?In the critical way, these positions are not different to the nazis, alt right or intentional monsters. — TheWillowOfDarkness
Yes, one can be a leftist SJW to do that too, to have that emotional hatred towards others.One doesn't need to demanding slavery for or attempting to genocide a group to have a culture which devalues or oppresses them. — TheWillowOfDarkness
Or those with the values of being "progressive", "open to new ideas", "tolerant" and "woke".Plenty of that happens in the values and expectations a lot of people consider "ordinary." — TheWillowOfDarkness
Well, both like authoritarianism and actually aren't so excited about liberal tolerance. Radicals always hate the present that we have and want real change, something totally else.Outsiders, though, see fanatics on both sides of them. The alt-right and the PC-left are perhaps equally eager to reduce their freedom. — pomophobe
Naturally. But for those it's quite easy to notice that the belief on liberties aren't actually so important.but surely their are crazies in the red states who would vote for laws against blasphemy, etc. — pomophobe
the only thing I've been doing is pointing out that the liberal grounds for 'non-censorship' are rubbish. My argument is against an argument; not a position on Shapiro being 'censored' or not. Living outside the shithole that is the States, I'm lucky enough to hardly be graced by anything he says or does. — StreetlightX
Thus the Left is suicidal in abandoning the defence of free speech to the Right. — jamalrob
Short of declaring Spencer an enemy of the state, how to we defeat fascism, and does protesting Shapiro contribute to that fight?
I'm willing to accept (culture) war in principle, but I think you might be escalating things rather quickly, especially you think if Shapiro's followers are beyond persuasion. — VagabondSpectre
Thus the Left is suicidal in abandoning the defence of free speech to the Right. — jamalrob
if you think anything other than speech simply is, or can only be, violence or censorship — StreetlightX
Well, both like authoritarianism and actually aren't so excited about liberal tolerance. Radicals always hate the present that we have and want real change, something totally else. — ssu
To combat Shapiro, he should not be invited to cable news to speak, he should be protested when giving lectures at college campuses, and he shouldn't be coddled in major publications because he says nothing of value and has no journalistic merit. He shouldn't be violently confronted because I'm not convinced he's anything other than two five-year-olds stacked on top of each other in a suit. — Maw
It worse that that: every single victory was won by attacking what seems to be counted as "free speech."
Each time we make a change of policy or culture, the very idea of the former is discarded. Not in the "Let's respect each other's differing opinion" either, but in the substantial "Our society ought not do this. This idea is not respectable or worth considering", such that the latter then holds dominance in culture. — TheWillowOfDarkness
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