Yes of course, censorship exists. If the boss believed in free speech, on the other hand, she might not be fired. — NOS4A2
I prefer to have a society where intentionally created unpleasant experience can be responded to with moderate violence. — Coben
Right, so I would want people to work on dealing with the specific cases, just as we do in contract law and even with physical violence. What kind of contact was it? Was it intentional? How were the bodies moving? What signals were given? Often the impacts can't be measured in physical violence and the context is extremely important and the communication. It can lead to very complicated court procedures, though over trivial stuff (unless it was, say, a police officer or a rich person on the receiving end) it gets dropped. Contracts, which you accepted before, can often have incredibly complicated interpretive differences involved, even if the contract were made with anal precision. Like whose name should get on a screenplay, jeez, that can be complicated. Or how an employee carried out tasks or didn't and to what degree and in what circumstances and in relation to what actions and inactions of coworkers and bosses. Again, jeez, anyone's position might seem arbritrary, but humans can develop methods to try to work this out. Obviously far from perfectly.Okay, whereas I wouldn't hinge anything merely on whether someone is "having an unpleasant experience" because arbitrary people can have an unpleasant experience — Terrapin Station
For example, someone could completely flip out because someone is wearing a plaid shirt, whether the plaid shirt-wearer knows the person will flip out or not. That shouldn't be a problem with the plaid shirt-wearer. The person flipping out needs to get help. — Terrapin Station
And look at that, you are capable of deciding what is 'too sensitive'. You could take part in the process. You seem to have a way to measure sensitivity. That's great. That means there is some equivalent to decibels.In my society people have a responsibility to not be too sensitive, — Terrapin Station
Sure, and I wouldn't want any physical contact to be considered assault (or is it battery) and it seems there are ways to determine the difference, though obviously there is a subjective element there. Likewise with contracts. I wouldn't want to get arrested for assault if I brushed past someone on the subway either.I'm not going to base laws on people being neurotic, not being able to handle simple things, etc.--because we can find people who'll flip out over any arbitrary thing, and then nothing is legal because of that and we've got a big mess where people only have to claim to be bothered by something in order to be able to control others over any and every little thing they don't like. — Terrapin Station
Well, I wouldn't like that either. I am also shooting for a way to deter, for example, threats that most humans would find disturbing enough to cause them problems. I would prefer that that is not treated the same as other kinds of free speech use. And, yes, it might be very tricky to work out individual cases. So be it.That's completely the opposite direction of what I'm shooting for. — Terrapin Station
t tMy slap might or might not pass that test, thought I have to say it seems rather arbritrary. I could probably use a little shiatsu like pressure that leaves no damage or scars and gives someone agony for 15 minutes. That should be a crime unless there was some serious justification for that. Like every time you tried to let them up they went for the gun they had recently pointed at you.This is also why I don't base any ethical stances or laws merely on "harm" or "suffering" or anything like that, and it's why I have minimum requirements even for nonconsensual violence. No one is being arrested, fined, etc. for intentionally poking you in the arm or something like that. It has to be something with macro-observable effects days later--that's a requirement for a minimum intensity, otherwise the "victim" needs to just chill out and not overreact. — Terrapin Station
In my society people have a responsibility to not be too sensitive, to not overreact, to not be offended, to not too easily worry, to not flip out, etc — Terrapin Station
And look at that, you are capable of deciding what is 'too sensitive'. You could take part in the process. You seem to have a way to measure sensitivity. That's great. That means there is some equivalent to decibels. — Coben
So where, in this society, does someone fit who is too sensitive to minor speech restrictions, who overreacts to a really minor infringement on their liberty, who is worried that if the government bans hate speech they'll ban all political opposition, someone who flips out at being told they can't say certain words anymore in public. Where does such a person fit? — Isaac
Some people really like loud repetitive noises late at night, so what is it that makes playing the drums for sixteen hours a day something that its reasonable to legislate against?
— Isaac
Well, I'm a free musical instrument playing absolutist, so I don't believe that there should be any laws restricting the freedom to play drums really loudly all night, every night, when your neighbours are trying to sleep. — S
Basically, I'd never decide this stuff on subjective reactions. — Terrapin Station
Well, I'm a free musical instrument playing absolutist, so I don't believe that there should be any laws restricting the freedom to play drums really loudly all night, every night, when your neighbours are trying to sleep — S
We're still waiting for the objective measures though. What's objective about the disturbance people feel from the types of noise prohibited by the noise ordinances — Isaac
But different decibels and durations and upbrinings and cultural backgrounds and expectations will lead to not being able to stay asleep with noise. It will be an arbritrary set of criteria and we can't have arbritrary. Of course my long post went into this.Not being able to stay asleep isn't subjective, for example. It's clearly, objectively observable. — Terrapin Station
It will be an arbritrary set of criteria and we can't have arbritrary. — Coben
As I've said already umpteen times already, the legislation wouldn't be based on subjective "disturbance." I explicitly pointed that out already, which is why I get annoyed that you can't read or you're not reading. — Terrapin Station
My posts (if you actually read them properly!) are objecting to you claiming such an approach is normal and uncontroversial and citing municipal ordinances in evidence. — Isaac
Sure as a pejorative. If it was merely an observation out of context and not critical. — Coben
Ok, it had seemed earlier like abritrary functioned as a critique in itself in your responses to me. — Coben
That's fine, but you're wrong. I've been on both sides of police being called about this sort of stuff lots of times. — Terrapin Station
Is this the TS special treatment again? If I'm wrong, show me the evidence. — Isaac
OK, so why is ok to have an arbritrary law about sound levels? but not one around threats? (covered in my long post) — Coben
Re codes, I can search, but this, for example, gives decibel allowances: — Terrapin Station
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