So where, in that code, is it limiting what it will restrict to those which have a physical effect. I'm seeing a lot of restrictions on noises during the day time (so sleep isn't an issue) and restrictions on noises which are still well below the volume which damages the human ear. So where is the objective physical harm that comes from a dog barking for a period of ten minutes or more during the day? — Isaac
No matter how much you flip out about someone wearing a plaid shirt, we're not banning plaid shirts. — Terrapin Station
I didn't see S saying this, but okay, he can be that (playing along that he'd be serious). Obviously different people would institute different laws if they were king. We're not all going to have the same preferences. That should be pretty obvious to anyone by the time they're in kindergarten at least. — Terrapin Station
The reason I said something about arbitrariness earlier was because people were forwarding arbitrary stuff as if it was a fact, as if it could be correct/true, etc. (Usually S does this, with an implication either/or that something is correct for him thinking it, or it's correct for it being common.) — Terrapin Station
I'm glad that someone else here sees how someone wearing a plaid shirt is just like someone publicly calling for the extermination of Jews. — S
Well, and I'm glad your reading abilities are such that you saw that I was saying that they're just the same. — Terrapin Station
As things are now, this simply goes by a combination of time of day and intensity of the sensory stimuli, at least re how it's enforced. — Terrapin Station
Yes, and the intensity of the sensory stimuli is not sufficient to cause physical harm. — Isaac
It was an out of place and inappropriate example, given the topic of hate speech. — S
Which has what to do with what, exactly? Are you being thrown off by the fact that I said "For example, loud sounds can cause hearing damage"? — Terrapin Station
The line of argument I'm following is that if you would accept laws preventing the emotional harm — Isaac
? I'm not basing any laws on "emotional harm." — Terrapin Station
I said this already. For example, loud enough, persistent noises at night can prevent sleep. — Terrapin Station
You additionally said that your ideas here were uncontroversial and like the noise ordinances that already exist. — Isaac
If you call the police now, and it's noon, and you say, "Hey there's this loud construction sound that's annoying me," they'll check it out, but unless it's something so loud and persistent that it could cause hearing damage, they'll say, "I'm sorry, but there's nothing we can do about this." — Terrapin Station
No they won't. I — Isaac
Yeah, they will. Again, many times I've been on both sides of this. In many different locales. — Terrapin Station
Oh, I see. So the ECtHR thinking that hate speech should be legislated against is not sufficient evidence that there might be a link to some harm, but your entirely subjective single person account is supposed to be sufficient evidence that limiting legislation against noises to actual harm is normal? — Isaac
have you had the police called on you about noise/have you had people you're with call the police with noise complaints against others? — Terrapin Station
es, I have. I co-manage a farm, we had a small festival on it, the neighbours complained about the noise and we were told we had to turn off the music by 11pm next day. — Isaac
Right,by 11 p.m.
Why weren't you told that you had to turn it off in the afternoon? — Terrapin Station
Balance of harms. As I've been saying throughout. They didn't like the music in he day either, but the harm is not great enough — Isaac
No, the moral justification for the code is not written in the code, — Isaac
I wasn't at all talking about hate speech there. — Terrapin Station
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