Sure. So the reason for it, from the perspective of the code and the enforcement by police, wouldn't be anything like a "balance of harms." In your country, is the code written so that the police were exactly following it when they only said that you had to turn off the music by 11 pm? — Terrapin Station
I'm having trouble finding good uses of the law that would show why it's necessary to be honest. — Baden
I'm having trouble finding good uses of the law that would show why it's necessary to be honest. — Baden
It’s well worth reading the remarks delivered by the judge in Choudary’s sentencing. Despite only finally falling foul of the law after being found to have pledged support to Isis, Holyrode points out that Choudary used his platform to spread his messages of division and violence long before he was arrested. Choudary is said to have “taken every opportunity to address audiences by various means”. He said to Choudary: “You wanted to address a large audience because you know that you were held in high regard by your followers, and that they could therefore be expected to be influenced by what you said.”
“Those who already held views in favour of Isis would no doubt have been encouraged and strengthened in those views by what you said, and that in itself makes your offending serious; but you were also aiming at a wider audience,” the judgment continues.
Choudary’s views, and more importantly his ability to communicate and share them, led to his extremism being propagated. What’s more, we know they contributed to encouraging others to engage in acts of indiscriminate, abhorrent violence. He was linked to one of the men who killed the soldier Lee Rigby, and the London Bridge attacker, Khuram Butt. His words are said to have influenced at least 100 British jihadists. — The Guardian
Police say it took just three or four weeks for Osborne’s extremism to emerge – evidence from devices he used show that he accessed posts by Tommy Robinson, Britain First and others. — The Guardian
I don't see what the fact that the reason for the code isn't in the actual code has to do with whether it's intent was to balance harms. — Isaac
I never said anything at all about "intent."
What I said was that I would do is no different than the way it works now. The way it works now is what happens when you call the police with complaints about it. — Terrapin Station
I don't think it's so simple. You gotta word that law and then the courts wil interpret it and it will change over time and interpretations will vary. Why doesn't the pro-limitation side come up with a version of the law and we can see what that might lead to.The crux of the matter is whether or not you're in favour of the major benefit of preventing terrorist attacks and other serious crimes, at the minor "cost" of not being free to spread condemnable hate speech. — S
I don't think it's so simple. You gotta word that law and then the courts wil interpret it and it will change over time and interpretations will vary. Why doesn't the pro-limitation side come up with a version of the law and we can see what that might lead to. — Coben
Sure. I believe what I said was it was not so simple. You couched the issue in utterly simplistic binary terms.It doesn't need to be foolproof. — S
The alternative is when discussing the issue to not make it all simple and binary.What's the alternative? Have nothing in place because it isn't perfect? — S
I would want to see what is considered inciting hatred. With a stress on that verb and also to see how the courts would or would not let the law slide or expand over time before couching the options we have in such simplistic terms you did. I have seen the way, for example, criticism of Israel gets turned into hate speech as anti-semitism and I have seen policies at universities that shut out vast swathes of potential and actual dialogue. I have seen people with economic concerns about immigration labelled racists, including immigrants who had those concerns, and seen them lose jobs. (I am in a European country right now though ex pat american.)"forms of expression which spread, incite, promote or justify racial hatred, xenophobia, anti-Semitism or other forms of hatred based on intolerance, including: intolerance expressed by aggressive nationalism and ethnocentrism,discrimination and hostility against minorities, migrants and people of immigrant origin"
The courts specifically state " authorities should, in particular, give careful consideration to the suspect's right to freedom of expression given that the imposition of criminal sanctions generally constitutes a serious interference with that freedom. The competent courts should, when imposing criminal sanctions on persons convicted of hate speech offences, ensure strict respect for the principle of proportionality" and, "the standards applied by national authorities for assessing the necessity of restricting freedom of expression must be in conformity with the principles embodied in Article 10". Article 10 is the right to freedom of expression.
Yes but you can't "do" a "way it works". A "way it works" is a state of affairs, to do is a verb, you "do" actions, or activities, not states of affairs. — Isaac
I'm not going to respond anymore to these arrogant presumptions that, in cases of misunderstanding, the problem is always with the comprehension skill of the reader and not your terribly poor communication skills. — Isaac
The crux of the matter is whether or not you're in favour of the major benefit of preventing terrorist attacks and other serious crimes, at the minor "cost" of not being free to spread condemnable hate speech. — S
I thought you might know where, thanks for the charitable interpretation of my question not request and the sweet message, role modeling future discourse for us all. — Coben
Sure. I believe what I said was [that] it was not so simple. You couched the issue in utterly simplistic binary terms. — Coben
The alternative is when discussing the issue to not make it all simple and binary. — Coben
I would want to see what is considered inciting hatred. — Coben
With a stress on that verb and also to see how the courts would or would not let the law slide or expand over time before couching the options we have in such simplistic terms you did. I have seen the way, for example, criticism of Israel gets turned into hate speech as anti-semitism and I have seen policies at universities that shut out vast swathes of potential and actual dialogue. I have seen people with economic concerns about immigration labelled racists, including immigrants who had those concerns, and seen them lose jobs. (I am in a European country right now though ex pat american.)
I worked in an organization that had a similar policy, though broader, including gender and sexuality and religion. I was appointed the person to deal with complaints. It certainly did help in some situations, but it became clear that almost everything was open season and I was pressured to censor and censure people who, I felt, were not inciting hatred against groups, but one could interpret the rule to include their speech acts.
Just to be preemtive: just because I say these things does not mean there should be no law. This is all in response to your simplistic version of the options. — Coben
I'd try to prevent terrorist attacks in some ways, not in other ways. — Terrapin Station
Hopefully you'll one day be able to use the quote function so you don't have to make up so much bullshit. I know you find it hard to believe, but application of abstract ideas is part of what makes things less simple then your aggressiveanyone who disagrees with me is an asshole approach to a philosophical discussion. I mentioned some the problems I had experienced with similar laws and rules and what happens over time. But you avoided that. Might have taken a few too many emoticons to make you think you actually made a point or dominated me or whatever your goal is.I put it just fine, and you responded with unconstructive worries. "Ooh, but what if the wording isn't quite right?", "Ooh, but what if someone interprets it all funny like?", "Ooooooh...". :scream: — S
Great, when I suggest writing laws, rather than discussing issues related to law, I'll think back to how prescient you were.Writing laws is best left to professionals, not members of a philosophy forum. — S
And more strawman stuff to get you to posture more. You are precisely the kind of person who probably thinks they are doing noble things, but via all the snarkiness, oversimplification, shifting of focus and irrelevant crap makes any tensions over an issue even worse.Yeah, yeah, yeah. Look, if you're arrogant enough to think that you can do better, then be my guest. But there's no way that I'd trust that responsibility to you over the actual professionals whose job it is to come up with this sort of legislation. — S
so you'd do what exactly? — S
Intelligence work seems to be doing the job fairly well. — Terrapin Station
Intelligence work failed to prevent the acts of terrorism mentioned in The Guardian article, whereas the enforcement of hate speech law at an earlier stage might have done. — S
The idea isn't that intelligence work would be infallible. — Terrapin Station
Again, there's zero evidence that controlling hate speech would have anything to do with controlling terrorism. — Terrapin Station
Terrorism isn't the primary problem we've had in the U.S. over the past 20-25 years anyway. It's violence related to other crimes (the illegal drug trade, gangs, etc.) and loony locals who want to shoot up folks for all sorts of reasons . . . or no reason at all in some cases. — Terrapin Station
The US has no hate speech laws and less terrorist incidents than the UK.
The UK has hate speech laws and more terrorist incidents than the US. — NOS4A2
No, there's not zero evidence, there's zero evidence that you're willing to acknowledge as evidence because you're biased. — S
So what evidence is there that having hate speech restrictions controls anything about terrorism? — Terrapin Station
Yes, hate speech laws have little if anything to do with terrorism. — NOS4A2
But censoring someone like Choudary leaves us all ignorant of his extremism. — NOS4A2
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