On my view, nothing counts as morally (or legally) unacceptable thought, belief or speech. — Terrapin Station
Speech acts are statements of thought/belief. Thought/belief have efficacy. They lead to patterns of thinking, habits, and acts.
Does anyone here deny this?
What we’re denying is that those thoughts and beliefs have efficacy beyond the person thinking or speaking them. Most have argued that, yes, words fly through the air and alter the matter in someone else’s brain. — NOS4A2
As I've said before, I'm not interested in the least bit in your opinion. I'm interested in the solidity of my opinion. I'm using you (or others in this discussion) to test it. — Isaac
Yet wars don't rise from the existence of hate speech. Hate speech or it's variants can be used in propaganda, yet the idea that hate speech being a reason for wars is silly.If hate speech is accepted using freedom of speech, then you've licensed the groundwork(the means) for war and bloodshed. — creativesoul
Yet wars don't rise from the existence of hate speech. Hate speech or it's variants can be used in propaganda, yet the idea that hate speech being a reason for wars is silly. — ssu
Just look how many places the US has bombed without any hate speech against the people of those countries. — ssu
Give an example.There are wars which were caused by hate speech. — creativesoul
Just an observation that conflicts don't emerge from the existence of hate speech.
Just like conflicts don't emerge from countries having armed forces. — ssu
Because what typically would be "hate speech" in this way would be just propaganda for the war, a tool used to sell the war. — ssu
Hate speech cultivates the conditions of/for war. — creativesoul
Too much guns, religion, celebrity, flag waving nationalism, egomaniac, warmongering, stupid constitutional rights obsession. The U.S. is like our deformed offspring. — S
It's the matter how you eliminate it. Sometimes being confrontational isn't the best way as likely the agitators look for that confrontation and need it. They need that tribalism.No argument here. Eliminating hate speech reduces the risks of war and bloodshed. — creativesoul
Just as well equipped, effective armed forces give the ability for politicians to go to war in distant places.Hate speech cultivates the conditions of/for war. — creativesoul
I guarantee that that's not the case. You're arguing against what you hold to be unacceptable thought, belief, and statements all the time here. — creativesoul
If hate speech is accepted using freedom of speech, then you've licensed the groundwork(the means) for war and bloodshed.
Pick an enemy. — creativesoul
Yet wars don't rise from the existence of hate speech. Hate speech or it's variants can be used in propaganda, yet the idea that hate speech being a reason for wars is silly.
Just look how many places the US has bombed without any hate speech against the people of those countries. — ssu
Yet anti-semitism has been quite universal in Europe.The history of anti-Semitism in Germany, which obviously peaked in the Nazi era, and which included what would now be classed as hate speech, undoubtedly played a part in the events which lead to the Second World War. — S
So then, do you agree that thought, belief, and speech has efficacy?
maybe you think it isn't hate speech at all? — jamalrob
Where's the common sense?
I mean does anyone really think that situations like Nazi Germany somehow happened without being long since steeped in hate speech?
Is anyone denying that there are groups of people being trained at an early age to be one thing and one thing only, and that being that thing requires and/or includes causing deliberate and intentional harm to complete strangers.
If hate speech is accepted using freedom of speech, then you've licensed the groundwork(the means) for war and bloodshed.
Pick an enemy.
The enemy I've picked is the idea that speech causes actions. — Terrapin Station
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