OK. But we do agree that the threat itself is still a speech act? — Echarmion
There are speech acts that are threats, but what I'm describing isn't just, or even necessarily, a speech act. — Terrapin Station
But it seems to follow that "speech acts can never be illegal" is not a tenable position then. The question that follows is what benefit does a dogmatic adherence to "free speech absolutism" have? — Echarmion
But it seems to follow that "speech acts can never be illegal" is not a tenable position then — Echarmion
Again, criminal threatening as I describe it isn't a speech act. — Terrapin Station
It can be accompanied by a speech act--as can murdering someone, raping someone, etc. But the speech act is neither sufficient nor even necessary. — Terrapin Station
You're clearly describing speech acts. — Echarmion
Hate speech cultivates the conditions of/for war.
— creativesoul
Just as well equipped, effective armed forces give the ability for politicians to go to war in distant places. — ssu
Yet to think that well equipped effective armed forces should then be banned is the wrong way to think about it. — ssu
Africa has had poorly equipped small armed forces for a long time and that hasn't prevented genocidal wars of happening.
Hate speech cultivates the conditions of/for war.
— creativesoul
Do you think the following example of hate speech cultivates the conditions for war between Britain and the US?
Too much guns, religion, celebrity, flag waving nationalism, egomaniac, warmongering, stupid constitutional rights obsession. The U.S. is like our deformed offspring.
— S
If not, is there any circumstance in which you think it could? Or maybe you think it isn't hate speech at all? — jamalrob
So then, do you agree that thought, belief, and speech has efficacy?
I do, but only on the person thinking, believing and speaking. I don’t believe they have any efficacy beyond that. — NOS4A2
Again, criminal threatening as I describe it isn't a speech act. — Terrapin Station
They were long steeped in censorship. Weimar Germany has the most modern hate speech laws in history. Nazis were persecuted for their speech up until the Nazis seized power. Not only did they use their sense of martyrdom to propel their cause, they turned around and used that persecution as justification for their own persecutory actions.
Censorship licensed the groundwork for war, bloodshed and genocide. — NOS4A2
Looks like ridicule to me. It's related to hate speech in that they are both founded upon a personal value system which devalues others for irrational reasons. — 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
The enemy I've picked is the idea that speech causes actions. — Terrapin Station
Nope. They're just doing it to be funny. That's their job. — S
So this, for example:
"it's an immediate, 'physical' threat in the sense of potential victims being within the range of the threatening instruments (whether just one's body, or weapons, or causally connected remote devices or substances, etc.), which are actual and not simply claimed,"
Is explicitly describing something that's not speech. — Terrapin Station
It seems weird that a lot of arguments here are just doubling down on an objection that makes no sense in light of what someone is actually saying. — Terrapin Station
Many find the deliberate belittling of another to be funny. Doesn't make it hate speech. — creativesoul
Everyone deserves a certain modicum of respect(dignity, worth, value) simply because they are human. — creativesoul
Don't quit your day job. The comedy needs work. — creativesoul
Would you like to be bullied, puppet?If a person who worships lies (ie. "believes" something that is not true) hears a truth that undermines their "belief", they will hate the person speaking the truth and accuse them of hate speech because it is how they themselves feel: hatred. — A Gnostic Agnostic
If I said to you, "I'm going to fucking knife you to death!", — S
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