Cherry picking is a logical fallacy. I can keep on repeating that if you like. — S
That's not what I was saying, but as I asked, what would you give as an example of a law that limits speech where speech isn't even necessary for it? — Terrapin Station
Surely you're not using "unacceptable" in this context to refer to whether we personally accept something a la believing it or considering it to be true ourselves, are you?I — Terrapin Station
If I don't think that this is something that it's possible to be right/wrong about, then obviously I don't think that I'm right. — Terrapin Station
So we agree that it's not right to allow hate speech? We agree that you're not right about that? — S
It's neither correct nor incorrect to allow or disallow hate speech. Correct/incorrect is a category error here. — Terrapin Station
It's not a category error. I'm arguing that it's correct to disallow it, meaning I think that it should be disallowed. — S
It's a category error because there is nothing to get correct or incorrect. — Terrapin Station
It's not a category error because there is something to get correct or incorrect, namely the issue under discussion. I'm correct and you're incorrect. — S
What would getting a moral stance correct amount to? — Terrapin Station
Thought/belief has efficacy. Hate speech consists entirely of statements thereof. Hate speech moves people to war.
What am I cherry picking? Repeat it again and you’d be wrong again. — NOS4A2
So if the requirement to not ban any speech is fulfilled, is that correct? — Terrapin Station
No. — S
Haha, okay. So how would any ethical stance be incorrect. You simply set a requirement that you then fulfill with your stance. — Terrapin Station
Oh you do. — creativesoul
It's obvious. You're cherry picking the first clause regarding freedom of expression under U.K. law, and deliberately ignoring the second clause. The second clause answers your fallacious criticism without me having to do anything except refer you back to it. I accept the two together. Maybe you accept only the first clause, but if you act as though I accept only the first clause, and point it out to me in isolation, then that is cherry picking.
It was a question. Is it true that you have the freedom to hold opinions and to receive and impart information and ideas without interference by public authority and regardless of frontiers?
You said it was. I said it wasn’t, and gave the examples proving the opposite. You cannot retweet a limerick mocking a trans person without being investigated. You cannot read Dabiq without getting arrested.
No, you do not have the freedom to hold opinions and to receive and impart information and ideas without interference by public authority and regardless of frontiers. — NOS4A2
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