Skavau
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Well, this is the crux of the issue here. People here appear to believe that an affront to their feelings is an affront to their rights. That their feeling offended is somehow more of a problem than censorship. That, I'm afraid I cannot abide as it opens up a very slippery slope to being compelled to censor all things that people find offensive. Scientologists find Xenu.tv, Anonymous websites and Free Zone literature profoundly offensive and by the reckoning of many here, would be absolutely within their rights of 'feeling offended' to pull their content from the internet and from circulation. How do you you objectively define that 'feeling offended' is a good enough reason to impose restrictions and somehow a transgression to their liberty, precisely?Woodrow said:If only we had a clear, proven way to be certain everybody will stop their fist before it impacts with a nose. People seem to have a tendency to push their freedoms to the extreme and it is common for them to fail to see when and where they have transgressed into the rights of their neighbor.
No he didn't. Freedom of speech of course gave Adolph Hitler a backdrop, but I would hardly consider his SA intimidating people into voting for the NSDAP, the Enabling Act (voted by a parliamentary majority) and many of the other backroom deals as products of free speech. Don't forget just how disjointed and corrupt the Weimar Republic was.Yet full freedom of speech can backfire. Hitler came to rise to a large degree because he had freedom of speech.
At any rate, I find fault with your premise. Are you suggesting that freedom of speech should be restricted in advance on the basis that just perhaps fascist groups, or totalitarian groups or such like might use it to argue their case? Not only is that in itself, a self-contradiction given than imposed censorship of a kind is totalitarian in nature - but it is also ineffective. If there is a prevailing tendency towards fascism sweeping through the population, then it would come regardless or not it would be legal or not to spread it. To take point, in the end - I don't think it mattered that Germany became a democracy. As long as their economic situation was dire and even if the Kaiser was still in place, Nazism would have always had a similar impact to the one it did.
In what context do you argue that freedom of speech is a "dangerous weapon"? Yes, I agree it is powerful and an excellent ahead-of-its-time or an excellent analysis has the capacity to change a lot of people's thoughts - but people should not be held accountable for that. Your argument so far appears to contain a lot of fear of people being convinced of fascism and other unpleasantries through the means of speech (and I assume you're going to connect media that mocks, or insults religion as enablers for that). I would say in direct response that this the price that we pay for free speech, and it is an important price for all of our liberty we take for granted in saying what we say and expressing what we belief stems from it. Your liberty to preach Islam is the same liberty defectors use to insult, satirize and mock Islam. My liberty to promote humanism is the same liberty that Christians use to promote Christianity. To drive a wedge and declare some as unacceptable based on 'hurt feelings' not only betrays the historical development of free speech, but it also opens everyone else up to have their cake and eat it too and demand their own restrictions.Words are formidable weapons. In some ways even more subtle than material weapons as their damage is subtle and difficult to see. When a recognized weapon is available is readily available to all, it will be misused. There is not happy nor agreeable solution. simple fact is weapons need to to restricted, even though we all have to give up some rights in order to protect everybody. the ideal solution would be for everybody to use Freedom of speech is a safe sane, constructive manner. As distasteful as it is, some degree of control is needed.
I would ask you though, as I have asked several others - a specific question: On the internet as I suspect you may know there exist parodies of wikipedia. Their intent is humour and all of their articles mock, deride and satirize the topic. One of the websites is explicit, and the other is not so explicit. They both have articles on all of the topics that wikipedia does and function just as wikipedia - including articles on Islam. I mean these websites have been posting cartoons and depicitions of Mohammed for at least as long as the original Danish cartoon 'controversy'. Do you propose that these websites, by your own beliefs be shut down and removed from the internet?
If so, would you by extension then suggest that any internet user who insults Islam, or insults any particular religion have their ISP contacted and be threatened with suspension of their service? Why or why not?
Cheers