منوة الخيال;1541349 said:
You're delusional if you think that you've any freedom in any western society. You're free only to express one brand of ideology no more no less.
That is simply wrong there are many ideologies competing and constantly fighting over this and that. In a cosmopolitan society there are some rules to ensure a peaceful free life for everyone. That doesn't mean everybody can do whatever they want. You cannot beat your children no matter what you claim your religion says. There are commonly agreed values that are imposed. Like in many situations womens rights collide with old patriarchic traditional religious interpretations and it then has to be decided what is more important. In the US there is a huge debate about those.
I just don't view things as pessimistic as you.
منوة الخيال;1541349 said:
I have no hopes of laws being put in place or any good change being made at all.
Great. I do trust our laws. I live in a very safe, very friendly country with many helpful people and our crime rate is so low that I see a police car in my town actually moving 3 times a year. We must be doing something right here.
I would prefer it some of the stupid tabloid newspaper were forbidden and people actually valued journalism but there is no chance of that ever happening.
If you have no hopes I am sorry but I think we are not so far on the wrong track.
There are some problems that aren't properly tackled. Like the age distribution where the elderly have more votes and thus certain legislation is problematic. It sucks that someone that reads two lines in a tabloid gets a vote with the same weight as someone that actually tries to form an informed opinion.
Democracy is the worst form of government, except for all those other forms that have been tried from time to time. -Churchill
I certainly don't want a theocracy, I would be more inclined to go to China with their hegemonial totalitarianism.
Democracy has a value and there are still ways to improve it. The pirate internet parties do promote a new more active involvement in politicial decision making of the public and more transparency. Democracy has its costs. It is way more inefficient and slow and it demands both educated and active participation to work. It doesn't come for free.
Can all we agree that freedom of speech, like all other freedoms, must be exercised responsibly?
Rights can be abused, and that's the crux of the discussion here.
I would agree.
I tried to make a case that some forms of it can not responsibly be criminalized and therefore remain legal unless of course you change the type of government. The people need to learn to deal with it in some productive fashion.
I can only say how the demonstrations are seen in much of the so called west and especially the liberal circles. It seems as if the internet connect countries and cultures that have never been exposed to any such criticism or mockery. Now they haven't learned to simply stand above such low trifling insults. One judges the content and the source in combination. If a high ranking politician or well educated professor insults someone or some people, people are upset and demand apologies. If some lowlife ultra rants about some nonsense, that is just ignored as everybody would feel like lowering oneself to that level by acknowledging even listening to it. Mad people cannot get reasoned with so there is no point trying.
Now I read somewhere that islamist blogs promoted this movie as if it was some kind of big thing in the US. In that case I could understand the people better but I would question why cares to set that straight. We got populists too but we don't respect them.
To sum it up it looks more like the people only sought to find some reason to go nuts and release all their anger, in which case sympathy is not exactly running high. If they only dug up some movie from the depths of the trash web to have some reason for inciting unrest it is difficult to feel sympathy.
The media has its sensationalism we all know but there was really only one article about Lybians demonstrating that they condone the murder of the US ambassador who was very popular in Lybia as he very early supported the uprising. It looked as if nobody cared what kind of a picture this sends to the rest of the world or that those that did are a weak minority or passive. Which I assume is the case. Not that they have to care but if they want to be heard they also need to be perceived as rational and respectful.
The noise makers we have are now calling for more insulting material for the sole purpose of toughening up this angry population. A sort of education tool so Muslims get to be as toughened as the Christians are. One such example is this
A populist group in Germany wants to publicly show the anti-Islam film "Innocence of Muslims," which is stoking a violent backlash across the Muslim world. Officials are reviewing whether they could ban the action, sparking a delicate debate over free speech and public order.
I can understand that the foreign policy of the US and EU is not being viewed positively, but I am really not sure if this whole issue is by the people that actually live there more about general resentments as in a political statement that has been sparked or primarily about the religious feelings. It it is really near impossible to extract that out of the news media.
To put it differently is it more about respect for Islam or respect for Muslims as people that don't want to be treated as they have been in the recent past. Like the Greek that demonstrate against Germany because they think austerity is bleeding them dry.
The demonstrations to display accusation against the West but seemingly not just as a proxy. No European and 99% of Americans feel responsible for the movie so people read the news paper and ask what do these people want.