• tim wood
    8.7k
    As to modern communication, I'm a dinosaur. I remember three-cent postage; I do not own a cell phone. That is, within a lifetime there have been astounding quantitative changes in every aspect of how people can communicate. But has it changed it qualitatively? Is communication itself changed to something that, on large scale at least, it has never, or rarely, been before?

    What used to be received, accepted, consumed, digested, considered, reflected upon, even discussed and perhaps finally judged by an individual taking responsibility for his own thinking, seems now to have become as if an electronic jolt administered to a large group, the measure of it being its seismic effect more than any appeal to reason. As if the body politic were all, and the measure of success of a communication were how well, if poked over here, how much it shook over there, as if it all were a bowl of jelly.

    The limitations on communication even a mere fifty years ago were such as to create a kind of space. Space for stupidity, ignorance, intolerance, evil to fall into and thereby fall out of notice. Obviously not always: history giving examples of that space being closed up and toxic ideas for a while thriving.

    But now it seems that toxicity can spread with the speed of immediacy, instant wildfire. A few persons with gasoline and matches setting a fire that at once is everywhere. Mark Twain anticipated this with, "A lie can travel halfway around the world while the truth is putting on its shoes." But his seeming the lie of persuasion, based on a falsehood relying on its head-start and appeal to out-distance the truth. Now the lie seems different and tailored to the need not of outdistancing the truth, but of right away cutting it off at the knees, this the method and tool of right-wing politics especially. An appeal to the immediate reaction, usually of emotion in terms of fear or hatred. In itself nothing entirely new, but, as the argument here claims, qualitatively different from its forebears.

    Famously in the US at least free speech does not permit calling out, "Fire!" in a crowded theater if there is no fire. And there are other restrictions, though it's not a simple subject. The point being that
    "free speech" does not mean free speech, and most people understand that.

    My view is that modern communication has lent a fire-power to speech that itself requires greater control. And if not prior restraint - and how could that be done? - then a system of definitions and penalties that would have an effectively chilling and prohibitive effect on proscribed speech.

    One way, to define "lie" such that it can be identified, and on being demonstrated to have been told, the teller(s) immediately subject to fierce penalties. In a sense, then, communication has turned the world into a giant crowded theater. False cries of fire become themselves too dangerous and thus rightly punished. Or are there better ways?
  • Cabbage Farmer
    301
    What used to be received, accepted, consumed, digested, considered, reflected upon, even discussed and perhaps finally judged by an individual taking responsibility for his own thinking, seems now to have become as if an electronic jolt administered to a large group, the measure of it being its seismic effect more than any appeal to reason.tim wood
    Do you really think most people were so responsible in their opinions fifty or a hundred years ago, or at any time in this planet's history? I don't think most people in any society of significant scale have ever had the opportunity to be as informed, and reflective, and responsible as you suggest.

    Let's not romanticize the past. There's never been a shortage of ignorant, misguided, unreasonable, selfish, and hateful souls in this world.

    The limitations on communication even a mere fifty years ago were such as to create a kind of space. Space for stupidity, ignorance, intolerance, evil to fall into and thereby fall out of notice. Obviously not always: history giving examples of that space being closed up and toxic ideas for a while thrivingtim wood
    I'd be more cautious with this metaphor. Good ideas as much as bad ones fell through the cracks into that space. A glance at the historical record should persuade you that toxic ideas and despicable deeds -- including unjust government policies enthusiastically cheered by hordes of duped voters -- have been incessant.

    Perhaps the most relevant difference is that it was easier for the powerful to influence the hearts and minds of the masses, to divide and rule, with flimsy ideological propaganda back in those days. Given the increasing accessibility of genuine information in recent decades, it's become harder to deceive and divide people the old-fashioned way. So the oligarchs have turned to making the people absolutely deranged. The same technology that has made information so accessible has also made consumers of information more susceptible to derangement.

    Generations raised on that newfangled poison are coming up behind us. You're right to suggest it's becoming harder for everybody to find "space" from the new media environment and the culture it drives.

    Famously in the US at least free speech does not permit calling out, "Fire!" in a crowded theater if there is no fire. And there are other restrictions, though it's not a simple subject. The point being that "free speech" does not mean free speech, and most people understand that.tim wood
    Free speech is free speech. Like all of our rights, our right to free speech must be limited so as to protect all the rights of all the members of our community. If everyone's rights are not limited in this way, there are no rights -- only privileges for a few.

    My view is that modern communication has lent a fire-power to speech that itself requires greater control. And if not prior restraint - and how could that be done? - then a system of definitions and penalties that would have an effectively chilling and prohibitive effect on proscribed speech.

    One way, to define "lie" such that it can be identified, and on being demonstrated to have been told, the teller(s) immediately subject to fierce penalties. In a sense, then, communication has turned the world into a giant crowded theater. False cries of fire become themselves too dangerous and thus rightly punished. Or are there better ways?
    tim wood
    I'm afraid I agree that recent technology makes it more urgent to regulate and penalize some forms of harmful speech.

    I might aim to regulate and punish large-scale acts of misinformation, in some cases even when the misinformer didn't know they were spreading misinformation.

    If a food seller fails to take precautions specified by law to ensure the safety of the food they sell, there may be warnings and penalties, regardless of whether the food is in fact unsafe. If a food seller hasn't taken the requisite precautions, and as a consequence consumers are harmed, there may be penalties even if the seller didn't know that the food was contaminated. At least in many jurisdictions, the regulations vary according to scale, and the smallest sellers are the least regulated. Someone who sells a few dozen homemade cookies at a local market isn't typically required to follow the same strict standards that apply to larger retailers, wholesalers, and distributors, because their potential to cause harm is far smaller and more easily contained; and it's thus safe enough to err on the side of personal liberty in such cases.

    I suppose we could seek to regulate the distribution of putative statements of fact somewhat analogously. Say, by targeting platforms, publishers, and self-publishers with more than one-hundred thousand or one million readers, listeners, viewers, subscribers, followers, or users, to make those publishers responsible for fact-checking and accountable for misinformation.

    Of course such a strategy comes with obstacles and risks. But it's come to seem that the risks associated with neglecting to regulate misinformation might outweigh the risks of cautious regulation.
  • Tobias
    984
    Now the lie seems different and tailored to the need not of outdistancing the truth, but of right away cutting it off at the knees, this the method and tool of right-wing politics especially. An appeal to the immediate reaction, usually of emotion in terms of fear or hatred. In itself nothing entirely new, but, as the argument here claims, qualitatively different from its forebears.tim wood

    It is a good question. I do not know whether communication has qualitatively changed. The worry about the abilities of authoritarian regimes to use appeals to emotion is among us for a long time already. In this article (not free unfortunately :( ) Karl Loewenstein writes about the use of mass media to enhance a political strategy that appeals to emotion as a basis for its appeal. It reads like it could be written yesterday, but it is written in the 1930's and he refers to the radio, news paper op eds and public rallies...

    The question is very thorny because it implies we might have to give up some of our most cherished rights to protect them and that is of course paradoxical. t is debated in law faculties currently, but an answer is very difficult to give, because the whole idea of free speech is that we are free to raise objections to the communis opinio... I think what we should worry about is the establishment of monopolies regarding the formation of discourse. Prohibition would be a last resort. I feel the key is to educate people to accept open and free debate, and encourage them to view matters from different perspectives, however harsh it may be. currently that is not the sign of the times though, where both the left and the right use tactics of canellation and villification.
  • tim wood
    8.7k
    Do you really think most people were so responsible in their opinions fifty or a hundred years ago, or at any time in this planet's history?Cabbage Farmer
    I had for years this book:
    https://www.amazon.com/Founders-Constitution-Major-Themes/dp/0226463893/ref=cm_cr_arp_d_product_top?ie=UTF8

    "The Founder's Constitution." A complete survey of the American mind on American independence before, during, and after the American revolution. We were good, then. And in Webster's speeches, and Lincoln's, including debates. All to an audience that clearly hungered for intelligent and challenging intellectual argument and display, and on the most serious issues, and understood them "even better than we do now." So, yes. Though not even close, now.

    Free speech is free speech.Cabbage Farmer
    On this a reference I've used before. David Souter in a speech at Harvard, here:
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eCxaDwOCXD8
    Speech starts at 4:00. "No law does not mean no law."

    I suppose we could seek to regulate the distribution of putative statements of fact somewhat analogously.... Of course such a strategy comes with obstacles and risks. But it's come to seem that the risks associated with neglecting to regulate misinformation might outweigh the risks of cautious regulation.Cabbage Farmer
    I do not know how any kind of prior restraint might work. Apparently the English have something like, but we not them, nor they us. And to be sure there are plenty of legal remedies for loss due to libel or slander, including punitive damages, but these all prohibitively slow and expensive. My own notion being that the lie being told, the teller(s) immediately subject to ferocious penalties, no delay. The message being that if you lie, especially about anything of any importance, you're f***ked big-time. The liar can then seek reduction of fines and penalties after he's paid them, and that might be on the substance of the content, but not on the fact of the lie, that being the separate offence.

    How many lies did Trump tell? 30,000+ just on the limited count that took place. In his business life ten times that? And his personal life? And all the crazies of every stripe that hover in a cloud around him? If each of those lies were severely punished, how few might there might be or have been.
  • tim wood
    8.7k
    Prohibition would be a last resort.Tobias
    Not prohibition; that does seem difficult and maybe a cure worse than the disease, but instead a punishment at every level guaranteed to make the liar wish he had never lied and make it likely he never will again.

    And if that sounds harsh, consider the damage done by lies even just since Trump's election. This by no means to suggest that no one ever lied before, but never in the US as a matter of default policy. Others have stretched the limits; Trump broke them. It's time to break them back and reestablish basic honesty as a basic standard, legally enforced as remediation of harm to date.
  • Streetlight
    9.1k
    The US in currently in the process of trying to throw Julian Assange in prision forever, for exposing wonton American murder overseas.

    The human rights lawyer Steven Donzinger was just thrown into jail by Chevron - literally by Chevron, the private company, and not the government - as punishment for winning a case against them for poisoning the environment, and securing an $18billion judgement against them.

    Edward Snowden is still in exile because he exposed illegal government surveillance.

    Academics lose jobs over critiquing Israel's protracted genocide against Palestinians.

    The idea that we need less, rather than more free speech, is the height of lunacy.

    It is of course, a classic liberal idea. Rather than have anything at all to say about the corporate control of the media - because liberals are effectively capitalist stooges who will go to bat for money wherever it is and whose politics is based on how comfortable they personally feel - and which has left (official) media a barren wasteland of corporate propaganda, they'd prefer to accelerate the problem by handing the keys of speech over to further control.
  • baker
    5.6k
    I'm nearing fifty and in my entire life, there has not been a single occasion, IRL or online, where I felt I could speak "freely".

    There is no such thing as "free speech", there are always repercussions for what one says. Some are not so grave (such as being told off), some result in imprisonment and death, and then everything inbetween.

    Things may be better for the rich and the powerful. But even they have their own power games and competition going on, so even they cannot just afford to speak "freely".
  • NOS4A2
    8.3k


    The “falsely yell fire in a crowded theater” dictum is not established law, but a -puerile analogy found in the unanimous opinion of Justice Holmes, who used the phrase to censor and jail a socialist who was passing out flyers urging resistance to the draft. Smarter jurists have long since overturned Holmes’ precedent (the clear and present danger test), and speech can only be prosecuted if it is directed to inciting or producing “imminent lawless action”, but it’s no surprise to find that the analogy still lives in the mouths of those who fear and wish to suppress speech—that is exactly what it was designed to do.

    But I would never expect penalty for your misinformation because only speech itself can rectify it. I would be doing a disservice to both truth and myself by censoring falsity, which treats truth as no worthy opponent to lies, and myself a coward, fearful of words. In any case, calling for the censorship of lies out of one side of the mouth and spreading misinformation out of the other is not a good look. And one day your opponents will wield the exact same tools of suppression you created. What then?
  • tim wood
    8.7k
    In any case, calling for the censorship of liesNOS4A2
    I do not call for that. Lie all you want. I do desire that within the sphere of influence and effect of the lie, there be punishments for the lie itself - never mind content - such that the lie is if not suppressed then at least well-understood to cause heavy penalties. And this for the simple reason that lies cause harm and damage.

    And you're right, the dictum is not established law. Nor are a lot of dicta. Nor did i say it was. But that does not mean you can act contra to them. It does mean that the punishment/penalties that come your way may be based in other language. Or try it. Go into a crowded theater and yell, "Fire!" And if apprehended, just see how many different kinds of trouble you will be in.

    But what is your point? That a right of free speech includes a right to lie? What nonsense! An ability to lie is not constitutive of any right to lie, just as being able to do any of a number of things does not constitute a right to do them. And as to misinformation, look at your own post and many of your other posts, for you are a considerable mis-informer!
  • tim wood
    8.7k
    Emigrate? "Freedom" is a word both deliberately and ignorantly misunderstood. But I infer you're a person with a good sense of it from the lack of it where you live. Do you travel to freer countries at all, business or vacation? You seem steeped in a lack of it, like a dark oolong. Maybe a wash and a little green tea?
  • tim wood
    8.7k
    To borrow: you are such a "nattering Nabob of negativism," that I think it's time for you to make a positive statement about the way you think things should be, and how they might work. As τύραννος, how does your world work?

    And, "literally by Chevron"? Literally?
  • NOS4A2
    8.3k


    I need only to know your past comments on the subject of “yelling fire in a crowded theater”, which anyone can find. Here is journalist Christopher Hitchens falsely yelling “fire” in a crowded theater. He acted in contrary to the dicta, as anyone can do, and it was permitted and had procured no trouble or punishment. It appears free speech does permit it after all.



    My point has already been made. Truth doesn’t need you to censor falsity, and at any rate, your sense of what is true or false is as useful as an asshole on the elbow. Yes free speech permits the distortion of truth, but only because free speech is the only way to straighten it. Censorship permits the distortion of truth and its suppression.
  • Streetlight
    9.1k
    A positive statement about the way you think things should betim wood

    All those who call for the curtailing of free speech without addressing the media ownership and power disparities in media production should be put into a barrel and shot into the sun.

    And yes, literally by Chevron:

    "When a NY Court decided to pass on prosecuting him for that, Judge Lewis Kaplan used a legal loophole to turn over prosecution of the case to Chevron ... Today, the Chevron-supported judge, aided by the Chevron-supported prosecution, sentenced Donziger to the maximum time of six months in federal prison".

    Because now private companies have sovereign power to adjudicate law - and in other jurisdictions, ignore it entirely - and apparently some morons think this is a perfect time to call for the curtailing of speech.
  • tim wood
    8.7k
    How nice it would be if you had actually listened - dare I say understood - the video you yourself provide.

    But there seems a local mis-understanding here that I oppose free speech, which is only possible by those who fail to understand "free" in this context. I only mean that those who lie should pay the bill for 1) the fact of their having lied, and 2) the costs associated with the lie itself.
  • Streetlight
    9.1k
    Cool. Must be nice to ignore the larger point so you can wangle with irrelevancies that you can't even be bothered to spell out.

    But trust you to side with the billion dollar oil company that dumped toxic waste in Ecuador that killed hundreds of people. Classic liberal.
  • tim wood
    8.7k
    Cool. Must be nice to ignore the larger point so you can wangle with irrelevancies that you can't even be bothered to spell out.StreetlightX
    Is the Chevron case nice? It seems not to be. Is how you present it reasonable? That manifestly is not. Isn't there some barricade awaiting your attendance?
  • Streetlight
    9.1k
    Is how you present it reasonable? That manifestly is not.tim wood

    So, still can't be bothered to spell it out? No wonder you want to curtail speech. You simply can't be bothered to use it so there's nothing for you to lose anyway.
  • tim wood
    8.7k
    So, still can't be bothered to spell it out?StreetlightX
    Spell what out? I seethe with desire to be accommodating - just be clear!
  • Streetlight
    9.1k
    I dunno, so far you replied to my post with a bunch of utter irrelevancies. "You're a negative nancy". What is this, a kindergarten?
  • NOS4A2
    8.3k


    Proposing a fine for anyone who speaks contrary to Tim’s truth is in direct opposition to the principle of free speech. If you do not oppose free speech, why do you oppose free speech?
  • tim wood
    8.7k
    What is it about the word "lie" you do not understand? You do understand what a lie is, yes?

    And you obviously do not understand "free" here. Absurd example time: am I free, owning a gun, to come to your house and shoot you? Is that a freedom that I have? Or is that just an ability, the exercise of which properly called license? Is the ability to tell a lie constitutive of a right to tell a lie?
  • tim wood
    8.7k
    So far, here, all I now of that you're for is this:
    All those who call for the curtailing of free speech without addressing the media ownership and power disparities in media production should be put into a barrel and shot into the sun.StreetlightX
    From elsewhere I'm pretty sure you're against capitalism, and I think also democracy - although what democracy you have in mind I do not know. Pretty near everywhere and everyone sucketh. Anything good to say about anything?
  • Streetlight
    9.1k
    Anything good to say about anything?tim wood

    And this utterly irrelevant question addresses my initial post how?
  • NOS4A2
    8.3k


    Do you not understand the word “speech”? Is a lie not speech? Your silly analogies about guns, wildfires, and electric jolts cannot alter the fact that speech is speech: it produces none of the effects or damages you claim it does.
  • Caldwell
    1.3k
    Is the ability to tell a lie constitutive of a right to tell a lie?tim wood
    No it isn't.

    In fact this would fall under JS Mill's harm principle. Spreading lies which harm others is an offense.

    We have a legal name for it if directed to a specific person -- slander.
  • unenlightened
    8.7k
    We have a legal name for it if directed to a specific person -- slander.Caldwell

    We have a legal name if it isn't too: - fraud.
  • Caldwell
    1.3k
    We have a legal name if it isn't too: - fraud.unenlightened
    I concur.
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