Is there some natural force in existence that specifically prevents such a hypothetical from being the case? — Isaac
When you refer to it as views I despise, that puts a subjective spin on it. I despise some right wing ideology, but I absolutely believe they should be able to voice their views. It boils down to whether or not there are standards that are more objective that can be applied. For example, do you think we should allow a public call-to-arms to start killing blacks? IMO, it's appropriate to silence that sort of speech.
how would you rate the liberty to say "Jews should all be killed" compared to the liberty to walk down the street, get a job, a house, live wherever you choose and retain your property? — Isaac
Personally, I’m an absolutist when it comes to free speech. I believe all speech should be allowed. — NOS4A2
I don't know how to answer "rating" such things. I'd not prohibit anyone from saying anything, walking down any public street, getting a job, etc. — Terrapin Station
If those two liberties clashed (ie you can't have one without removing the other) which would you remove and by what degree? — Isaac
So you're saying that there is never a need to decide whether to allow one person's liberty when it might constrain another's? — Isaac
Maybe I could frame it in your terms then. I wish to throw rock off a building. You wish to walk down the street below but can't do so for fear of being hit by rocks. I frame that in terms of comparing my right to throw rocks with your right to walk down the street unmolested. How do you frame that dilemma? — Isaac
Ah. So you disagree with all laws aimed at protected people from harm. — Isaac
I'd also have a "criminal threatening" category — Terrapin Station
But why? You subjectively value free speech so highly that you are willing to accept the negative consequences. — Relativist
You're clearly either a sociopath or (more likely I suspect) simply pretending to be one for effect. — Isaac
either we potentially ban any arbitrary thing--just in case someone is afraid of it--or we have people making laws based only on the fears that they deem "reasonable," where such designations are completely subjective, where they're going to be based on social norms, etc. — Terrapin Station
Yes. The second one. Because the third option is that we have no laws at all preventing actions which severely curtail people's freedom in blatantly obvious ways just to adhere to some stupid philosophical ideal.
Free speech is not some objective moral value. You value it because of what you perceive to be the positive consquences. The negatives have not been demonstrated to your satisfaction, but neither have you demonstrated the positive consequences to my (and perhaps others') satisfaction.As I've been explaining over and over in this thread, I don't accept that we can at all demonstrate that there are negative consequences (especially of the sort that I'd legislate against, as I've been describing just today, in posts just above) — Terrapin Station
Yes. The second one. — Isaac
You're basing them on the emotional reactions you're subjectively giving approval to. Which is just another way of trying to enforce your personal whims. — Terrapin Station
Free speech is not some objective moral value. — Relativist
You value it because of what you perceive to be the positive consquences. — Relativist
The negatives have not been demonstrated to your satisfaction, but neither have you demonstrated the positive consequences to my (and perhaps others') satisfaction. — Relativist
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