Which wouldn't be problems then. One can't really complain about people who try to limit free speech if one thinks speech cannot have negative effects on people, even other people.
But by limiting speech (through coercion, no less) they limit speaking, reading, conversation, which are actions which have meaningful and important effects. — NOS4A2
(Or we could allow 99.99% of speech to be free and just put some sensible limitations on the stuff that is likely to have extremely negative consequences for both individuals and society as a whole (like hate speech). Sorry, just a weird thought...)
That’s the line of thinking for blasphemy laws for instance, that evil words beget evil deeds and laws against it must be enforced in order to protect the greater public good. It turns out it wasn’t so sensible. — NOS4A2
I'd rather acknowledge that sometimes words do lead to bad things than allow a situation where someone could order my family to be murdered and receive no punishment because some had an ideological attachment to free speech laws even more irrational than religious fundamentals' attachment to blasphemy laws. — Baden
on balance I'd prefer a society where extreme cases of hate speech, for example, surrounding a black person, shouting the N word at them and threatening to lynch them was not tolerated — Baden
What you're referring to here as hate speech would surely be covered by things like criminal threat, intimidation, or incitement to violence. Isn't the introduction of hate speech legislation precisely to cover other cases, namely of harm interpreted more widely, or offence--cases that don't fall under the other laws? — jamalrob
Do any serious commentators argue that ordering murder etc. ought to be defended on the basis of the principle of freedom of speech, or on the basis of its constitutional safeguards? I don't think even (reasonable) free speech absolutists would advance that position — jamalrob
Should state prosecute people who order killings or have a stance or an ideology which promotes violence.
— Wittgenstein
No, not in my view. A number of times I've brought up the extreme case that people like to bring up (and I now see you did in the following post): to my knowledge, Hitler never killed anyone. I don't know what, if any crimes (that I'd consider a crime) he committed, but certainly no speech, nothing he ever ordered, etc. should be considered a crime. — Terrapin Station
It is this cost-benefit analysis that the discussion has really been about, though many refuse to see it that way — Isaac
So yes, it does extend beyond direct incitement to violence, into incitement to hatred. — Isaac
What you're referring to here as hate speech would surely be covered by things like criminal threat, intimidation, or incitement to violence. Isn't the introduction of hate speech legislation precisely to cover other cases, namely of harm interpreted more widely, or offence--cases that don't fall under the other laws? — jamalrob
But that is a criterion that can be adapted to many purposes. No doubt the Chinese Communist Party could claim that the Hong Kong protestors are encouraging ‘hatred against the Motherland’. — Wayfarer
Sexual harrassment in companies. A boss who makes sexual comments to his women (or men, but let's keep it to one group). Does not back off from this pattern when challenged. Can companies limit the bosses speech within the laws of your country? — Coben
Your neighbor practices his electric guitar until five in the AM and your bed actually vibrates - and not in a fun way. No way to call in the law? or can one? How do you see something like this getting resolved? — Coben
dangers to not having them — Baden
I'd have "sensory ordinances" similar to what we have now re sounds, smells, flashing lights, etc. — Terrapin Station
So if I don't like the sound of an electric guitar, I'd have recourse, but if I don't like the sound of "gays should be killed" I'd have nothing. Any reason why some sounds are legislated against and others aren't in your dystopia? Or is it just on a whim? — Isaac
this isn't something unusual. It's the case in countries like the U.S. now, that there are noise ordinances, etc — Terrapin Station
Yes, but not of the sort your describing in your dystopia, that's what I was asking for clarification about. The modal ordinance from the EPA, for example describes violations as noises which are "unwanted" and "disturbing". Not just those that physically damage your ears. You, unsurprisingly, have limited the state's role to just about keeping everyone alive, and the rest of their welfare can go hang. Don't try and pretend that's a normal position. — Isaac
You, unsurprisingly, have limited the state's role to just about keeping everyone alive, and the rest of their welfare can go hang. — Isaac
If you have to hand any municipal ordinance which sets acceptable noise levels only at those which physically damage he ear, — Isaac
You very much implied that noises which people found disturbing would also be covered — Isaac
There's no "cost" to consider. — Terrapin Station
It's not that speech can't have an effect on others. It's that it can't be shown to force them to perform particular actions. — Terrapin Station
Yes there is. Your opinion doesn't matter in the bigger picture. — S
No, you've already been told that that's a straw man. — S
Yeah, that's a can of worms we didn't get into--just what counts as hate speech? — Terrapin Station
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