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No Platforming?

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Topic: No Platforming?
Posted By: Blacksword
Subject: No Platforming?
Date Posted: March 03 2020 at 03:59
No Platforming:

"the practice of refusing someone an opportunity to make their ideas or beliefs known publicly, because you think these beliefs are dangerous or unacceptable"

Bearing in mind that legislation already exists to curb speech that will likely incite actual violence and disorder, where do you stand on no platforming of individuals or organisations whose perspectives are merely unpopular, or considered 'off colour' within the context of the current Zeitgeist, or 'Overton window' ?

This really refers to colleges and universities, where the student union (UK) has had a policy of no platforming since the early 70's, but in recent years the list of perspectives deemed off limits seems to have grown. The Oxford Union - to its credit - has allowed some very controversial speakers to address the student audience; Steve Bannon, Kate Hopkins, Tommy Robinson, and for the students to challenge their views in Q&A, but some colleges have banned speakers for relatively minor social faux pas's. Germaine Greer being a good example, barred from addressing the student union at Cardiff University in Wales, UK, for expressing the belief that a trans woman is not an 'actual' woman, and receiving death threats for expressing the view.

Regardless of your specific views on contentious issues, do you support or reject the principle of no platforming?

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Replies:
Posted By: ExittheLemming
Date Posted: March 03 2020 at 05:44
Something that has always irked me are those (predominantly) far right political parties who demand the right to express their views citing that denying them this exposure would be an affront to democracy and free speech. Yet their avowed aims and manifestos are invariably totalitarian/undemocratic in the extreme and would result in all dissent or opposition being criminalised as their first act upon election. (That's why I voted 'No' with caveats) I also think the current trend in further education establishments where 'safe spaces' are being created under the pretext of protecting vulnerable minorities is disingenuous and counter productive to polemical or critical thinking that strives towards inclusivity. This type of 'snowflake husbandry' is starting to appear in the workplace where even the mildest rebuke or hint of criticism in written or verbal communication is castigated as negativity or worse still, abuse that can be escalated to grounds for disciplinary action/dismissal etc.
As an aside, is 'zero tolerance' for (insert something you consider indefensible here) just intolerance with a majority on your side?


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Posted By: SteveG
Date Posted: March 03 2020 at 05:54
^ I mostly agree. The era of free speech (or much less restrictive speech) ended with the advent of safe spaces. But there have always been caveats. You couldn't yell fire in a crowded theater if there really wasn't one.

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Posted By: Easy Money
Date Posted: March 03 2020 at 10:00
For some, giving nazis freedom to speak satisfies their "ivory towered" idealistic notions of free speech for everyone, while to others, depending on their race and religion, giving nazis freedom to speak can lead to murder and mayhem for their family for generations to come.

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Posted By: SteveG
Date Posted: March 03 2020 at 10:07

Whatever happened to "I hate what you say but I defend your right to say it"?



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Posted By: Easy Money
Date Posted: March 03 2020 at 11:13
Originally posted by SteveG SteveG wrote:

Whatever happened to "I hate what you say but I defend your right to say it"?

I wouldn't expect a nazi to defend anything except your right to say yes sir.

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Posted By: Jeffro
Date Posted: March 03 2020 at 11:26
Originally posted by Easy Money Easy Money wrote:

For some, giving nazis freedom to speak satisfies their "ivory towered" idealistic notions of free speech for everyone, while to others, depending on their race and religion, giving nazis freedom to speak can lead to murder and mayhem for their family for generations to come.

Does this apply to communists as well? 


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Posted By: Jeffro
Date Posted: March 03 2020 at 11:31
Originally posted by SteveG SteveG wrote:

Whatever happened to "I hate what you say but I defend your right to say it"?

That still exists but I fear less and less so as time moves on. 


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Posted By: SteveG
Date Posted: March 03 2020 at 11:51
Originally posted by Easy Money Easy Money wrote:

Originally posted by SteveG SteveG wrote:

Whatever happened to "I hate what you say but I defend your right to say it"?

I wouldn't expect a nazi to defend anything except your right to say yes sir.
Let me restate my post with emphasis added: What ever happed to "I hate what you say but I defend your right  to say it"?
 
In Nazi Germany, citizens had no rights. No one could speak unless it was party approved propaganda and forget about any other personal liberties or rights like due process or a fair trial.
 
You brought up the Nazi's twice so far but you miss the irony of your statements. Is this what happens when someone is in a safe zone?


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Posted By: Easy Money
Date Posted: March 03 2020 at 12:31
Originally posted by SteveG SteveG wrote:

Originally posted by Easy Money Easy Money wrote:

Originally posted by SteveG SteveG wrote:

Whatever happened to "I hate what you say but I defend your right to say it"?

I wouldn't expect a nazi to defend anything except your right to say yes sir.

Let me restate my post with emphasis added: What ever happed to "I hate what you say but I defend your right  to say it"?
 
In Nazi Germany, citizens had no rights. No one could speak unless it was party approved propaganda and forget about any other personal liberties or rights like due process or a fair trial.
 
You brought up the Nazi's twice so far but you miss the irony of your statements. Is this what happens when someone is in a safe zone?
I agree with what you say about citizens under nazi rule having no rights. What was the ironic part you refer to?

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Posted By: Shadowyzard
Date Posted: March 03 2020 at 13:35
The great poet Percy Bysshe Shelley was expelled from Oxford University, because of his essay entitled "The Necessity of Atheism". Nowadays such a thing wouldn't probably result in expulsion, yet it is also thanks to such courageous figures.

In Turkey, such things are very complicated. Even if we are not -deemed- a free country, we randomly encounter appalling, unacceptable, blasphemous etc. statements; or come across revolutionary utterances and bold people going against the grain, in a positive context.


Posted By: Mirakaze
Date Posted: March 03 2020 at 16:45
Originally posted by SteveG SteveG wrote:

Whatever happened to "I hate what you say but I defend your right to say it"?



I used to be of this opinion but I no longer believe that a society can ensure safety to all of its inhabitants when deliberate hate speech of any kind is allowed to spread unchecked, and in this regard I support Karl Popper's stance that tolerant societies have a right of self-preservation against acts of intolerance. Direct incitements to violence and threats should obviously not be allowed but I think there should also be laws against more insidious means of hatemongering. To name an obvious example, I live in a country where denying the Holocaust is forbidden by law and I think that's a good thing because I frankly don't believe that anyone claiming to be a Holocaust denier actually believes a thing that they're saying and that what they actually believe is that the Holocaust did happen and that it was a great thing, but of course they can't say that so instead they try to disguise their ideology under a palatable veneer of scepticism and critical thinking, when in reality their only goal is to smear and dehumanize the Jewish community to the point where persecution and eventually genocide becomes socially acceptable again.

My view is biased because I am a member of a particular group that is in current times subject to a disproportionate amount of vilification and abuse (to the point where I'm afraid to express and present myself the way I would like in most contexts), but I do not hold the illusion that hateful people have honourable intentions or that their ideology contributes something of value to society.


Posted By: ExittheLemming
Date Posted: March 03 2020 at 17:13
Originally posted by Mirakaze Mirakaze wrote:

Originally posted by SteveG SteveG wrote:

Whatever happened to "I hate what you say but I defend your right to say it"?



I used to be of this opinion but I no longer believe that a society can ensure safety to all of its inhabitants when deliberate hate speech of any kind is allowed to spread unchecked, and in this regard I support Karl Popper's stance that tolerant societies have a right of self-preservation against acts of intolerance. Direct incitements to violence and threats should obviously not be allowed but I think there should also be laws against more insidious means of hatemongering. To name an obvious example, I live in a country where denying the Holocaust is forbidden by law and I think that's a good thing because I frankly don't believe that anyone claiming to be a Holocaust denier actually believes a thing that they're saying and that what they actually believe is that the Holocaust did happen and that it was a great thing, but of course they can't say that so instead they try to disguise their ideology under a palatable veneer of scepticism and critical thinking, when in reality their only goal is to smear and dehumanize the Jewish community to the point where persecution and eventually genocide becomes socially acceptable again.

My view is biased because I am a member of a particular group that is in current times subject to a disproportionate amount of vilification and abuse (to the point where I'm afraid to express and present myself the way I would like in most contexts), but I do not hold the illusion that hateful people have honourable intentions or that their ideology contributes something of value to society.


So where would you draw your line in the sand? making the soviet gulag denial a crime, making the Armenian genocide denial a crime? (insert your choice of atrocity founded upon sectarian intolerance here  - the list goes on) There is precisely zero evidence that banning certain speech is going to change what anyone actually wants to believe. Holocaust denial should be tackled in schools, universities and the media, not the courts. Currently only 9 EU countries have laws against holocaust denial and for good reason: you can make a very compelling argument that criminalizing such speech merely fans the flames of perceived persecution that racists, anti-Semites and xenophobes love to exploit.


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Posted By: Atavachron
Date Posted: March 03 2020 at 17:23
Lenny Bruce was famous for, among other things, saying "Don't take away my words".   He had a difficult career, in and out of court, and had a sad end.   I support his right to having expressed himself honestly.   He wouldn't have been as funny or innovative without it.

That said, the notion that words can't hurt you is just incorrect.   Words can hurt, destroy, slander, even kill, and the weight they carry must be recognized.   The pen is mightier than the sword, and words ~ like power ~ should be wielded with great responsibility and caution.





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Posted By: Logan
Date Posted: March 03 2020 at 17:46
No, with caviar and a bottle of champagne. Voted for no, with caveats.

I'd describe myself as a moral situationalist, and would take various university incidents on something of a case-by-case basis.

I like the sunlight is the best disinfectant concept. When you make expressing ideas illegal, or very taboo, this can make them all the more appealing, and render things more conspiratorial. "Hear the truth that THEY don't want YOU to hear". Pushing people underground can be very dangerous, and resentments will build, and it can create more of an "us vs. them" mentality. Such people can find networks or go lone-wolf. Better to know they exist commonly, and how great a concern should one be rather than pushing it under the carpet.

In university establishments, I like the idea that bad ideas, good ideas, neutral ideas and all sorts of ideas can be challenged. Challenging what you believe is important to me. Ridicule, including self-ridicule, is important.
I don't believe that educational institutions need give everyone a platform certainly not, but great care should be taken with de-platforming. Sometimes it is a security issue, sometimes it's because a minority of very vocal students complain very loudly. And in various cases, I believe those students are ignorant. I don't like to see those organisers psuhing for de-platformg, with decorum and according to strict guidelines, get a chance to formally debate those they wish to de-platform or at least ask questions. If the ideas of those they despise are unreasonable., they can help to expose that.

At one Canadian university (such incidents have happened multiple times including at my alma mater) they had a controversial speaker (controversial because of something he wrote years ago). A group of students had tried to de-platform, but the speaking engagement was not stopped. Those students were permitted to exercise "their free speech" by banging gongs, shouting swear words, and chanting while the speaker was at the podium. I think the students should not have been given that platform, and if such things happened and they were told that they were not allowed to, suspended or expelled. It was so crass and juvenile, and it was disrespectful to everyone in the audience. Such a thing should not have been permitted.

In Canada, I have been quite concerned about our hate speech laws, and amendments, and some local incidents.. Sometimes these are pushed by very vocal minorities who can't seem to tolerate any criticism. That said, we do need various laws that govern speech, including defamation and libel laws, when people incite violence, or create danger and health risks by shouting fire in a crowded urinal....

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Posted By: Tapfret
Date Posted: March 03 2020 at 17:55
Originally posted by Atavachron Atavachron wrote:

Lenny Bruce was famous for, among other things, saying "Don't take away my words".   He had a difficult career, in and out of court, and had a sad end.   I support his right to having expressed himself honestly.   He wouldn't have been as funny or innovative without it.

That said, the notion that words can't hurt you is just incorrect.   Words can hurt, destroy, slander, even kill, and the weight they carry must be recognized.   The pen is mightier than the sword, and words ~ like power ~ should be wielded with great responsibility and caution.

Don't you mean the mouth? Who uses a pen any more?

Anyway, don't know that one is mightier than the other. They are more or less homicidal siblings. Like the Menendez brothers.

Originally posted by Mirkaze Mirkaze wrote:

....I frankly don't believe that anyone claiming to be a Holocaust denier actually believes a thing that they're saying and that what they actually believe is that the Holocaust did happen and that it was a great thing, but of course they can't say that so instead they try to disguise their ideology under a palatable veneer of scepticism and critical thinking, when in reality their only goal is to smear and dehumanize the Jewish community to the point where persecution and eventually genocide becomes socially acceptable again...

I wish I could believe that, but we are clearly living in a post-fact world where beliefs are not beliefs to the believer. They are truths to them in the face of overwhelming evidence to the contrary. And I don't mean the metaphysical stuff that makes the basis for religious/spiritual belief, I'm talking about things that happen on a daily basis. And anything outside of the scope of their immediate experience (any genocide, moon landing, rape allegations against malignant narcissist Cheetos) is nothing more than subterfuge meant to scramble their belief system and should be summarily denied, if not violently suppressed.    

That being said, I am certainly not arguing that either scenario of cognitive dissonance is more pallatable than the other. 



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Posted By: Atavachron
Date Posted: March 03 2020 at 18:24
Originally posted by Tapfret Tapfret wrote:

Originally posted by Atavachron Atavachron wrote:

Lenny Bruce was famous for, among other things, saying "Don't take away my words".   He had a difficult career, in and out of court, and had a sad end.   I support his right to having expressed himself honestly.   He wouldn't have been as funny or innovative without it.

That said, the notion that words can't hurt you is just incorrect.   Words can hurt, destroy, slander, even kill, and the weight they carry must be recognized.   The pen is mightier than the sword, and words ~ like power ~ should be wielded with great responsibility and caution.
Don't you mean the mouth? Who uses a pen any more?

No, I mean the pen.   It's a metaphor most people still know and understand.   Who uses their mouth anymore?   Surely you mean a keyboard.

Either way, you get the point.





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Posted By: Blacksword
Date Posted: March 04 2020 at 03:15
There is a tendency to jump to extreme examples in these debates; references to Nazi's etc. There are already laws in place to prevent actual incitement to violence.

I'm talking more about no platforming people who may, for example believe that abortion is wrong, or immigration is too high. Should the student population be 'protected' from these perspectives, by the student union, banning such speakers on campus? What about the rights of the students who disagree with the speaker but want to hear them speak, so they can challenge their position in Q&A? Why should the rights of the self appointed defenders of virtue, override those of everyone else?

Another assumption, often made by the left is that any advocate for free speech is a fascist, which is clearly incorrect. It depresses me that the right seemed to have claimed the free speech argument, from the left these days, and the left appear to be trying to shut everything down, and ban everything that doesn't smell right to them. It's largely because of this, that you have madman and right wing nutjob in the Whitehouse, because the left - or relative left - doesn't represent anyone anymore, beyond the left wing middle class students and the LGBT community.

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Posted By: handwrist
Date Posted: March 04 2020 at 03:28
I think the whole problem of free speech is that people can't shut up.

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Posted By: SteveG
Date Posted: March 04 2020 at 04:02
Originally posted by handwrist handwrist wrote:

I think the whole problem of free speech is that people can't shut up.
Wouldn't it be sad if you weren't allowed to complain about free speech?

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Posted By: handwrist
Date Posted: March 04 2020 at 04:04
Not really.

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Posted By: SteveG
Date Posted: March 04 2020 at 04:04
Originally posted by Easy Money Easy Money wrote:

Originally posted by SteveG SteveG wrote:

Originally posted by Easy Money Easy Money wrote:

Originally posted by SteveG SteveG wrote:

Whatever happened to "I hate what you say but I defend your right to say it"?

I wouldn't expect a nazi to defend anything except your right to say yes sir.

Let me restate my post with emphasis added: What ever happed to "I hate what you say but I defend your right  to say it"?
 
In Nazi Germany, citizens had no rights. No one could speak unless it was party approved propaganda and forget about any other personal liberties or rights like due process or a fair trial.
 
You brought up the Nazi's twice so far but you miss the irony of your statements. Is this what happens when someone is in a safe zone?
I agree with what you say about citizens under nazi rule having no rights. What was the ironic part you refer to?
Nazi's took away free speech. You're against free speech of Nazis. Seems ironic to me.

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Posted By: SteveG
Date Posted: March 04 2020 at 04:06
Originally posted by handwrist handwrist wrote:

Not really.
That's because you can only imagine what it's like and not really experience it. If you lived in a police state, your views would be different.

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Posted By: handwrist
Date Posted: March 04 2020 at 04:29
Restrictions on free speech is not the same as a police state - arguably it's part of it, but not even close to the whole of it.

I never said I would like to live in a police state.

But if they just didn't allow me to say certain things, and left me alone to do my stuff then I'd be alright.


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Posted By: SteveG
Date Posted: March 04 2020 at 04:43
Originally posted by handwrist handwrist wrote:

Restrictions on free speech is not the same as a police state - arguably it's part of it, but not even close to the whole of it.

I never said I would like to live in a police state.

But if they just didn't allow me to say certain things, and left me alone to do my stuff then I'd be alright.
What makes you think they would they would let do what you like to do? So much is under censorship. Music, in it's creative endeavors or just passive listening, is usually considered subversive because it entails thinking on your own.

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Posted By: handwrist
Date Posted: March 04 2020 at 05:07
I agree it's a difficult balance to achieve.


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Posted By: Easy Money
Date Posted: March 04 2020 at 06:14
Originally posted by SteveG SteveG wrote:

Originally posted by Easy Money Easy Money wrote:

Originally posted by SteveG SteveG wrote:

Originally posted by Easy Money Easy Money wrote:

Originally posted by SteveG SteveG wrote:

Whatever happened to "I hate what you say but I defend your right to say it"?

I wouldn't expect a nazi to defend anything except your right to say yes sir.

Let me restate my post with emphasis added: What ever happed to "I hate what you say but I defend your right  to say it"?
 
In Nazi Germany, citizens had no rights. No one could speak unless it was party approved propaganda and forget about any other personal liberties or rights like due process or a fair trial.
 
You brought up the Nazi's twice so far but you miss the irony of your statements. Is this what happens when someone is in a safe zone?
I agree with what you say about citizens under nazi rule having no rights. What was the ironic part you refer to?
Nazi's took away free speech. You're against free speech of Nazis. Seems ironic to me.
I never said that, show me the quote where I said I wanted to curtail anyone's speech.

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Posted By: SteveG
Date Posted: March 04 2020 at 07:04
Originally posted by Easy Money Easy Money wrote:

Originally posted by SteveG SteveG wrote:

Originally posted by Easy Money Easy Money wrote:

Originally posted by SteveG SteveG wrote:

Originally posted by Easy Money Easy Money wrote:

Originally posted by SteveG SteveG wrote:

Whatever happened to "I hate what you say but I defend your right to say it"?

I wouldn't expect a nazi to defend anything except your right to say yes sir.

Let me restate my post with emphasis added: What ever happed to "I hate what you say but I defend your right  to say it"?
 
In Nazi Germany, citizens had no rights. No one could speak unless it was party approved propaganda and forget about any other personal liberties or rights like due process or a fair trial.
 
You brought up the Nazi's twice so far but you miss the irony of your statements. Is this what happens when someone is in a safe zone?
I agree with what you say about citizens under nazi rule having no rights. What was the ironic part you refer to?
Nazi's took away free speech. You're against free speech of Nazis. Seems ironic to me.
I never said that, show me the quote where I said I wanted to curtail anyone's speech.
You inferred it. And if you only want to restrict the inflammatory aspects of Nazi speak, then that would entail virtually all they say.

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Posted By: moshkito
Date Posted: March 04 2020 at 07:33
Originally posted by SteveG SteveG wrote:

Originally posted by handwrist handwrist wrote:

I think the whole problem of free speech is that people can't shut up.
Wouldn't it be sad if you weren't allowed to complain about free speech?

That would be a "trump'ism"?


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Posted By: Easy Money
Date Posted: March 04 2020 at 07:35
I did not infer curtailing speech for anyone. Since my point was not clear the first time, let me reiterate.

For some people, myself included, free speech for nazis, or anyone for that matter, is a lofty ideal and is not clouded by any personal trials or history.

For others, such as my wife who is Jewish, free speech for nazis includes some very dark history in which nazi rhetoric led to death for members of her family. Not just death, but humiliation, torture, destruction of property and an attempt to wipe out an entire group of people.

My point being that I was illustrating two very different perspectives on free speech. I do not know if my wife wants to curtail speech by nazis, I'll let her speak for herself.

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Posted By: SteveG
Date Posted: March 04 2020 at 07:36
Originally posted by moshkito moshkito wrote:

Originally posted by SteveG SteveG wrote:

[QUOTE=handwrist] I think the whole problem of free speech is that people can't shut up.

That would be a "trump'ism"?
Clap Way to go, mosh!

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Posted By: moshkito
Date Posted: March 04 2020 at 07:38
Originally posted by handwrist handwrist wrote:

Restrictions on free speech is not the same as a police state - arguably it's part of it, but not even close to the whole of it.

I never said I would like to live in a police state.

But if they just didn't allow me to say certain things, and left me alone to do my stuff then I'd be alright.

Hi,

I think your view is ... lacking ... the history in Europe in the 20th Century, was the same in Spain, Portugal, Italy, Germany and many other places ... even the pen is not allowed ... if you consider that my dad's film reviews of many American films were censored and cut up silly, so the review looks bad and stupid ... and if you don't believe me, there is a book published with both reviews and translated into at least 10 languages!

The pen, or being left alone, was ... not the answer ... and if you read Luis Bunuel's book, about the time and place and what happened in Spain, and how so many of his friends were murdered ... you might have taken a different thought and idea of how things are ... and if you think the "you're fired" generation is any different in hurting people's lives and putting them out on the streets ... well ... that's your choice, isn't it? That's your definition of democracy, right?


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Posted By: SteveG
Date Posted: March 04 2020 at 07:39
Originally posted by Easy Money Easy Money wrote:

I did not infer curtailing speech for anyone. Since my point was not clear the first time, let me reiterate.

For some people, myself included, free speech for nazis, or anyone for that matter, is a lofty ideal and is not clouded by any personal trials or history.

For others, such as my wife who is Jewish, free speech for nazis includes some very dark history in which nazi rhetoric led to death for members of her family. Not just death, but humiliation, torture, destruction of property and an attempt to wipe out an entire group of people.

My point being that I was illustrating two very different perspectives on free speech. I do not know if my wife wants to curtail speech by nazis, I'll let her speak for herself.
If they are clouded by trials and history, is that a reason to criticize it?

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Posted By: Easy Money
Date Posted: March 04 2020 at 07:45
Originally posted by SteveG SteveG wrote:

Originally posted by Easy Money Easy Money wrote:

I did not infer curtailing speech for anyone. Since my point was not clear the first time, let me reiterate.

For some people, myself included, free speech for nazis, or anyone for that matter, is a lofty ideal and is not clouded by any personal trials or history.

For others, such as my wife who is Jewish, free speech for nazis includes some very dark history in which nazi rhetoric led to death for members of her family. Not just death, but humiliation, torture, destruction of property and an attempt to wipe out an entire group of people.

My point being that I was illustrating two very different perspectives on free speech. I do not know if my wife wants to curtail speech by nazis, I'll let her speak for herself.

If they are clouded by trials and history, is that a reason to criticize it?
Who is the 'they' you are referring to?

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Posted By: SteveG
Date Posted: March 04 2020 at 07:48
Originally posted by Easy Money Easy Money wrote:

Originally posted by SteveG SteveG wrote:

Originally posted by Easy Money Easy Money wrote:

I did not infer curtailing speech for anyone. Since my point was not clear the first time, let me reiterate.

For some people, myself included, free speech for nazis, or anyone for that matter, is a lofty ideal and is not clouded by any personal trials or history.

For others, such as my wife who is Jewish, free speech for nazis includes some very dark history in which nazi rhetoric led to death for members of her family. Not just death, but humiliation, torture, destruction of property and an attempt to wipe out an entire group of people.

My point being that I was illustrating two very different perspectives on free speech. I do not know if my wife wants to curtail speech by nazis, I'll let her speak for herself.

If they are clouded by trials and history, is that a reason to criticize it?
Who is the 'they' you are referring to?
Now I'm not being clear. If free speech is clouded by past trials and history, shouldn't those past speakers be criticized for what they said, not that they had the right to say it?

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Posted By: Easy Money
Date Posted: March 04 2020 at 08:02
^ Well of course.
I have no particular opinion on any of this, I'm just pointing out that nazi rhetoric is much more of a concern to some than others.
From my own experiences, I can not fathom how a survivor of a nazi death campaign would view nazi rhetoric.

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Posted By: SteveG
Date Posted: March 04 2020 at 08:20
Originally posted by Easy Money Easy Money wrote:

^ Well of course.
I have no particular opinion on any of this, I'm just pointing out that nazi rhetoric is much more of a concern to some than others.
From my own experiences, I can not fathom how a survivor of a nazi death campaign would view nazi rhetoric.
Well, to go off on an aside, there are memoirs from many survivors. The best, imo, being from Victor Frankel in his book "Man's Search For Meaning". If you ever have a desire to see what it was like, this one is very good and actually has a message of hope that others don't.

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Posted By: Easy Money
Date Posted: March 04 2020 at 09:45
^ Thanks.

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Posted By: LAM-SGC
Date Posted: March 04 2020 at 10:26
I think Islam needs to be controlled more. It is a dangerous sect as far as I am concerned.


Posted By: someone_else
Date Posted: March 04 2020 at 15:16
No, albeit with a plethora of caveats. The freedom of speech, in which I grew up, is under siege. Everyone should have the right to say what he thinks, in political correct terms or not. On the other hand, many media which practise no platforming, give platforms to ideas that are either insane or evil and therefore should not be given way to. A system that cannot defend itself against threats from within is doomed.

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Posted By: Easy Money
Date Posted: March 04 2020 at 18:24
Originally posted by LAM-SGC LAM-SGC wrote:

I think Islam needs to be controlled more. It is a dangerous sect as far as I am concerned.
What happened to our noble defenders of "free speech", they seem to have disappeared.

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Posted By: Blacksword
Date Posted: March 05 2020 at 02:19
Originally posted by LAM-SGC LAM-SGC wrote:

I think Islam needs to be controlled more. It is a dangerous sect as far as I am concerned.


Controlled in what way? Who do you want to control?

There are already enforceable laws in place that prohibit speech that incites actual violence and acts of terrorism. If those laws are not enforced enough that's a separate issue, and not one of free speech.

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Posted By: SteveG
Date Posted: March 05 2020 at 04:01
Originally posted by Blacksword Blacksword wrote:

Originally posted by LAM-SGC LAM-SGC wrote:

I think Islam needs to be controlled more. It is a dangerous sect as far as I am concerned.


Controlled in what way? Who do you want to control?

There are already enforceable laws in place that prohibit speech that incites actual violence and acts of terrorism. If those laws are not enforced enough that's a separate issue, and not one of free speech.
Excellent response because it's true. A suicide bombing may be a political statement but it's not speech. It's not the words that come out of a person's mouth, it's an act or an action. There's some confusion in the minds of the frightened about this. And fear is what clouds people's judgments and reasoning. And when that happens then the terrorists have achieved their goal.

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Posted By: SteveG
Date Posted: March 05 2020 at 04:08
Originally posted by Easy Money Easy Money wrote:

Originally posted by LAM-SGC LAM-SGC wrote:

I think Islam needs to be controlled more. It is a dangerous sect as far as I am concerned.
What happened to our noble defenders of "free speech", they seem to have disappeared.
We rational thinkers can't monitor this thread 24-7, can we?

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Posted By: Blacksword
Date Posted: March 05 2020 at 04:26
Originally posted by SteveG SteveG wrote:

Originally posted by Blacksword Blacksword wrote:

Originally posted by LAM-SGC LAM-SGC wrote:

I think Islam needs to be controlled more. It is a dangerous sect as far as I am concerned.


Controlled in what way? Who do you want to control?

There are already enforceable laws in place that prohibit speech that incites actual violence and acts of terrorism. If those laws are not enforced enough that's a separate issue, and not one of free speech.
Excellent response because it's true. A suicide bombing may be a political statement but it's not speech. It's not the words that come out of a person's mouth, it's an act or an action. There's some confusion in the minds of the frightened about this. And fear is what clouds people's judgments and reasoning.
And when that happens then the terrorists have achieved their goal.


If an Iman stands up before a congregation in a mosque and unambiguously encourages war against the infidels, he is breaking a law, and in theory can be arrested and charged with incitement. If he stands up and says "A womans place is in the home, and homosexuality is an abomination" he is merely expressing a perspective. Not a very nice one. Not one that I agree with, but one that he does/should reserve the right to voice.

The issue I have, is that when you start this debate, people start ranting about Nazi's and communists. I have no problem with countering political extremes, but the accusations of fascism get hurled at people who just hold views that are just slightly at odds with the current climate and more in tune with the past, and actually don't incite violence and disorder at all....until someone on the far left suggests that they do, then all of a sudden it becomes an issue where there wasn't one before, and if you remove the right to debate those whose views you find unacceptable, those 'off colour' perspectives never get challenged and ridiculed out in the open. Instead they fester as part of an 'alt right' or far left subculture and that's what breeds militancy and violence.

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Posted By: SteveG
Date Posted: March 05 2020 at 04:32
Originally posted by Blacksword Blacksword wrote:

Originally posted by SteveG SteveG wrote:

Originally posted by Blacksword Blacksword wrote:

Originally posted by LAM-SGC LAM-SGC wrote:

I think Islam needs to be controlled more. It is a dangerous sect as far as I am concerned.


Controlled in what way? Who do you want to control?

There are already enforceable laws in place that prohibit speech that incites actual violence and acts of terrorism. If those laws are not enforced enough that's a separate issue, and not one of free speech.
Excellent response because it's true. A suicide bombing may be a political statement but it's not speech. It's not the words that come out of a person's mouth, it's an act or an action. There's some confusion in the minds of the frightened about this. And fear is what clouds people's judgments and reasoning.
And when that happens then the terrorists have achieved their goal.


If an Iman stands up before a congregation in a mosque and unambiguously encourages war against the infidels, he is breaking a law, and in theory can be arrested and charged with incitement. If he stands up and says "A womans place is in the home, and homosexuality is an abomination" he is merely expressing a perspective. Not a very nice one. Not one that I agree with, but one that he does/should reserve the right to voice.

The issue I have, is that when you start this debate, people start ranting about Nazi's and communists. I have no problem with countering political extremes, but the accusations of fascism get hurled at people who just hold views that are just slightly at odds with the current climate and more in tune with the past, and actually don't incite violence and disorder at all....until someone on the far left suggests that they do, then all of a sudden it becomes an issue where there wasn't one before, and if you remove the right to debate those whose views you find unacceptable, those 'off colour' perspectives never get challenged and ridiculed out in the open. Instead they fester as part of an 'alt right' or far left subculture and that's what breeds militancy and violence.
I agree 100%. And as I've stated in an early post, free speech doesn't mean that you can yell fire in a movie theater when there isn't one in order to start a riot. Every right and privilege is not carte blanche and does have it's restrictions. I also believe that Nazis and neo-Nazis fall into the camp of extremes and opinions voiced here do not extend to those of a markedly left or right agenda.

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Posted By: ExittheLemming
Date Posted: March 05 2020 at 06:45
Originally posted by Blacksword Blacksword wrote:



If an Iman stands up before a congregation in a mosque and unambiguously encourages war against the infidels, he is breaking a law, and in theory can be arrested and charged with incitement. If he stands up and says "A womans place is in the home, and homosexuality is an abomination" he is merely expressing a perspective. Not a very nice one. Not one that I agree with, but one that he does/should reserve the right to voice.

The issue I have, is that when you start this debate, people start ranting about Nazi's and communists. I have no problem with countering political extremes, but the accusations of fascism get hurled at people who just hold views that are just slightly at odds with the current climate and more in tune with the past, and actually don't incite violence and disorder at all....until someone on the far left suggests that they do, then all of a sudden it becomes an issue where there wasn't one before, and if you remove the right to debate those whose views you find unacceptable, those 'off colour' perspectives never get challenged and ridiculed out in the open. Instead they fester as part of an 'alt right' or far left subculture and that's what breeds militancy and violence.


In a country where sexual activity between members of the same sex is illegal and can be punishable by death (say Iran, Yemen, Brunei, Mauritania, Nigeria, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Afghanistan, Somalia, Sudan, UAR, Pakistan - the list goes on) a religious leader's utterance that 'homosexuality is an abomination' would clearly not merely be a perspective but a summons to action. Just for the sake of attenuating my confusion: Your cited iman would have to be domiciled in a country where homosexuality is NOT illegal (say from your perspective the UK?)  You also say you have 'no problem countering political extremes' yet from the perspective of those qualified for this onerous burden historically, fascism and communism in Europe have been directly responsible for an estimated 14 million deaths* and we can add another 30 million* courtesy of Mao (*YMMV) Let's hear it for the moderates. I suspect I misunderstand most of your posts so apologies up front for that, but from my perspective you always come across like a frustrated Marxist slumming it on a musical appreciation site.


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Posted By: SteveG
Date Posted: March 05 2020 at 07:26
^ I may be wrong but I think that Mr. B. Sword was referring to Iman's issuing fatwas  in the lands of freedom.

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Posted By: moshkito
Date Posted: March 05 2020 at 08:07
Originally posted by ExittheLemming ExittheLemming wrote:

...
In a country where sexual activity between members of the same sex is illegal and can be punishable by death (say Iran, Yemen, Brunei, Mauritania, Nigeria, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Afghanistan, Somalia, Sudan, UAR, Pakistan - the list goes on) a religious leader's utterance that 'homosexuality is an abomination' would clearly not merely be a perspective but a summons to action. Just for the sake of attenuating my confusion: Your cited iman would have to be domiciled in a country where homosexuality is NOT illegal (say from your perspective the UK?)  You also say you have 'no problem countering political extremes' yet from the perspective of those qualified for this onerous burden historically, fascism and communism in Europe have been directly responsible for an estimated 14 million deaths* and we can add another 30 million* courtesy of Mao (*YMMV) Let's hear it for the moderates. I suspect I misunderstand most of your posts so apologies up front for that, but from my perspective you always come across like a frustrated Marxist slumming it on a musical appreciation site.

Hi,

One of the scariest things I have ever seen in film was one about these things, and one in particular in Iraq (and we don't know about other countries!!!), where some of these folks were giving out some "temporary marriage certificates", and in the end, the girl/girls are left out in the street, abused, sometimes raped, and with no future ... in the end of the film, the big guy in Iran, said that it was all a failure of the security system, not something that the religious order/faith had to address. 

What bothered me the most is that many of these folks considered themselves representatives of a religion, and they had nothing to show for it in their background ... one apparently did, but some of the others were basically run a house of prostitution with one of them actually providing "his own" girls!

I'm not sure what the real issue is, but the abuse and the lack of controls by the big names, is scary, and then one declares war and becomes this or that group ... and the other versions/denominations of it will say nothing about it because they want that power and ability as well!

The question I had was ... how many of these "platforming" was fake and not "valid" and should not be accepted by their religion ... but their faith is not centralized like the Vatican ... it is so varied and different everywhere! And the joke about allowing women to drive in one of those countries, is going to end up like this ... 75% of all accidents are women ... just to take it away from them again?


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Posted By: Easy Money
Date Posted: March 05 2020 at 08:19
How free is 'free speech' in the real world.
If I go into a redneck bar in Collierville (just outside Memphis) and start pointing out that hollywood donald is a liar and a grifting con artist with no respect for representative democracy, if I keep at it long enough, I will eventually be physically assaulted and silenced.
If I go to the police and tell them my freedom of speech has been violated they will laugh me out of the building.

On the other hand, if the klan holds a rally in downtown Memphis, they will be given extensive police protection so that the klan are not given the treatment they have given to others.
This protection is of course very expensive and comes out of the pockets of taxpayers like myself.

So the murderous klan gets more citizen funded government protection for their speech than a mostly law abiding citizen like myself.

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Posted By: Blacksword
Date Posted: March 05 2020 at 08:58
Originally posted by SteveG SteveG wrote:


^ I may be wrong but I think that Mr. B. Sword was referring to Iman's issuing fatwas  in the lands of freedom.


Yes, I was referring to 'lands of freedom'

How the outside world chooses to address issues of religious intolerance in countries where such intolerance is both religious, cultural and broadly regarded as acceptable, by followers of the predominant religion, is another debate and goes beyond free speech and into the realm of human rights.

As for being a frustrated Marxist, there is probably some truth in that, but my frustration is born out losing patience with the left, and not so much drifting to the right, but abandoning faith in politics altogether. The world appears to have gone barking mad.

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Posted By: SteveG
Date Posted: March 05 2020 at 09:41
Originally posted by Easy Money Easy Money wrote:

How free is 'free speech' in the real world.
If I go into a redneck bar in Collierville (just outside Memphis) and start pointing out that hollywood donald is a liar and a grifting con artist with no respect for representative democracy, if I keep at it long enough, I will eventually be physically assaulted and silenced.
If I go to the police and tell them my freedom of speech has been violated they will laugh me out of the building.

On the other hand, if the klan holds a rally in downtown Memphis, they will be given extensive police protection so that the klan are not given the treatment they have given to others.
This protection is of course very expensive and comes out of the pockets of taxpayers like myself.

So the murderous klan gets more citizen funded government protection for their speech than a mostly law abiding citizen like myself.
You must embrace the natural balance of life. The klan can't march through Harlem. I witnessed them try and they were not successful.
 
But we are free to say more than you give us credit for. It's only when freedoms are recinded that causes people to truly miss them.


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Posted By: SteveG
Date Posted: March 05 2020 at 09:49
Originally posted by Blacksword Blacksword wrote:

Originally posted by SteveG SteveG wrote:


^ I may be wrong but I think that Mr. B. Sword was referring to Iman's issuing fatwas  in the lands of freedom.


Yes, I was referring to 'lands of freedom'

How the outside world chooses to address issues of religious intolerance in countries where such intolerance is both religious, cultural and broadly regarded as acceptable, by followers of the predominant religion, is another debate and goes beyond free speech and into the realm of human rights.

As for being a frustrated Marxist, there is probably some truth in that, but my frustration is born out losing patience with the left, and not so much drifting to the right, but abandoning faith in politics altogether. The world appears to have gone barking mad.
I'm a socialist, so you're in good company. ;)

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Posted By: Easy Money
Date Posted: March 05 2020 at 10:06
Originally posted by SteveG SteveG wrote:

Originally posted by Easy Money Easy Money wrote:

How free is 'free speech' in the real world.
If I go into a redneck bar in Collierville (just outside Memphis) and start pointing out that hollywood donald is a liar and a grifting con artist with no respect for representative democracy, if I keep at it long enough, I will eventually be physically assaulted and silenced.
If I go to the police and tell them my freedom of speech has been violated they will laugh me out of the building.

On the other hand, if the klan holds a rally in downtown Memphis, they will be given extensive police protection so that the klan are not given the treatment they have given to others.
This protection is of course very expensive and comes out of the pockets of taxpayers like myself.

So the murderous klan gets more citizen funded government protection for their speech than a mostly law abiding citizen like myself.
You must embrace the natural balance of life. The klan can't march through Harlem. I witnessed them try and they were not successful.
 
But we are free to say more than you give us credit for. It's only when freedoms are recinded that causes people to truly miss them.


I guess my point being that in the real world folks like you and me know we have to watch what we say. If we go to the wrong place and say something stupid it could result in physical damage or even death. This is true of anywhere I have lived or visited all across the US, Europe or Mexico.

When the government steps in and protects murderous thugs like the klan or the nazis they have created a very unreal situation where people no longer pay the price for their stupidity.
You and I will pay the price for our stupidity if we say something stupid, but we also pay the price for the nazis stupidity via taxpayer funded protection.

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Posted By: SteveG
Date Posted: March 05 2020 at 10:10
^ Again, it depends on perspective. The government has done more to dismantle the klan than help it. Did you forget?

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Posted By: Easy Money
Date Posted: March 05 2020 at 10:25
Lets keep this simple. i have never received police protection for my speech. If I say something stupid to the wrong person I will have to pay the price or defend myself.
Meanwhile I have seen taxpayer funded protection for a nazi rally in San Francisco and a klan rally in mostly African-American Memphis.

Seems like an imbalance or injustice to me that those with a track record of murder and mayhem get better protection than a mostly respectful and law abiding person like myself.

Why not level out the playing field and provide police protection for all of us, I wonder how expensive that would get.

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Posted By: SteveG
Date Posted: March 05 2020 at 10:40
Let's make it even simpler. I'll get off my American Civil Liberties Union soapbox and give you my own personal views on censorship, which you've swayed from. Perhaps because your argument was not persuasive.
 
Hate speech is a symptom of it's underlying cause which is hatred. Censorship does nothing to abolish hatred. If anything, it drives it underground. I would much rather know who my enemies are then guess who they are. As far I'm concerned every bigot in America should have a megaphone. If you think that their censorship will somehow protect you then you're mistaken. Hatred knows how to be covert and violent acts will still go on.
 
In the era of Trump it has come out of it's hiding place and is exposed. I'm grateful for that. If you woukd like to see it buried again and still smoldering, that will happen when Trump's run is over. But the hatred is not gone. Your fear is not gone. Nothing will have changed. The hatred will remain, be frustrated and grow.


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Posted By: Logan
Date Posted: March 05 2020 at 10:47
Speaking of Islam and free speech, a topic I've been quite vocal about in the past here, of course at this site we do have proscribed limits on our free speech -- see http://www.progarchives.com/forum/forum_posts.asp?TID=13083" rel="nofollow - Site rules and guidelines

Note: "...Profanity - the deliberate denigration of another person's belief, will not be tolerated. Our membership is global, and thus represents a host of spiritual and religious beliefs. Given this, profanity is tantamount to personal attack (see next entry). Likewise, there is no place in this forum for bigotry (this includes religious bigotry, racism, and sexual discrimination) which are also considered to be personal attacks.
We are committed to not censoring messages or opinions, but this is a moderated forum. We simply want to maintain the spirit of an open, interactive discussion without offending any of the participants."

This can be hard to navigate. I like to say feel free to speak your mind, but mind your speech. I have been critical of Islam, Imams and schools of thought, the practices and intolerance in Islamic countries, particular sects of Islam (especially Salafism and Wahhabism and the Shi'ah form of people like the Ayatollah Khomeini), as well as religious texts (I have read a translation of the Qur'an and Sunnah --- some would say you need to read that in Arabic), and not that it should matter, but various of my best friends grew in Moslem households (Persians who fled the Iranian/ Islamic revolution). I definitely have had concerns with Islamism, and particularly after the Charlie Hebdo attacks and the Nov. 2015 Paris attacks, and the rise of IS, I became more concerned still.

Having expressed my concerns, despite being quite nuanced, I thought, I have been called an Islamophobe and that I was being racist, and all that by non-Moslems who seemed quite ignorant about what I was talking about. Islam isn't a race, and those people haven't the expertise or knowledge of my psyche to claim a phobia.   It seemed a knee-jerk reaction rather than people wishing to discuss such things rationally in good faith (and commonly such people have not done much research of their own). I'm open to different perspectives, would like to learn more, and hold no idea with absolute certainty. Criticism of Islam has seemed quite a taboo subject in a way that criticism of Christianity, Scientology or the teachings of Ti and Do haven't. I can understand that. I have been critical of all of those, and have sometimes rather felt, a la Hitchens, that "religion poisons everything" even if that seems more of a line to sell books.

If talking phobias, I do think such diagnoses and labeling is better left to psychologists (it's an irrational fear, and as corollary, hatred, that cause the phobe psychological distress). I would rather see less niqabs/ burqas when I go grocery shopping as I do, and I have discomfort with such a tradition, and would rather not see as much religious symbolism as I do where I live. I do have some fear of religion, especially conservative/orthodox/ fundamentalist forms. my wife was Pentecostal, and her church scared me. The speaking in tongues made me really uneasy. Maybe with me it does approach a sort of religious phobia, but then I could say I have had various phobias. Should I be stigmatised for it? Should I be more tolerant of intolerant people?

Bigotry would be the better terms for what people mean most of the time, although there are truly Islamophobic individuals, as there are true coulrophobes etc. Such terminology, though, along with terms such as Islamophilia are often used to shut down conversation. In Canada, we had an anti-Islamophobia motion put forward by Liberal MP Irqa Khalid despite already having hate speech laws. I suggested to our government that they should consult with psychologists/ psychiatrists to look into how much of this is a genuine clinical phobia and consider potential treatment options. My problem with such terms partially comes from stigmatising those who genuinely suffer form phobias. Perhaps partially due to my time working with people who have cognitive impairment/ intellectual disabilities, I also dislike it when people use "retard" as an insult.

I think that all religions should be open to criticism and even ridicule, and I do believe in a general right to offend. I believe in freedom of religion, but with limitations, and part of that is freedom from religion, just as I believe in free speech with certain limitations. I commonly am not that comfortable with ridicule actually, and I tend to dislike sarcasm (I like a certain warmth and good-natured humour in the conversation).

I do wish we could live in a world where we could try to act in a more respectful, and definitely rational, manner to each other while not necessarily respecting someone's ideas. Ideally speech would not to be shut down and people would argue rationally while really considering other positions.

Sorry for the rambling digression. If the student union at the university I do work for wanted an Anjem Choudary-type figure to give a speech, I'd want to go and ask questions, but my biggest concern would be security.



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Posted By: Easy Money
Date Posted: March 05 2020 at 10:50
Originally posted by SteveG SteveG wrote:


Let's make it even simpler. I'll get off my American Civil Liberties Union soapbox and give you my own personal views on censorship, which you've swayed from. Perhaps because your argument was not persuasive.
 
Hate speech is a symptom of it's underlying cause which is hatred. Censorship does nothing to abolish hatred. If anything, it drives it underground. I would much rather know who my enemies are then guess who they are. As far I'm concerned every bigot in America should have a megaphone. If you think that their censorship will somehow protect you then you're mistaken. Hatred knows how to be covert and violent acts will still go on.
 
In the era of Trump it has come out of it's hiding place and is exposed. I'm grateful for that. If you woukd like to see it buried again and still smoldering, that will happen when Trump's run is over. But the hatred is not gone. Your fear is not gone. Nothing will have changed. The hatred will remain, be frustrated and grow.

I don't want to bury anything, I just want police protection for my free speech just like the nazis get, thats only fair.

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Posted By: SteveG
Date Posted: March 05 2020 at 11:30
Originally posted by Easy Money Easy Money wrote:

Originally posted by SteveG SteveG wrote:


Let's make it even simpler. I'll get off my American Civil Liberties Union soapbox and give you my own personal views on censorship, which you've swayed from. Perhaps because your argument was not persuasive.
 
Hate speech is a symptom of it's underlying cause which is hatred. Censorship does nothing to abolish hatred. If anything, it drives it underground. I would much rather know who my enemies are then guess who they are. As far I'm concerned every bigot in America should have a megaphone. If you think that their censorship will somehow protect you then you're mistaken. Hatred knows how to be covert and violent acts will still go on.
 
In the era of Trump it has come out of it's hiding place and is exposed. I'm grateful for that. If you woukd like to see it buried again and still smoldering, that will happen when Trump's run is over. But the hatred is not gone. Your fear is not gone. Nothing will have changed. The hatred will remain, be frustrated and grow.

I don't want to bury anything, I just want police protection for my free speech just like the nazis get, thats only fair.
Excellent. I'll take that as a vote for  free speech. (With caveats, off course.)

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Posted By: SteveG
Date Posted: March 05 2020 at 11:36
Originally posted by Logan Logan wrote:

Speaking of Islam and free speech, a topic I've been quite vocal about in the past here, of course at this site we do have proscribed limits on our free speech -- see http://www.progarchives.com/forum/forum_posts.asp?TID=13083" rel="nofollow - Site rules and guidelines

Note: "...Profanity - the deliberate denigration of another person's belief, will not be tolerated. Our membership is global, and thus represents a host of spiritual and religious beliefs. Given this, profanity is tantamount to personal attack (see next entry). Likewise, there is no place in this forum for bigotry (this includes religious bigotry, racism, and sexual discrimination) which are also considered to be personal attacks.
We are committed to not censoring messages or opinions, but this is a moderated forum. We simply want to maintain the spirit of an open, interactive discussion without offending any of the participants."

This can be hard to navigate. I like to say feel free to speak your mind, but mind your speech. I have been critical of Islam, Imams and schools of thought, the practices and intolerance in Islamic countries, particular sects of Islam (especially Salafism and Wahhabism and the Shi'ah form of people like the Ayatollah Khomeini), as well as religious texts (I have read a translation of the Qur'an and Sunnah --- some would say you need to read that in Arabic), and not that it should matter, but various of my best friends grew in Moslem households (Persians who fled the Iranian/ Islamic revolution). I definitely have had concerns with Islamism, and particularly after the Charlie Hebdo attacks and the Nov. 2015 Paris attacks, and the rise of IS, I became more concerned still.

Having expressed my concerns, despite being quite nuanced, I thought, I have been called an Islamophobe and that I was being racist, and all that by non-Moslems who seemed quite ignorant about what I was talking about. Islam isn't a race, and those people haven't the expertise or knowledge of my psyche to claim a phobia.   It seemed a knee-jerk reaction rather than people wishing to discuss such things rationally in good faith (and commonly such people have not done much research of their own). I'm open to different perspectives, would like to learn more, and hold no idea with absolute certainty. Criticism of Islam has seemed quite a taboo subject in a way that criticism of Christianity, Scientology or the teachings of Ti and Do haven't. I can understand that. I have been critical of all of those, and have sometimes rather felt, a la Hitchens, that "religion poisons everything" even if that seems more of a line to sell books.

If talking phobias, I do think such diagnoses and labeling is better left to psychologists (it's an irrational fear, and as corollary, hatred, that cause the phobe psychological distress). I would rather see less niqabs/ burqas when I go grocery shopping as I do, and I have discomfort with such a tradition, and would rather not see as much religious symbolism as I do where I live. I do have some fear of religion, especially conservative/orthodox/ fundamentalist forms. my wife was Pentecostal, and her church scared me. The speaking in tongues made me really uneasy. Maybe with me it does approach a sort of religious phobia, but then I could say I have had various phobias. Should I be stigmatised for it? Should I be more tolerant of intolerant people?

Bigotry would be the better terms for what people mean most of the time, although there are truly Islamophobic individuals, as there are true coulrophobes etc. Such terminology, though, along with terms such as Islamophilia are often used to shut down conversation. In Canada, we had an anti-Islamophobia motion put forward by Liberal MP Irqa Khalid despite already having hate speech laws. I suggested to our government that they should consult with psychologists/ psychiatrists to look into how much of this is a genuine clinical phobia and consider potential treatment options. My problem with such terms partially comes from stigmatising those who genuinely suffer form phobias. Perhaps partially due to my time working with people who have cognitive impairment/ intellectual disabilities, I also dislike it when people use "retard" as an insult.

I think that all religions should be open to criticism and even ridicule, and I do believe in a general right to offend. I believe in freedom of religion, but with limitations, and part of that is freedom from religion, just as I believe in free speech with certain limitations. I commonly am not that comfortable with ridicule actually, and I tend to dislike sarcasm (I like a certain warmth and good-natured humour in the conversation).

I do wish we could live in a world where we could try to act in a more respectful, and definitely rational, manner to each other while not necessarily respecting someone's ideas. Ideally speech would not to be shut down and people would argue rationally while really considering other positions.

Sorry for the rambling digression. If the student union at the university I do work for wanted an Anjem Choudary-type figure to give a speech, I'd want to go and ask questions, but my biggest concern would be security.

Saying things against terrorism is sticky due to the terrorist's connection with their religions. I'm afraid the best we can do on occasion is tread carefully and hope we don't overstep our bounds.

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Posted By: Easy Money
Date Posted: March 05 2020 at 11:44
Originally posted by SteveG SteveG wrote:

Originally posted by Easy Money Easy Money wrote:

Originally posted by SteveG SteveG wrote:


Let's make it even simpler. I'll get off my American Civil Liberties Union soapbox and give you my own personal views on censorship, which you've swayed from. Perhaps because your argument was not persuasive.
 
Hate speech is a symptom of it's underlying cause which is hatred. Censorship does nothing to abolish hatred. If anything, it drives it underground. I would much rather know who my enemies are then guess who they are. As far I'm concerned every bigot in America should have a megaphone. If you think that their censorship will somehow protect you then you're mistaken. Hatred knows how to be covert and violent acts will still go on.
 
In the era of Trump it has come out of it's hiding place and is exposed. I'm grateful for that. If you woukd like to see it buried again and still smoldering, that will happen when Trump's run is over. But the hatred is not gone. Your fear is not gone. Nothing will have changed. The hatred will remain, be frustrated and grow.

I don't want to bury anything, I just want police protection for my free speech just like the nazis get, thats only fair.
Excellent. I'll take that as a vote for  free speech.
(With caveats, off course.)

Do you think I deserve police protection for my free speech when I head to the local redneck bar to give my opinion about hollywood donald?

-------------
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Posted By: SteveG
Date Posted: March 05 2020 at 12:08
^ Should the military protect me if I decided to jogging in Kandahar?

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Posted By: Easy Money
Date Posted: March 05 2020 at 12:21
^ Of course not.
The police will not protect my free speech, and they shouldn't, but they have protected the klan.
This doesn't seem fair. Let the klan deal with the outcome of their free speech just as i have to.
That would be fair and that would be equal freedom for everyone.

-------------
Help the victims of the russian invasion:
http://www.jazzmusicarchives.com/forum/forum_posts.asp?TID=28523&PID=130446&title=various-ways-you-can-help-ukraine#130446


Posted By: twseel
Date Posted: March 05 2020 at 12:33
Originally posted by Easy Money Easy Money wrote:

^ Of course not.
The police will not protect my free speech, and they shouldn't, but they have protected the klan.
This doesn't seem fair. Let the klan deal with the outcome of their free speech just as i have to.
That would be fair and that would be equal freedom for everyone.
I'm very confused by your argument, don't you also have the right to protection when you go protesting? How is this legally uneven?

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Posted By: Logan
Date Posted: March 05 2020 at 12:41
Originally posted by SteveG SteveG wrote:

Originally posted by Logan Logan wrote:

Speaking of Islam and free speech, a topic I've been quite vocal about in the past here, of course at this site we do have proscribed limits on our free speech -- see http://www.progarchives.com/forum/forum_posts.asp?TID=13083" rel="nofollow - Site rules and guidelines

Note: "...Profanity - the deliberate denigration of another person's belief, will not be tolerated. Our membership is global, and thus represents a host of spiritual and religious beliefs. Given this, profanity is tantamount to personal attack (see next entry). Likewise, there is no place in this forum for bigotry (this includes religious bigotry, racism, and sexual discrimination) which are also considered to be personal attacks.
We are committed to not censoring messages or opinions, but this is a moderated forum. We simply want to maintain the spirit of an open, interactive discussion without offending any of the participants."

This can be hard to navigate. I like to say feel free to speak your mind, but mind your speech. I have been critical of Islam, Imams and schools of thought, the practices and intolerance in Islamic countries, particular sects of Islam (especially Salafism and Wahhabism and the Shi'ah form of people like the Ayatollah Khomeini), as well as religious texts (I have read a translation of the Qur'an and Sunnah --- some would say you need to read that in Arabic), and not that it should matter, but various of my best friends grew in Moslem households (Persians who fled the Iranian/ Islamic revolution). I definitely have had concerns with Islamism, and particularly after the Charlie Hebdo attacks and the Nov. 2015 Paris attacks, and the rise of IS, I became more concerned still.

Having expressed my concerns, despite being quite nuanced, I thought, I have been called an Islamophobe and that I was being racist, and all that by non-Moslems who seemed quite ignorant about what I was talking about. Islam isn't a race, and those people haven't the expertise or knowledge of my psyche to claim a phobia.   It seemed a knee-jerk reaction rather than people wishing to discuss such things rationally in good faith (and commonly such people have not done much research of their own). I'm open to different perspectives, would like to learn more, and hold no idea with absolute certainty. Criticism of Islam has seemed quite a taboo subject in a way that criticism of Christianity, Scientology or the teachings of Ti and Do haven't. I can understand that. I have been critical of all of those, and have sometimes rather felt, a la Hitchens, that "religion poisons everything" even if that seems more of a line to sell books.

If talking phobias, I do think such diagnoses and labeling is better left to psychologists (it's an irrational fear, and as corollary, hatred, that cause the phobe psychological distress). I would rather see less niqabs/ burqas when I go grocery shopping as I do, and I have discomfort with such a tradition, and would rather not see as much religious symbolism as I do where I live. I do have some fear of religion, especially conservative/orthodox/ fundamentalist forms. my wife was Pentecostal, and her church scared me. The speaking in tongues made me really uneasy. Maybe with me it does approach a sort of religious phobia, but then I could say I have had various phobias. Should I be stigmatised for it? Should I be more tolerant of intolerant people?

Bigotry would be the better terms for what people mean most of the time, although there are truly Islamophobic individuals, as there are true coulrophobes etc. Such terminology, though, along with terms such as Islamophilia are often used to shut down conversation. In Canada, we had an anti-Islamophobia motion put forward by Liberal MP Irqa Khalid despite already having hate speech laws. I suggested to our government that they should consult with psychologists/ psychiatrists to look into how much of this is a genuine clinical phobia and consider potential treatment options. My problem with such terms partially comes from stigmatising those who genuinely suffer form phobias. Perhaps partially due to my time working with people who have cognitive impairment/ intellectual disabilities, I also dislike it when people use "retard" as an insult.

I think that all religions should be open to criticism and even ridicule, and I do believe in a general right to offend. I believe in freedom of religion, but with limitations, and part of that is freedom from religion, just as I believe in free speech with certain limitations. I commonly am not that comfortable with ridicule actually, and I tend to dislike sarcasm (I like a certain warmth and good-natured humour in the conversation).

I do wish we could live in a world where we could try to act in a more respectful, and definitely rational, manner to each other while not necessarily respecting someone's ideas. Ideally speech would not to be shut down and people would argue rationally while really considering other positions.

Sorry for the rambling digression. If the student union at the university I do work for wanted an Anjem Choudary-type figure to give a speech, I'd want to go and ask questions, but my biggest concern would be security.


Saying things against terrorism is sticky due to the terrorist's connection with their religions. I'm afraid the best we can do on occasion is tread carefully and hope we don't overstep our bounds.


Indeed, and if we overstep our bounds just hope there is no explosive "Kaboom!" land-mine style as a consequence. The threat of terrorism can be quite an effective means to silence the critics. "Death to the blasphemer!"

Of course one also does have to worry about reprisals against a greater Moslem community by the kafir/kuffar (non-moslems) after an Islamic terrorist attack, and so speech should be moderated particularly when tensions are high.

What I found so strange is that non-Moslems who knew so little about Islam were so quick to defend it and proclaim it a religion of peace after the latest attacks by certain adherents (who according to many real Moslems, but also those non-Moslems that are ignorant about the teachings, don't understand what Islam really is). There is no one Islam, I'd say, as there is no one Christianity. Islam means surrender or submission -- it's then about surrendering your will to Allah and following the five main Pillars of Islam. The peace can be seen to come from within following internal jihad, but also after external jihad (religious war) when all have surrendered that will and obey the commands, peace prevails. That oversimplifies things, mind you.

I've often noticed that it's the most orthodox who often seem the most insecure when it comes to hearing any criticism of their beliefs, or anyone questioning those beliefs. I believe that a well-founded belief should stand up to scrutiny. With religious aspects, it's faith or nothing, as so many religious claims and dogma can't be verified to a scientific degree. I couldn't imagine the anger one sees from certain religious communities when their beliefs are ridiculed coming form , say a community of Humanists after being insulted about their lack of faith.

"With or without religion, good people can behave well and bad people can do evil; but for good people to do evil—that takes religion" (Steven Weinberg).

Or something like religion I'd say, such an nationalism, which is like a state religion, etc. Not all religions need a belief in a supernatural power per se.

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https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLXcp9fYc6K4IKuxIZkenfvukL_Y8VBqzK" rel="nofollow - Duos for fave acts


Posted By: Easy Money
Date Posted: March 05 2020 at 12:46
Originally posted by twseel twseel wrote:

Originally posted by Easy Money Easy Money wrote:

^ Of course not.
The police will not protect my free speech, and they shouldn't, but they have protected the klan.
This doesn't seem fair. Let the klan deal with the outcome of their free speech just as i have to.
That would be fair and that would be equal freedom for everyone.
I'm very confused by your argument, don't you also have the right to protection when you go protesting? How is this legally uneven?
I'm sorry, when was I protesting? You seem to know things about me that I don't know.

-------------
Help the victims of the russian invasion:
http://www.jazzmusicarchives.com/forum/forum_posts.asp?TID=28523&PID=130446&title=various-ways-you-can-help-ukraine#130446


Posted By: Logan
Date Posted: March 05 2020 at 13:26
^ Would there have been the proper clarity had it been written as "...shouldn't you also have the right to protection if you go protesting?" That's how I would have interpreted it.   It seemed a pretty common informal way of writing that in my experience, so much so that I wouldn't have thought twice about it unless I was called on to edit it -- in which case I would seek clarification before making any changes.

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https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLXcp9fYc6K4IKuxIZkenfvukL_Y8VBqzK" rel="nofollow - Duos for fave acts


Posted By: SteveG
Date Posted: March 05 2020 at 15:07
Originally posted by Easy Money Easy Money wrote:

^ Of course not.
The police will not protect my free speech, and they shouldn't, but they have protected the klan.
This doesn't seem fair. Let the klan deal with the outcome of their free speech just as i have to.
That would be fair and that would be equal freedom for everyone.
This is how the police protect free speech. In a lawful assembly that gathers together in order to protest a particular wrong, unfair law or immoral action, a lawful permit is obtained to gather in a public place. All speech and speakers are protected by the police, as are the lawful protesters, from harassment from an opposing group of unlawful protesters, who many times are arrested as they do not have a permit to gather. I have been involved in numerous public protests in life and I was protected by the police and was allowed to speak publicly with a PA system, as were many others. That is free speech.

That an organization like the klan can do the same in this country is what bothers you and that unlawful protesters get arrested instead of the klan. Like it or not, that is what free speech in the US entails. That doesn't mean that the klan is not listed in a FBI domestic terrorists list or that that frees the klan from investigation, arrest and charges for committing hate crimes. One thing has nothing to do with the other. If you're really foolish enough to go to a redneck bar and instigate acts of hate against yourself, then even the police cannot save you. By the time they respond, you will have been physically injured or possibly killed. The police are not psychic and life doesn't work the way you want it to, in ignoring the reality that you have knowingly put yourself in harm's way and feel that you deserve some kind of special (nee supernatural) treatment that is not afforded to anyone else living.


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Posted By: Easy Money
Date Posted: March 05 2020 at 16:05
^ I'm easily foolish enough to do much worse and have done so.
As far as protests go, I was at a protest, but the police didn't protect me, they tried to arrest me, but I out ran them. I guess I was not following correct protocol there either, I was supposed to let them arrest me. I guess I missed out on a trip to jail because I ignored the rules. Shame on me.

All the same, I do like the ACLU and generally support them even if I don't agree with who they are protecting. I guess I just like seeing nazis and klan get punched in the face, I know that's not politically correct, but there is a lot of personal history there.

-------------
Help the victims of the russian invasion:
http://www.jazzmusicarchives.com/forum/forum_posts.asp?TID=28523&PID=130446&title=various-ways-you-can-help-ukraine#130446


Posted By: moshkito
Date Posted: March 05 2020 at 20:55
Originally posted by Logan Logan wrote:

...
I think that all religions should be open to criticism and even ridicule, and I do believe in a general right to offend. I believe in freedom of religion, but with limitations, and part of that is freedom from religion, just as I believe in free speech with certain limitations. I commonly am not that comfortable with ridicule actually, and I tend to dislike sarcasm (I like a certain warmth and good-natured humour in the conversation).
...

Hi,

In that same film, btw, there is one of these "clerics" that states quite emphatically ... that "secular law is more important than civil law" ... and I think this is an important consideration in this discussion, and explains some of the things we criticize in that area ... but I'm not sure that PA is the right place to discuss it, and I think this topic should be locked, before we all end up hating each other? 

A very sad side effect of "opinions"!


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Music is not just for listening ... it is for LIVING ... you got to feel it to know what's it about! Not being told!
www.pedrosena.com


Posted By: Blacksword
Date Posted: March 06 2020 at 00:32
^^^ If that's the consensus, then yes it should be locked to preserve the positive spirit of the community. It's a shame free speech is such a divisive issue.

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Ultimately bored by endless ecstasy!


Posted By: I prophesy disaster
Date Posted: March 06 2020 at 01:33
Originally posted by Blacksword Blacksword wrote:

It's a shame free speech is such a divisive issue.
 
Paradoxical, even.
 
 


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No, I know how to behave in the restaurant now, I don't tear at the meat with my hands. If I've become a man of the world somehow, that's not necessarily to say I'm a worldly man.


Posted By: SteveG
Date Posted: March 06 2020 at 04:04
Originally posted by Easy Money Easy Money wrote:

^ I'm easily foolish enough to do much worse and have done so.
As far as protests go, I was at a protest, but the police didn't protect me, they tried to arrest me, but I out ran them. I guess I was not following correct protocol there either, I was supposed to let them arrest me. I guess I missed out on a trip to jail because I ignored the rules. Shame on me.

All the same, I do like the ACLU and generally support them even if I don't agree with who they are protecting. I guess I just like seeing nazis and klan get punched in the face, I know that's not politically correct, but there is a lot of personal history there.
I took your example of putting yourself in harm's way as purely hypothetical, so you're only hypothetically foolish, not so in reality.
 
I heard no mention of a lawful assembly with a permit in regard to your protest. Free speech has it's caveats.


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Posted By: handwrist
Date Posted: April 09 2020 at 08:08
I take back what I said earlier in this thread.

Who knew I would be living in a police state so soon after saying it might not be that bad?

It really sucks.

Sorry for being wrong.


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Posted By: Triceratopsoil
Date Posted: April 16 2020 at 11:50
even 5-10 years ago the biggest LARPERs weren't guessing it would have been corporations, not governments, limiting their speech



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