AnonoBoy wrote: » "I abhor what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it." I'm for it. While I hate what some people have to say, I don't think they should be silenced. (excepting the obvious incitement to hatred type, etc.)
Jakkass wrote: » I like that quote from Voltaire, but I won't defend someone quite to the death for it.
Magnus wrote: » It's when people feel they can't voice their opinions and they are getting criminalised they are the most dangerous. That the first thing the fascists do, infringe right to assembly or speech. Just look at the developments in the US or China. To criminalise whatever you don't agree with won't remove it, it'll only drive it underground and make it harder to handle. Even though China openly tortures Falun Gong members it doesn't stop people from joining Falun Gong. The criminalisation/tortures isn't working, it's doing the opposite! Same with the war against muslims terrorists.
minidazzler wrote: » Free speech is fine, but if you are calling for the lynching of someone you should be arrested regardless of if someone does it or not! So free speech with limits IMO.
AnonoBoy wrote: » "I abhor what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it."
AnonoBoy wrote: » I'm for it. While I hate what some people have to say, I don't think they should be silenced. (excepting the obvious incitement to hatred type, etc.)
lugha wrote: » So many of us say. In reality we wouldn't avert our eyes from our shoe laces if some biffo takes exception to some verbals from someone in the local chipper / pub. Don't know about this incitement to hatred malarkey at all. If I proclaim to all that AnonoBoy is a bit of a dingbat or insult your religion/race/mother, and you duly thump me, then it is you and only you that should be reprimanded. Anti-incitement to hatred legislation may be a pragmatic necessity, but it's an unethical one. If you're part of a society that embraces free speech then you have to be prepared to accept that sometimes people won't like what you have to say.
Jakkass wrote: » There was a thread the other day about the Islamic march through Wootton Bassett when British troops were coming home from Afghanistan. Indeed, 400,000 people joined a facebook group opposing it. It seems to me that these 400,000 people would be arguing for their right to freedom of speech were a blasphemy law brought in like in Ireland, but wouldn't be arguing for the right to freedom of speech for these protesters? QUOTE] I understand what your saying but those 400,000 people had the right to to express their opposition to the march just as marchers had a right to hold their march. I do believe in freedom of speech but there is a time and place for it. They could have had that march anywhere but they decided to do it where and when it would create the most upset and therefore get alot more media attention. Its the cynicism that people would have a problem with here not their views.
AnonoBoy wrote: » Ah yes but insulting my religion (if I had one) isn't incitement to hatred.
Lux23 wrote: » I understand what your saying but those 400,000 people had the right to to express their opposition to the march just as marchers had a right to hold their march. I do believe in freedom of speech but there is a time and place for it. They could have had that march anywhere but they decided to do it where and when it would create the most upset and therefore get alot more media attention. Its the cynicism that people would have a problem with here not their views.
Jakkass wrote: » Is criticising how one acts, or how one lives an incitement to hatred?
with intent to provoke a breach of the peace or being reckless as to whether a breach of the peace may be occasioned.
AnonoBoy wrote: » If you proclaimed that people should gang up and beat me to within an inch of my life then that's incitement to hatred. And I don't think anyone is willing to accept that.
AnonoBoy wrote: » (At least I hope not - what'd I ever do to you? )
hooradiation wrote: » Free speech provided that you recognise that when your opinion is called a festering heap of malignant shit that your freedom of speech isn't being curtailed, you're just an awful person with awful opinions.
Jakkass wrote: » So anyone who disagrees with you is an awful person, with awful opinions? Do you think it's acceptable to arrest someone with opinions you find disagreeable?
Diabhal Beag wrote: » We will never understand the value of free speech until we lose it IMO
Magnus wrote: » Speaking of hate speeches: On June 17, 1959, at a Belfast rally, he publicly chastised “the men of the Shankill for allowing papists, pope’s men, and papishers” to live on the Shankill Rd. Angry crowds went to the addresses called out by Paisley, burned out the occupants and looted their homes.