mistermack wrote:I'm not sure about this. Hitchens is so persuasive, it's easy to go along with him.
But look what he skips around. He defends the right to insult religions, agreed. He defends the right to push highly controversial views like holocaust denial. Again agreed.
But what he DOESN'T do, is face up squarely to INCITEMENT TO RACE HATRED.
I think he does. It's been a while since I heard his argument on that, but I recall him mentioning in one of his free speech arguments the ACLU v Skokie, Illinois case wherein the ACLU defended the American Nazi Party's right to incite race hatred and public demonstrate in favor of racial hatred.
Freedom of belief and freedom of speech includes the freedom to believe in racism, and to say what one believes.
mistermack wrote:
You can't claim to be fully honest, unless you tackle the hard bits. He concentrates on the easier stuff.
It's only "easier" for you because you arbitrarily choose race as a sacred cow. To many people, religion is far more sacrosanct than race.
mistermack wrote:
It is surely not beyond the wit of man to frame a law, so that a wise judge can say : There is the line, and you crossed it. Or : There is the line, and you kept just inside it.
In the case of freedom of belief and freedom of speech, I haven't seen it. The law invariably is overly broad and vague.
mistermack wrote:
Or even : I think you ever so slightly went over the line, but I'm giving you the benefit of the doubt.
I can't embrace a world where PUBLIC incitement to race hatred is considered a right.
Why not?
Many people - perhaps even most people in the world, can't embrace a world where PUBLIC incitement to religious hatred is considered a right.
mistermack wrote:
Lots of rights impinge on other rights, you can't have it all ways.
Holding the belief in racism and espousing it publicly does not infringe on other rights.
mistermack wrote:
I think this is one right that could kill,
How?
If you mean - that people might act on that belief, and kill, then the same analysis applies to political beliefs, philosophies, and religious beliefs. People have always killed for what they believe in. Rarely, if ever, do people kill for reasons that they don't feel are important.
mistermack wrote:
and in any case impinges on people's rights to live without threat or fear.
.
Once again, if beliefs causing people to feel threatened and fearful are not fair game for expression, then goodbye to blasphemy - goodbye to insulting and disrespecting religion - billions of people on the planet are rendered fearful and threatened by assaults on their bullshit religions.