Coito ergo sum wrote:Where would you get the idea that I don't want them to be free at all? I want them to educated and cared for at school. They have to be supervised, and freedom for children doesn't mean unrestricted free speech. You already admitted that. Why are you continually creating straw men? I've told you exactly what it should be like, and "not wanting them to be free AT ALL" isn't anything I ever implied.
I'm getting no sense of what you think freedom is. All you're talking about is restrictions; they must be quiet, do as they are told, follow instructions. Where's the freedom?
Coito ergo sum wrote:

Hah! Abuse will get you nowhere!
Coito ergo sum wrote:Exi5tentialist wrote:
Coito ergo sum wrote:
That depends where and when. I wouldn't want to live in a world where the President couldn't get up and speak at a dinner or something without being heckled.
Really? You'd want the President to be immune from heckling?
No more or less immune than anyone else.
In that case it sounds like you want the President to be treated equally to everyone else by audiences. But later you go on to contradict that.
Coito ergo sum wrote:
Exi5tentialist wrote:
I want the opposite - and only because everybody has the right of free speech, and that includes heckling.
Next time you're at a wedding, heckle the best man during the toast. Exercise your free speech.
Well, no - because the people who invite me to weddings trust me not to do that. That's the bit I think you're missing. Trust.
Coito ergo sum wrote:
Exi5tentialist wrote:
Our 'leaders' want sanitized, stage-managed speeches where they can be seen to be the perfect speechifiers, skilfully handling every problem. And President Obama in that clip handled the situation very well, with good humour n'awl, but let's face it he had more than a little support from some paid thugs who eliminated the problem for him in short order.
Well, if loud hecklers could veto our right to hear the President speak by simply yelling and screaming during his speeches, we'd never hear what he had to say.
Or... he'd have to make the sanitisation even more obvious by limiting himself to lone speeches from the Oval Office, thus demonstrating how incapable he is as an individual of dealing with hecklers, and leaving people to realise that the President isn't quite as immune from failing as many people seem to think he is. Maybe they'd end up reducing the role of the President as a result. What do you think?
Coito ergo sum wrote:
Exi5tentialist wrote:
And where do you draw the line? What about
this 82-year-old man who famously shouted "rubbish!" at our Home Secretary in 2005 and was quickly bundled out of the Party Conference Hall for daring to exercise
his right of free speech?
If people are in public spaces, they can say and do what they want, in line with laws that apply to everyone every day - disturbing the peace, disorderly conduct, etc. If the President is at a private event at the Kiwanis Club and someone sneaked in to disrupt it, then he ought to be thrown out. Seems pretty easy to draw the line to me. What's so confusing to you?
Nothing is confusing me, thanks. The Labour Party Conference is a private event, not a public space. So I presume that means you think that it was right for the heckler to be chucked out, just for shouting "Rubbish!" at the Home Secretary.
I think this private / public divide is a bit of red herring. Of course, it was crap that the heckler at the Labour Conference was thrown out. It was an affront to democracy. I think you need to come up with a better reason that public / private for justifying it.
Coito ergo sum wrote:
Exi5tentialist wrote:
Coito ergo sum wrote:
And, like heckler at a debate or conference, people don't have the right to disrupt meetings. Hecklers at city council meetings ought be removed, for example.
Very, very wrong. We have a free-speech society. Hecklers at city council meetings cutting services or forcing people into poverty should be applauded, not 'removed'. I think this is the difference between us. It is not some small, detailed argument about visiting speakers in schools, it is your fundamental misunderstanding about the right of free speech
in general, and your inability to trust people in general to exercise their right of free speech productively.
Free speech doesn't give you the right to stop city or government business or to disrupt someone else's private function.
Surely the city hall is a public building by your definition. Having disposed of hecklers in meetings like the "private" Labour Party Conference, you are now moving on to clamping down on hecklers in city hall. Soon, you'll be moving on to declaring the space outside to be private property. This is the way presumptions about democracy are going nowadays. There is always, always, always a reason to clamp down on free speech in our televised, sanitised democracy.
Coito ergo sum wrote:
The right of free speech doesn't give you the right, for example, to stand up in a courtroom and start shouting such that the judge and the lawyers can't do their job, for example.
True, that would be contempt of court (under an elected judiciary... otherwise I and several thousands of protesters in your city might just take up the right to shout there too, unlike you or your obedient students!)