Yours is like the dopey argument about using torture -- what if the torture would get information to stop a nuclear attack. Hitler is dead. He killed millions of people and he was the government. When you say Hitler, I read "someone espousing Hitler's views" -- like neonazis and stormfags and the like.rEvolutionist wrote:See this is what I mean by ideological and naive. It's HITLER, ffs. In the real world, bad people exist, and politely debating with them is patently idiotic. Sometime it requires more than just a counter-argument.Forty Two wrote:It's easy to refer to Hitler, because we see him as the Chancellor of Germany, engaged in genocide. That's when he's the government, and when he's assaulting, battering, murdering, kidnapping, etc. - if all he ever did was spout hateful comments about Jews, then, indeed, he has free speech, just like Louis Farrakhan and various Muslim Imams. Hitler, as in, someone espousing antisemitic ideas, advocating racist or fascistic viewpoints, that person does have free speech, and is just as entitled as you or me to be free from assault and battery.rEvolutionist wrote:Dude, you are missing the point. "Standing up to stop.." includes assault, batter, push, shove etc etc. I'd love to see you naively protesting people assaulting Hitler because 'But but free speech, dudes!'Forty Two wrote:Dude - "what an individual let's pass without standing up to stop what they consider evil..." has nothing to do with "free speech." You and everyone else, including fascists and authoritarians, have the right to stand up and try to stop what they consider to be evil (as long as they don't assault, batter, push, shove, rush stages to attack, pick fights, spit on people, etc, which is criminal behavior).![]()
You said Hitler shouldn't be treated under the law. You said he wouldn't have free speech. Everyone else does.rEvolutionist wrote:This is a non-sequitur. I never said people shouldn't be treated equally under the law.No, I never said fuck-all about "inherently good." Good and bad have nothing to do with it, as they are just fucking figments of the imagination. They are value judgments. One person thinks it's "good" to allow Social Justice Warriors to speak their bullshit, but others think it's "bad." One person thinks it's "good" to allow Trump to speak his bullshit, and others think it's "bad." The goodness of speech, or the goodness of allowing speech, is all a matter of opinion, and it may or may not be good or bad.rEvolutionist wrote:You believe that the allowance of free speech is inherently good (within the constraints you mentioned above). So people saying bad things is actually good in the bigger picture. I simply disagree with this and I think that is a very naive position to take. Now don't go telling me you don't think the allowance of free speech is inherently good. You've argued that Hitler is "of course" entitled to his free speech, ffs.And, I never argued that person X should be able to stand up and say whatever because free speech is inherently good. Obviously, people can say bad things - things which in my opinion, or your opinion,are bad. But, our fucking opinions don't impact the right of the other person to ALSO express their opinion.
Why is this so hard? What is it that you aren't getting?
The reason equal "allowance" of speech (without interference from the State, and without physical or threatened interference from private actors) should exist is that each individual person ought to be treated equally under the law.
No, because it makes sense, because there is no reason why you would be entitled to more favorable treatment than me.rEvolutionist wrote:
And besides, why should people be treated equally under the law? Because you believe that is an inherent good.
Well you don't want fascists to be allowed, so they are afforded less of an allowance.rEvolutionist wrote:Strawman. I never made that assumption, and I don't now. You need to concentrate harder on the points in this debate.To have a different assumption allows you or me to be the ones who are afforded less of an allowance than others. You assume that it will be the ones you consider nasty, but that is not in the least guaranteed, and history suggests that it s not even the norm that the nice guys are the ones allowed to speak, and only the mean guys are limited. It may start out that way, but the results down the line are never good.
I don't say it's inherently good. Fuck off.rEvolutionist wrote:That paragraph contains is a non-sequitur with itself. What does "varied viewpoints" have to do with whether everyone should be afforded free speech? The two are unrelated. Unless, of course, you believe that equality of the right to speech (like you do with the law) is inherently good, as I explained above.So, don't go telling me what to argue. I never said anything about "inherently good," and that's your straw man. Suggesting that a fascist "of course" has as much a right to speak as a communist or a monarchist is not a suggestion that there is inherent goodness in allowing them to speak. The reason it's "of course" is that whether you think an idea is bad and should be prohibited is just another opinion of yours, and across the population there will be varied viewpoints on what should and should not be prohibited.
Effectively you are, because you've advanced no other way to know who gets and who doesn't get free speech, other than arbitrarily designating someone a fascist.rEvolutionist wrote:This is all straw. It has nothing to do with what I am saying. I am not arguing for the State to ad hoc limit free speech.The political winds may be that Trump should not have free speech today, and Revolutionist tomorrow. However, the concept of free speech is to remove it from the vicissitudes of public opinion -- truth is not determined by popular vote, and even if 99% of people think something is false or evil today, it may not be tomorrow. Look at sodomy -- ask someone in the 19th century if sodomy was good, and you'd likely get a negative answer. it was a crime punishable by death. Should it have been "free speech" to advocate in favor of criminal behavior then? Those protesters would be advocating in favor of breaking the law! What about marijuana and cocaine? Is it free speech to say that doing these drugs can be good, and that they should be legal, and that people should do them?
No, I'm giving you arguments.rEvolutionist wrote:This is all just ideology. You aren't doing your argument any good by referring to subjective ideology in an objective way. You are making my point for me.It’s not just the right of the person who speaks to be heard, it is the right of everyone in the audience to listen and to hear. And every time you silence somebody, you make yourself a prisoner of your own action, because you deny yourself the right to hear something. your own right to hear and be exposed is as much involved in all these cases as is the right of the other to voice his or her view. As John Stuart Mill said, if all in society were agreed on the truth and value of one proposition, all except one person, it would be most important–in fact, it would become even more important–that that one heretic be heard, because we would still benefit from his perhaps outrageous or appalling view. Rosa Luxemburg said the freedom of speech is meaningless unless it means the freedom of the person who thinks differently.
Check out Milton's Aeropagitica -- http://www.gutenberg.org/files/608/608-h/608-h.htm
As Thomas Paine wrote in his introduction to the seminal work "Age of Reason,"http://www.ushistory.org/paine/reason/singlehtml.htmTO MY FELLOW-CITIZENS OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA:
I PUT the following work under your protection. It contains my opinions upon Religion. You will do me the justice to remember, that I have always strenuously supported the Right of every Man to his own opinion, however different that opinion might be to mine. He who denies to another this right, makes a slave of himself to his present opinion, because he precludes himself the right of changing it.
The most formidable weapon against errors of every kind is Reason. I have never used any other, and I trust I never shall.
And, check out John Stuart Mill's On Liberty - http://www.gutenberg.org/files/34901/34 ... 4901-h.htm
You just hand-wave, and have zero argument yourself. You "just believe" some people shouldn't have free speech, because they're bad.
only "large scale" authoritarians....right?rEvolutionist wrote:You really need to start paying attention. I haven't said anything about the left or right in general. My only point has been concerning fascists and authoritarians (the latter of which can exist on the left), and hate speech in general.But, do go on to justify why someone who is a fascist or large scale whatevers should not be permitted to speak their mind as much as you, or "small scale" whatevers. LOL. I love love love, that weasel term you stuck in there. You wanted to make sure the social justice regressive left keeps their right to free speech, because they're just small scale.... those are the good intolerants - they're intolerant of the stuff you think is good to be intolerant about.
A good start would be to stop LOLing.
And, I'll stop LOLing when you stop talking nonsense.