this post was submitted on 29 Apr 2024
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Theyβre not looking for freedom of speech but freedom from consequences.
Youβll get banned there real quick.
you get banned from individual instances but not from the fediverse/lemmy which is kind of the point
Does Saidit and Poal work the same as Lemmy that way?
im not that familiar with them but they don't look federated, which is what makes this possible, so no.
So what was the point of your previous comment?
wtf is freedom of speech if not a freedom of consequences from what you say?
There is a distinct difference.
Freedom of speach means that the government can't punnish you for talking shit, except in limited circumstances.
Freedom of consequences from what you say, means that no one should be allowed to let what your say affect them in any way, this means that no one would be allowed to be offended by what you might say, nor that they would be allowed to act on such offence.
In a functional society you want to have freedom of speach, but not freedom of consequences from what you say. This allows you to express opposing views in mostly resonable ways.
As long as the consequences are words and non-violent actions. Advocating violence as a consequence for someone expressing an idea is imho dangerous and should be avoided.
yes, but words that incite violence are also very dangerous. there is a line to thread here.
case in point: i don't think goebbels actually directly harmed anyone, but his speech caused quite a lot of suffering, violence and death. his speech should absolutely not be rebutted with 'just words', there must be actual consequences to what he did.
on top of it we live in a world where his propaganda techniques are still used for harm.
it is dangerous, but so is speech that incites violence even if the perpetrator himself isn't directly doing it. its a fine line to tread.
case in point: i don't think goebbels ever directly killed or harmed anyone, but his speech caused a lot of death and suffering, and someone like him should absolutely not be dealt with just words. keep in mind his propaganda techniques are still alive today.
I agree that speech that incites violence is dangerous too. In theory I can imagine a net benefit if we could silence some voices in various places. The big question then is, who do we trust to decide which people should be silenced? I think governments have historically shown that they can't be trusted. Then private people? Lots of people across the political spectrum feel that their version of truth is so important that they deem it moral to silence others, so what it comes down to is just who does it better. The image of an angry mob is no fun if the mob has decided that you should be silenced, even though you feel like you're on the good side. They probably think they are the good ones. Who then?
The limited restrictions in the US is that you can't for example yell "Fire!" in a room to try and cause panic.
Here in Sweden, we also have hate speech laws, which basically comes down to "You can't incite violence toward an ethnic group"
It's the textbook definition. Using another definition is wrong.
Anyone who thinks Freedom of Speech means "I can say whatever I want whenever I want however I want and you can't do a damn thing about it" is mistaken. Likely guessing what it means based on the words.
Of course, the incorrect usage forgets about the Right to Live in Peace...or the Freedom of Speech that others have to tell someone their opinion is shit. Or the freedom of association for people to exclude from their groups people with shitty opinions (or decent opinions, but an inability to express them decently).
People telling you you're and arsehole and treating you like what arsehole is then expressing their freedom of speech.
It's also a consequence of your speech.
That's fair but I don't think there's much freedom of speech if someone will murder you for what you've said
Where the fuck did murder come from?
That's a possible outcome that I subconciously included in the list of consequences
I mean sure, if you leap all the way from 0 to 1,000 for no reason.
No reason? Being murdered is still a consequence, isn't it? Why wouldn't I include it?
Because "a consequence" doesn't mean "any and every possible consequence anyone could think up".
So a consequence isn't a term to describe consequences, according to you. OK, I seem to get it now.
Go back and reread your first comment, and the comment you were replying to. It's pretty clear why your comment was nonsensical in context to anyone interested in engaging in sensible good-faith conversation.
Murder is illegal, and thus covered by other areas of the law.
Freedom of speech doesn't give others freedom to do whatever they want in respect to speech. You're incorrectly extrapolating.
Freedom of speech is only freedom from government-sponsored consequences. As a member of We The People, you control the government. It is not democratic for the government to control you.
Freedom of Speech does not impose a limitation on me, a private individual, from taking action against you on the basis of your speech. I'll defend your right to say whatever the hell you want, but I don't have to give you my soapbox to stand on.