Not a flat-out-advocate here, but FWIW:
(1)&(2)- Spencer openly advocates ethnic cleansing, denounces Jews, quotes Nazi propaganda, and once published an article on his alternativeright.com website asking if Black Genocide was something worth considering. His views violate (at least) every civil rights act in the U.S. This is protected as free speech in the states and does not 'merit assault' per se, but it could be argued that he is ideologically provoking conflict and inciting violence.
Thanks for your reply -- thoughtful but not fulfilling. I want specific goods on Spencer. I'd like to see his actual words, not a characterization. If someone advocates violence against Spencer, that's not a lot to ask.
I don't want the sort of hate speech laws like exist in Europe because I highly value free speech. Unfortunately that permits a lot of disgusting speech.
OK so there's a beginning of a standard. "If someone genuinely feels" followed by something that's plausibly horrific. This impresses me as a recipe for a whole bunch of vigilante justice.(3) If someone genuinely believes that abortion is murder, I would consider them to have some degree of moral justification in their aggression.
I mostly agree, except this. While I'm strongly pro choice, I can't dismiss the feelings of anti-abortion zealots as insincere.But say, if you knew there were innocent people being drug off the street and murdered by citizens in a nearby building, could you in any way continue to live there? I couldn't, it would be inhuman to sip coffee while unprovoked murders happened down the road. So I question the sincerity of believing it is actually murder, making it a difficult comparison. Occupying the moral high-ground may ethically justify an action, but does not excuse it from legal consequences. Nazi-punchers are as subject to assault charges as anyone else, but as a neo-Nazi by definition holds U.S. laws and human rights in contempt, isn't it at least poetic justice to not subject them to laws which might protect them?
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