Meadmaker
Unregistered
- Joined
- Apr 27, 2004
- Messages
- 29,033
You should listen to Ken White's Make No Law: The First Amendment Podcast because there are a ton of times where the SCOTUS has decided what someone else gets to say. Speech limitations are plenty and backed up by years of case law.
Well, sure. Of course there are some limits on free speech. There always have been, and there ought to be. The question is what should those limits be? We can sit here and talk in the abstract all day long, and I've seen threads do this where people go on at length on opposite sides of the issue, and yet never actually state a concrete and meaningful position. I'm going to repost something I said earlier.
Not buying it.
Of course, if it actually rises to specific threats or specific incitements to violence, yes, but we already do that. If it's the general, "Immigrants are taking over our culture" kind of b.s., that rhetoric is dumb, but making it illegal starts us down a path that ends in a very bad place.
I suppose I would like to see examples of what sort of rhetoric people think ought to be made illegal in order to curb mass shootings. Or if there is some sort of lesser action short of making it criminal, what would you have in mind.
It's all well and good to say we have to do something about thus and such a thing, but the devil is in the details. What is it that people think really ought to be done? in concrete terms? If we give government broad powers to restrict free speech when they think it is necessary, I'll take bets that they will find it necessary to restrict an awful lot of things. That's what powerful people do when given the authority to do it. That way lies madness, or more accurately, an authoritarian government or a dictatorship.
ETA: And, if possible, I would like to discuss this only in the context of what might be done that could reduce mass shootings. If that can't be done, it really ought to go in a different thread.
So, I would like to see an actual example of legal speech that people think ought to be illegal, or an example of a youtube video that youtube finds acceptable but which someone thinks ought to be illegal. Let's get away from hypotheticals if we can. Is there a real example of expression that is not restricted using the current prevailing interpretations of our laws and constitution, but which people think ought to be restricted?
As you can guess from the quoted material above, I strongly lean toward not restricting speech, but I'm willing to examine that position if given an example that someone is willing to put forward as an example of speech that they think ought to be banned.