Is it any wonder that I'm getting frustrated here?
EC: I am not missing the point. I have said almost exactly this, for example, here:
You accuse me of 'missing the point', when you use literally the exact same words that I did, to describe the point you think I'm missing.
Unbelievable.
Let me rephrase: You're missing the point that posters in this thread are making.
Nobody is questioning the legality involved. We know that it's been deemed legally protected speech. We know that the legal challenges have failed to yield a prosecution. We know all of that, so we're a bit baffled as to why you keep bringing it up and harping on that aspect of it.
The inference that we end up making is that you are arguing that because it's legal speech and none of the charges have resulted in prosecution... there is not a problem.
But that's a response to a claim that none of us actually made.
The problem that we see, that has been pointed out several times, is the chilling effect of being arrested/detained/questioned/charged in the first place. The problem is that *despite* it being legally protected free speech, people who engage in such legal behavior repeatedly find themselves being subjected to police intrusion that borders on harassment.
That's the problem we have been focused on. When you respond by repeatedly telling us that none of the charges have resulted in prosecution... it comes across as you deflecting the issue. At a minimum, it makes it very much seem as if you're not getting it at all.
Let me try an analogy - with fair warning that analogies are nothing more than illustrative vehicles, not direct comparisons.
In the US, it's perfectly legal to say "Pentecostals are all nutty crazy people and speaking in tongues is psychosis". It's not particularly nice, but it's perfectly legal. In fact, our right to express that opinion about a particular religion is absolutely protected speech. We can even go so far as to write on social media directly in response to a Pentecostal's post "You're nuts and/or psychotic". We can even do it in all caps, or make up an entertaining song about how incredibly nutty that specific Pentecostal person is.
Is it nice? No, not at all. Is it possible that the Pentecostal in question might feel very put-upon, and even feel that they are hated by the person making the song? Absolutely.
But it's perfectly legal, and protected as such.
Now, imagine that a group of like-minded Pentecostals collectively believed that it was hateful to call their religious beliefs insane, and viewed it as being hateful for people to express that view. Imagine that this group of Pentecostals took to reporting the posters of "you're nuts" tweets and "You're a loony" tik-tok songs to the police. Imagine that the police acted on those reports, arrested and mirandized the posters of such sentiments and subjected them to hours or weeks of investigation including interrogation and intense questioning. Imagine that these Pentecostals raised such an incredible stink about the "hatefulness" of posters on social media that they managed to get people fired from their jobs because they expressed the view that Pentecostals are nutty. Imagine that the people who lost their jobs had to go to court in order to get their jobs back, costing them months of income. Imagine that this didn't happen just once, but over and over and over again - even after the first couple of courts came back and said "no, this is view is legal to hold and express and is not hateful".
Now... If I then proceed to make a post on ISF stating that these Pentecostals are abusing the legal system, and that the police and prosecutors and employers involved in this fiasco are all complicity in violating the civil rights of people who believe and express that Pentecostals are nutty....
Do you think that it would be a reasonable response for someone else to respond with "
Well, it's protected speech to say that Pentecostals are nutty, and besides, I can't find a single case where the charges resulted in a successful prosecution"?
Do you think it's plausible that anyone reading that response might infer that the poster had completely missed the entire point?