catsmate
No longer the 1
- Joined
- Apr 9, 2007
- Messages
- 34,767
Still spewing the same lies?LOL. In the UK people are thrown into jail for Tweets. Freedom of speech is meaningless without the right to bear arms.
Still spewing the same lies?LOL. In the UK people are thrown into jail for Tweets. Freedom of speech is meaningless without the right to bear arms.
In Australia if you're not killing that bunny you're doing it very wrong.
Trausti is clearly misremembering the Twitter bomb threat joke. Paul Chambers was initially convicted and fined (not sent to jail), but appealed the conviction and had it quashed by the High Court in London in 2012.Still spewing the same lies?![]()
It's precedent based except when political interference decides it's not.Of course it is true!
I know and said as much in posts before and after the one you quoted. But that does not contradict U.S. law being precedent based.
Trausti is clearly misremembering the Twitter bomb threat joke. Paul Chambers was initially convicted and fined (not sent to jail), but appealed the conviction and had it quashed by the High Court in London in 2012.
If Trausti is talking about something other than this, Trausti can provide some examples of people getting thrown in jail over tweets.
Not sure why frame it as something specific to the UK or Twitter, though. Death treats are illegal the USA too, and reason for a civil case too, and it's not specific to the medium. Using Twitter is no different from using the postal service.
The US ‘limits’ free speech in essentially the same manner as the UK does.
Not true. The U.K. has laws against hate speech. The U.S. does not.
Not sure why frame it as something specific to the UK or Twitter, though. Death treats are illegal the USA too, and reason for a civil case too, and it's not specific to the medium. Using Twitter is no different from using the postal service.
Because this side discussion started with a claim that in the UK folk can be imprisoned for a tweet and that in the US free speech was defended by people having guns.
Not true. The U.K. has laws against hate speech. The U.S. does not.
That is not true. The Nazi regime made it impossible fir certain groups to legally possess firearms. This was based on the Weimar laws of ~1920 which instituted theNot only that's not what 2A says about it, but OK, I'll bite...
And how do guns help there? Do you think a guy who's accused of inciting violence, should prove it by starting shooting at the cops? How does that make it any better?
Oh, you mean people should revolt and yada yada. Well, even in the USA, which likes to use that rhetoric a lot, that's not what happens, is it? What happens is that some loony picks up a gun and starts shooting up the school (or workplace, convention, clinic, etc) to show those darned X what's what. Where X is whatever group they had a beef with.
How's that making it any better?
Plus, historically, gun ownership doesn't even have that much to do with ensuring freedom of speech. As a trivial example, Nazi Germany DIDN'T actually take people's guns away; it actually encouraged more gun ownership. Did that preserve freedom of speech? In what universe? The mirror universe from ST where Spock had a beard?![]()
That works so well.The USA does not need to. They have guns to keep society (and schools) polite.
The claim was, of course, a lie.Because this side discussion started with a claim that in the UK folk can be imprisoned for a tweet and that in the US free speech was defended by people having guns.
Perhaps the word ‘essentially’ is throwing you? A state can pass legislation prohibiting ‘fighting words’ and then charge a person under that statute for calling a specific African American the N-word in public. A conviction would likely survive constitutional challenges.
Apparently, it is throwing you. There is no comparison between the hate speech laws of the U.K. (and other European democracies) and what is unprotected speech in the U.S. The U.K.'s hate speech laws would be flat-out unconstitutional in the U.S.
There is enough similarity between Hate Speech laws and our own laws against speech that is likely to or is actually intended to provoke violence. Their effect is similar enough to call them essentially the same, even if the wording used in some countries wouldn’t survive constitutional muster here.