GreNME
Philosopher
- Joined
- Sep 16, 2007
- Messages
- 8,276
Ok, first of all, keep in mind that that blog post was through the CBC. Not sure if you're familiar with the Canadian media, but the CBC is generally seen as having a left-of-center bias. (Perhaps not as bad as, lets say, Fox news, but expect that whatever is presented by them will usually be slanted.)
When cornered play the good-old "librul media" canard, as if that somehow proves what was said wrong. Lame.
Secondly, this was a very poorly written and researched article. There are some rather significant mistakes in it. For example, one of the claims is that she never intended to show because she would have had to have left the Rideau club 'a half hour before' in order to make it. Ummmm.... I live in Ottawa. The only way it would take you half an hour to get from the Rideau club (located downtown Ottawa) to the University is if you were walking. With a broken leg. While dragging a 100 pound boulder. Had she spent 2 minutes with a city map (or even mapquest) she would have seen that travel time by car is roughly 5 minutes. Should you really trust an author who makes blunders such as this?
Lastly, the author of this article seems to be relying on certain sources, but ignoring others. Heck, she even ignores information even from sources she referred to. For example, she claims that: They [her source] added: "At no time was there any evidence of physical threat." Yet one of her sources also pointed out: One male in his early twenties was escorted out of the foyer of the building by an Ottawa police officer..
Umm.. Just wondering, just why do you think the police would be escorting someone out of the building? Unclaimed parking tickets?
To the second: trying to change the subject because you think she too long getting there is insipidly pedantic, and blatantly trying to play incredulous. To the last, unless you have some proof of reason why the young man was being escorted away (for pulling the alarm maybe?), you have nothing supporting that there was any threat. The police themselves said they were never concerned about a threat (but open to any being reported), so in case you're missing this Coulter's people have lied about that.
Oh, and by the way, there was evidence of a threat provided by reporters that were there. For example:
From: http://deborahgyapong.blogspot.com/2010/03/anti-free-speech-students-shut-down-ann.html
...a group of people rushed the hall, jostling the three people who were at a table checking student ids and those who had registered. The table got pushed aside. When the volunteers said they needed order and for people to come to the table, some of the rowdies folded the table up and threw it aside. Then the volunteers decided it was too dangerous for them and they shut the doors to the auditorium.
Nice backpedaling. The police never warned of any threat. Repeat it with me: the police never warned of any threat. Ann Coulter and friends are outright lying about the police having any concern of a threat. You're just retreating into hearsay now that the authorities don't back up Coulter's claims. Speaking of the authorities not backing them up:
Ok, first of all, my personal belief is that, on average, the Ottawa police are incompetent. Just a general observation from living in the city (and from seeing crimes that the police did absolutely nothing to stop). Its also borne out by statistics (for example, they have the lowest clearance rate for crime in the region.)
Wow, it's like you're playing directly from the Fox News playbook now: when the facts don't fit the narrative, character assassination is soon to follow. Great job on being uncreative.
Secondly, the author of the article spoke to an Ottawa police media relations officer... but did she actually talk to police that were there? Quite possible that the media relations officer is just attempting to provide a 'spin', while those at the event might have had a different story to tell.
You're fishing now. Coulter's quote of the police in her tweets and blogs were creatively paraphrasing the police concern over capacity. The very person whom Coulter quoted was asked to verify, and he contradicted them. Why can't you just admit the duplicity?
Lastly, and most importantly, just what would be the purpose of "finding a bigger venue"? You had to have a prior registration to enter, and the article itself points out that they were making sure only registered participants entered. So why was a bigger hall needed? Did the police mistakenly think everyone should be let in? Were they just too lazy to provide proper crowd control outside the hall?
Do you not understand what a fire hazard is? The hall had a capacity of 400 people, and by the time the event was canceled the hall was already at half capacity with more than twice the capacity outside. That you can't see the obvious venue size concern seems intentionally obtuse after so many pages on the topic.
And just how practical would it have been to move the talk? I'm not a student at the University of Ottawa, but from what I've read, Marion hall was already the largest hall on campus. (See: http://web5.uottawa.ca/mcs-smc/virtualtour/science_buildings.php) Think they'd actually be able to just pick up and move somewhere else in the city?
Perhaps that's a question you should be asking the organizers... you know, the guys who cut and ran.
Frankly, the idea that they could have just "moved" the thing is a foolish idea that would have been seen as impractical had the author of this article spent 2 minutes doing some investigation.
No one is suggesting they should have just "moved" that day. You're making up strawmen to ignore the reality of the only concern the police expressed.
Yes, 8 people in a hall that wasn't even near full. And for which other protesters were attempting to enter. And do you really think its possible to give a speech when people are having a shout-off?
8 people out of 200, and those were shouted down by the others there to see Coulter. This is actually described quite plainly in the link, and you're ignoring it to continue insisting on a fantasy scenario.
Nope, I'm not 'dancing away'. I've been entirely consistent.
Yes, you've certainly been consistently giving a narrative from bizarro-world that the updates on what happened completely contradict. In doing so, you've pretty much solidified what I said earlier about not believing that you would be making these same defenses were the ideological bent switched. Again, while I can believe that you believe you would defend the same, the lengths to which you are denying reality in your defense of Coulter's lying does not support your insistence that you'd behave the same with different characters at play.
As I've said before (and will probably have to again since you seem to have a lack of understanding over this point)... Free speech should not belong to only those with the largest megaphone.
Once again, Free speech should not belong to only those with the largest megaphone.
How many more times do I have to repeat that before you understand?
And as the source I have pointed to earlier indicated, It was being blocked because people who had not registered were attempting to gate-crash. Registration for the event was required, when certain people were asked for 'order' so that they could be checked off, their table was pushed aside (the word "thrown" was used, although I suspect that is a bit of poetic license.)
Look, you (and AvalonXQ) were the one who earlier in the thread seemed to be implying that the anti-Coulter folks were the ones blocking entrance to the event, and it turned out that the organizers were blocking entrance to the event. That you're not admitting the reality is the opposite of what was being presented earlier in the thread is why I pointed it out. You're just avoiding admitting as much.
Actually, it was disseminated. It was probably discussed more on conservative message boards and similar places because they had more interest, but the fact that at least some protesters were actually admitted suggests that the event (plus the registration requirement) was disseminated.
You don't at all see the cognitive dissonance in what you're trying to argue here, do you? If the dissemination was as selective as you seem to be admitting, how does that support what you're asserting and disputing what I'm saying?
And do you know why it wasn't disseminated more widely? One of the reasons is that the head of the student council (Seamus Wolfe) banned posters from certain buildings. So, he bans posters giving details about the event, then complains that people don't know the details of the event.
And yet the word got out to at least 190+ people who made it to the event, and presumably more-- unless you're now asserting that everyone present who wasn't admitted was anti-Coulter-- who showed up.
In that case I find your definition of "free speech" to be rather idiotic.
And I find yours dishonest.
Remind me if I ever see you in a movie theater to yell as loud as I can... after all, it is free speech, isn't it?
What part of "no freedom from consequences" did you not understand?
Another idiotic suggestion. Yeah, an amplified mic can be louder than a voice, but there are limits, and I doubt anyone that was within a few seats of the protesters would have found the 'amplified mic' to be all that beneficial.
An amplified mic wasn't necessary-- the anti-Coulter folks were already shouted down before the event was put off. You're just ignoring this to continue insisting that your fantasy-land scenario is the one that actually played out when it didn't.
So, you try to justify your idiotic statements by quoting someone else who isn't really much better.
Nope, just pointing out that your weird conditions do not seem to be recognized as valid by anyone but those defending Coulter on ideological bases, which is part of why I said I didn't believe you earlier.
Hey, if you want to claim 'free speech does not mean freedom from consequences[/i] I agree... If I say something wrong, I could expect to be insulted, criticized for my views, shunned by society, etc. But the point is, I should still be able to get my message out there without having it shouted down by someone with a bigger megaphone.
No you shouldn't. There's no guarantee of that. It's completely irrelevant to the event in question though, because the only people who got shouted down were the anti-Coulter folks who made it into the hall. Don't let the facts stop you from continuing to argue along your goofy fantasy scenario though.
Oh, and by the way, I do think that acceptable consequences should not include physical harm or property damage.
How many times does it have to be pointed out that the police issued no warnings about physical threats? There were no reports of fights or other injuries happening, and about the closest you could get to "property damage" is your anecdote about a table being pushed over. You're just making crap up to try to present Coulter and the organizers as victims, when in reality it's precisely as I've been saying since the first page-- Coulter cut out on the event for false pretenses and is trying to claim moral high ground based on lies.
Already answered. (I was in the process of answering when you made your post.
The suggestion by the police should have been seen for what it was: an idiotic suggestion not worthy of consideration....
- Marion hall was already the biggest one on campus. And I doubt it was really practical to move the event on short notice.
- Registration was required (and registration was open to anyone who wanted to register ahead of time).. So, why would a bigger hall be required?
To the first, again you're making up a scenario where someone suggested moving the venue on short notice (no one did), and to the second all you're doing is displaying the logistical fail of the organizers that turned out being precisely the problem the event was called off anyway (despite the lies from Coulter-fantasy-land). Funny how all of the sudden the police concern has stopped being a talking point waved by you in your defense of Coulter's walking out, and now is being lambasted as idiocy because it contradicts your earlier assumptions-- classic confirmation bias failing and then facing scorn as a result.
And with that, I'm done trying to see if you could actually live up to your claim of ideological agnosticism on the topic after pointing out the facts contradicting the early claims (lies) by the Coulter crowd. You've basically proved why I said earlier I don't believe you would make the same defense under different circumstances, and you've already had the facts and reason pointed out to you several ways and you refuse to acknowledge them. Have fun in your ideological imaginary land.