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  1. #1
    Feeding the Peanut Gallery Senior Member Redleg's Avatar
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    Default Re: What is Freedom Of Speech ?

    Quote Originally Posted by Soulforged
    Exactly, that's one interpretation. That's called, in theory, historic interpretation.
    Your getting close

    The magical properties are in the fact that you seem to see some kind of causal connection between the speech and the result, emptying the affected subjects of will.
    No causal connection - a direct causation happens. individual yells fire - panic strikes the crowd - someone ends up hurt or dead. The direct result of the yelling of fire caused the events to happen.

    Caracterizing positions of idealogue is what's stucking the conversetion, apparently you have a certain taste for attaching arbitrary labels to certain statements made against your possition.
    What do you think the term magic is - don't go attempting to play the maytr when you yourself are more guilty of this.

    And still you don't recognize the interpretation that I proposed as something that reasonabily can be infered.
    Maybe its because its not something that is reasonabily inferred.

    You can throw as much examples as you want, you're ignoring the fact that there's only a very tiny connection between an speech and any given effect as far as human relatioships go (not sure what other effect a voice or a letter can cause).
    Death resulting from the irresponsible shouting of fire in a crowded place is not a minor or tiny connection between speech and a given event.

    In all the examples that you've provided, except pehaps for one or two occasions in wich the consequences might surpass the line of the reasonable (like punishing someone for denying the holocaust) and in the case of sedition, we're talking about penal cases in wich the persecution begins by a private instance.
    Not at all - I clearly have stated that there are both civil and criminal applications.

    That's, if there's no result, i.e. person affected, there's no case whatsoever.
    Your getting warm.

    In the case of sedition this changes, you speak some words and suddenly it's a crime by itself, I don't know why, perhaps you can explain this to me, since I've never understood this quite enough.
    Then your attempting to debunk my statements from lack of knowledge - sedition is covered in the United States Constitution as a specific event that the government through Congress has to act on.

    I don't need to go to the US for that. And now that you gave me the situation, then ask yourself this: In what manner will that black man respond if I tell him "monkey", for example? Will it be a reaction as in cause-effect, or will it be the result of human interpretation and the conventional use of words working in his brain. Both have different consequences.
    It will have the same effect - hate speech is in the preception of the reciever not your intent. The power of the spoken word still exists regardless of your attempt to equate it to "magic."

    If your unwilling to accept the responsibility that goes with Freedom of Speech - you are not ready to exercise that Freedom.
    O well, seems like 'some' people decide to ruin a perfectly valid threat. Nice going guys... doc bean

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    Mystic Bard Member Soulforged's Avatar
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    Default Re: What is Freedom Of Speech ?

    Quote Originally Posted by Redleg
    No causal connection - a direct causation happens. individual yells fire - panic strikes the crowd - someone ends up hurt or dead. The direct result of the yelling of fire caused the events to happen.
    Contradiction.
    Maybe its because its not something that is reasonabily inferred.
    I think I can reasonabely infer advocation of sedition as a derivate of the liberalists principles.
    Death resulting from the irresponsible shouting of fire in a crowded place is not a minor or tiny connection between speech and a given event.
    Is it just me or did you just found a connection between a cause and an effect just because the effect happens to be "tragic"?
    Not at all - I clearly have stated that there are both civil and criminal applications.
    Okay, more to my point. All civil cases are private.
    Your getting warm.
    Then your attempting to debunk my statements from lack of knowledge - sedition is covered in the United States Constitution as a specific event that the government through Congress has to act on.
    Just for fun then, can you present me with an hipotetical advocation of sedition right now, one that will fall into the category persecuted by the government. What the Constitution covers, and you've presented consistently is that sedition will be represed by the state.
    It will have the same effect - hate speech is in the preception of the reciever not your intent. The power of the spoken word still exists regardless of your attempt to equate it to "magic."
    Doesn't answer my question.
    If your unwilling to accept the responsibility that goes with Freedom of Speech - you are not ready to exercise that Freedom.
    I see that we're stuck on this, as if I denied this to be true. The concept of responsability that you uphold is the one of knowing the legal consequences of such speech and acting in accordance. However that kind of responsability only comes with law... I'm talking about something that goes beyond the law in general, wether I can interprete what I want from your Constitution or not it's irrelevant, I'm talking in general, from morals or ethics (or even law principles or theories if you want, though they constructed to fill the blank spaces on the law), as you like to call it.
    Last edited by Soulforged; 05-26-2006 at 04:03.
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    Feeding the Peanut Gallery Senior Member Redleg's Avatar
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    Default Re: What is Freedom Of Speech ?

    Quote Originally Posted by Soulforged
    Contradiction.
    A direct causation is not a causal relationship.

    I think I can reasonabely infer advocation of sedition as a derivate of the liberalists principles.
    Sedition is an act against the established government. Liberalists and sedition does not necessarily go hand and hand. One can be a liberal without advocating the violent overthrow of the established authority.

    Is it just me or did you just found a connection between a cause and an effect just because the effect happens to be "tragic"?
    Must be you - the cause is the speech - using the word Fire when there is no fire.

    Okay, more to my point. All civil cases are private.
    Civil cases more to point is between individuals who have a disagreement. Slander is a civil case, based upon a public utterance.

    Just for fun then, can you present me with an hipotetical advocation of sedition right now, one that will fall into the category persecuted by the government.
    The American Civil War. I don't even have to use a hypothecial situation. There is no sedition speech currently that I know of in the United States that is prosecutable by the United States Government. Sedition speech requires the advocation of force to remove the established authority.
    What the Constitution covers, and you've presented consistently is that sedition will be represed by the state.
    Of course because Sedition is not considered covered under the 1st Ammendment which is often refered to as Freedom of Speech.

    Doesn't answer my question.
    Then you were not listening.

    I see that we're stuck on this, as if I denied this to be true. The concept of responsability that you uphold is the one of knowing the legal consequences of such speech and acting in accordance. However that kind of responsability only comes with law... I'm talking about something that goes beyond the law in general, wether I can interprete what I want from your Constitution or not it's irrelevant, I'm talking in general, from morals or ethics (or even law principles or theories if you want, though they constructed to fill the blank spaces on the law), as you like to call it.

    Incorrect - I am speaking of a concept that goes way beyond the law but into how an individual acts. With Freedom comes responsibility is a concept that means you have a responsiblity to your fellow man to exercise your Freedoms in a reasonable manner.

    Sedition speech and its prosecution is a matter of law. Behaviors between people is being responsible in your actions toward your fellow man.
    O well, seems like 'some' people decide to ruin a perfectly valid threat. Nice going guys... doc bean

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    Thread killer Member Rodion Romanovich's Avatar
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    Default Re: What is Freedom Of Speech ?

    Quote Originally Posted by Redleg
    Sedition is an act against the established government. Liberalists and sedition does not necessarily go hand and hand. One can be a liberal without advocating the violent overthrow of the established authority.
    Did you see my post above? If not, please read it. If you don't want to reply to it, I'll at least ask you this question again - do you really think it should have been illegal for German citizens of the Weimar Republic to after Hitler was elected speak in favor of overthrowing the nazi government?!! At which point does it become legal to state your opinion that a governmenht should be overthrown in your opinion? Finally, do you really know of any threat to society that could be caused by people being allowed to state their opinion that a government should be overthrown? You'd better have some really good reasons for not allowing people to speak in favor or overthrowing a regime, reasons that weigh heavier than 6 million murdered Jews, Gypsies, Handicapped, and others, as well as 50 million soldiers and civilians of various countries. Your opinion of making it forbidden to speak in favor of overthrowing a government sounds very much like the "King by the grace of God" ideals of the 17th century.
    Last edited by Rodion Romanovich; 05-26-2006 at 13:21.
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    Feeding the Peanut Gallery Senior Member Redleg's Avatar
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    Default Re: What is Freedom Of Speech ?

    Quote Originally Posted by LegioXXXUlpiaVictrix
    Did you see my post above? If not, please read it. If you don't want to reply to it, I'll at least ask you this question again - do you really think it should have been illegal for German citizens of the Weimar Republic to after Hitler was elected speak in favor of overthrowing the nazi government?!!
    Patience - Sometimes I do sleep. You gave a good reply and I was giving my response some thought.

    Now to this post - I will respond to the first post after we address this serious of questions.

    Your attempting something here that is more of a moral question versus what would be legal question (IMO). Would it have been illegal for the German citizens to attempt to overthrow the Nazi government through violence? Is that what you are asking?

    If so the answer is yes it would be illegal because that falls under the definition of sedition, the state has an obligation to preserve itself. It would of been illegal under that concept of National Law.

    Application of the concept of Freedom of Speech makes it perfectly acceptable and protected by the government for the people to protest the actions of the government through peaceful protest. But advocation of violence is not speech that the government has to allow to perserve a free society.

    Now if your asking would it have been moral thing to do - hindsight is always 20/20. So you can answer the moral question yourself. When it was discovered that the Nazi Government idealogue was no longer following the principles of the German people as envisioned in their Constitution and national idendity - then the people should revolt. However their failure will be punished by the government, and their success will result in the punishment of the govenment.


    At which point does it become legal to state your opinion that a governmenht should be overthrown in your opinion?
    That is a different question then what constitutes Freedom of Speech and protesting the government. Remember the state has the obligation to preserve itself, when the preservation of the state goes against the will of the people - the people will revolt. That point has been demonstrated in history several times - no need for me to attempt to answer such a hypotheical question with a more quantive answer, then this one, when the interests of the state goes against the will of the people, the people will often revolt. In the eyes of the govenment revolt, sedition, rebellion, insurgection and violence against the state will always be illegal.


    Finally, do you really know of any threat to society that could be caused by people being allowed to state their opinion that a government should be overthrown?
    The answer is self-evident. I am being to think your reaching beyond the concept of Freedom of Speech into something else.


    You'd better have some really good reasons for not allowing people to speak in favor or overthrowing a regime, reasons that weigh heavier than 6 million murdered Jews, Gypsies, Handicapped, and others, as well as 50 million soldiers and civilians of various countries. Your opinion of making it forbidden to speak in favor of overthrowing a government sounds very much like the "King by the grace of God" ideals of the 17th century.
    I saved reading this paragraph for last. Your confusing morality with legality. If you wish to read beyond the words used that is your problem not mine. Legality requires a government - morality requires only the individual.

    With Freedom comes responsiblity - without responsiblity there is no Freedom. It does not imply it is morally incorrect to protest against the government. It does not imply that it is morally wrong to speak of rebellion and sedition. It does imply that you as an individual have a moral obligation to speak truthfully.

    Freedom of Speech does not protect one from a morally correct course of action if that action crosses into something that the government by its very nature must establish laws against. (even the kindest most benvolent governments must surpress sedition)
    O well, seems like 'some' people decide to ruin a perfectly valid threat. Nice going guys... doc bean

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    Thread killer Member Rodion Romanovich's Avatar
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    Default Re: What is Freedom Of Speech ?

    @Redleg: No, it must be completely allowed to speak in favor of overthrowing a government, otherwise there's no free speech. To say that a government such as the nazi government has a legal right to prosecute people who merely SAID (note: not even acted) they thought the nazi government should be overthrown, is IMO very anti-democratic.

    Don't you see the difference between the state preserving itself and the government preserving it's claims to the power? Overthrowing a government but maintaining the democratic system - making the new government being chosen by election - preserves the state while overthrowing the government.

    Furthermore, if a government has so little public support that it would fall immediately if someone spoke in favor of overthrowing it, would you consider such a government justified to hold power?

    Also, merely speaking in favor of overthrowing a government, without overthrowing it, can hardly be considered any danger to anyone under any circumstances. Let's say I'd say, after Hitler got elected and decided to soon pass a law that all Jews should carry badges: "If Hitler passes that law, I think his government is undemocratic and should be overthrown". Do you think such a statement should be illegal according to a state's laws?

    Finally, make sure you understand what law is for! Law is an attempt to make a formal version of our morals. We punish murderers, because we think murderers are bad guys. We punish rapists because we don't support rape. We punish violence because we don't support violence. None of those choices of what is to be defined as a crime are arbitrary, they're formed by our own sense of morality, but altered slightly to allow for a strict interpretation - we must find precise definitions, rather than just use the half-subconscious judgement or intuition we use when we relaxedly reason about morality. And the exact definitions are also useful for legal safety of citizens, so that every citizen, before any act, knows whether that act will be considered a crime or not, to make up for the slight differences in moral intuition that we have. We state beforehand when the action will pass the line of being a crime, so that we may make it justified for ourselves to punish the citizen if he commits the act.

    What I'm saying is the following - this is the very core of my message:
    - a nation should by law allow every citizen to speak in favor of overthrowing it's government (by violence if necessary), but not in favor of destroying the country in itself or destroy it's system (but allow them to speak in favor of altering the system to allow for more democratic safety - i.e. like adding amendments). The moment any official of the nation decides to imprison or otherwise punish someone for using this freedom of speech, the country can immediately be considered to have passed the line of democracy and has become a dictatorship, and that it's leadership (government) is justified by law to not only speak in favor of overthrowing, but also to overthrow in practise, by any degree of violence necessary.

    Again I ask you to make clear the difference between preserving a state and preserving someone's claim to a position of power. Overthrowing a government but electing the next one by normal voting procedure doesn't threaten the state. Even less does it threaten the state if someone merely speaks in favor of overthrowing a government, and doesn't even act. The less able you are to critize the government angrily, the less able the government is to know that you're disliking what they do, and the more prone they are to continue doing what they are doing wrong. The more freedom of critizising the government is removed, the less able the government is at knowing what the people wants, and the less able at being democratic it becomes.
    Last edited by Rodion Romanovich; 05-26-2006 at 14:30.
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    Feeding the Peanut Gallery Senior Member Redleg's Avatar
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    Default Re: What is Freedom Of Speech ?

    Quote Originally Posted by LegioXXXUlpiaVictrix
    @Redleg: No, it must be completely allowed to speak in favor of overthrowing a government, otherwise there's no free speech. To say that a government such as the nazi government has a legal right to prosecute people who merely SAID (note: not even acted) they thought the nazi government should be overthrown, is IMO very anti-democratic.
    Advocation of violence is not Freedom of Speech. Violence equates to denying others their rights. Governments have the obligation to preserve the state.

    So sadly the advocation of the violent overthrow of the established authority does not fall under Freedom of Speech.

    Protesting the actions of the government - calling for the the election process to remove the current government is within the concept of Freedom of Speech. Calling for the peaceful removal through the democratic process should always be protected speech because it allows for peaceful dissent to the government.

    However advocations of violence does not have legality when facing the state. The state has the legal obligation to prevent violence. Prosecution of sedition does not equate to anti-democratic action.

    Don't you see the difference between the state preserving itself and the government preserving it's claims to the power? Overthrowing a government but maintaining the democratic system - making the new government being chosen by election - preserves the state while overthrowing the government.
    I believe in your attempt to equate morality, legality, and justification you have confused yourself concerning my point.

    Freedom of Speech enables one to voice his dissatification with the course the government is taking, it does not protect one from their advocating the violent overthrow of the established authority. Seditous speech is not protected speech.


    Furthermore, if a government has so little public support that it would fall immediately if someone spoke in favor of overthrowing it, would you consider such a government justified to hold power?
    Not the issue at hand. States have the obligation to perserve itself. Governments without popular support always fall. If its done through the non-violent process of the democratic election process where the dissent agaisnt the government is done in the ballot box - the government loses it's mandate and a new government is established.

    The speech involved in this process protected speech by most governments


    If the people chose to use violence to overthrow the government - the government has the obligation to preserve itself and the nation state.

    The speech involved in this process is not protected speech by most governments.


    I also see your attempting something here - justification is different then the legal obligation of the state to preserve itself. Address the legality and the morality if you will - the justification falls within the moral perview of the individual. The state has the obligation to preserve itself

    Also, merely speaking in favor of overthrowing a government, without overthrowing it, can hardly be considered any danger to anyone under any circumstances. Let's say I'd say, after Hitler got elected and decided to soon pass a law that all Jews should carry badges: "If Hitler passes that law, I think his government is undemocratic and should be overthrown". Do you think such a statement should be illegal according to a state's laws?
    The illegality of the statement depends upon if the individual is speaking of violent overthrow or the recall process involved in removing a politican from office.

    One is protected speech the other is not.


    Finally, make sure you understand what law is for! Law is an attempt to make a formal version of our morals. We punish murderers, because we think murderers are bad guys. We punish rapists because we don't support rape. We punish violence because we don't support violence. None of those choices of what is to be defined as a crime are arbitrary, they're formed by our own sense of morality, but altered slightly to allow for a strict interpretation - we must find precise definitions, rather than just use the half-subconscious judgement or intuition we use when we relaxedly reason about morality. And the exact definitions are also useful for legal safety of citizens, so that every citizen, before any act, knows whether that act will be considered a crime or not, to make up for the slight differences in moral intuition that we have. We state beforehand when the action will pass the line of being a crime, so that we may make it justified for ourselves to punish the citizen if he commits the act.
    Tsk tsk - have you lost your temper?

    You have confused yourself in attempt to look for a specific definition, especially when one was given. I have stated that advocation of the violent overthrow of the government is not protected speech. You use the term overthrow. Your definition is general - my comment has a specific set of conditions that makes it non-protected speech.

    Advocation of violent overthrow of the government - is inconsistent with the legal code of most free states.

    Advocation of the overthrow of the current government through the democratic process of the nation is protected speech because it follows the legal established authorities mandate to power. Democracy is indeed a dangerous thing. WIth Freedom comes responsibility comes to mind once again.

    Where in any legal code does it advocate the use of violence other then the preservation of self?

    What I'm saying is the following - this is the very core of my message:
    - a nation should by law allow every citizen to speak in favor of overthrowing it's government (by violence if necessary), but not in favor of destroying the country in itself or destroy it's system (but allow them to speak in favor of altering the system to allow for more democratic safety - i.e. like adding amendments). The moment any official of the nation decides to imprison or otherwise punish someone for using this freedom of speech, the country can immediately be considered to have passed the line of democracy and has become a dictatorship, and that it's leadership (government) is justified by law to not only speak in favor of overthrowing, but also to overthrow in practise, by any degree of violence necessary.
    violence is inconsistent with the legal code of most states. Violence ensures that Freedom of Speech falls.

    Again I ask you to make clear the difference between preserving a state and preserving someone's claim to a position of power. Overthrowing a government but electing the next one by normal voting procedure doesn't threaten the state. Even less does it threaten the state if someone merely speaks in favor of overthrowing a government, and doesn't even act. The less able you are to critize the government angrily, the less able the government is to know that you're disliking what they do, and the more prone they are to continue doing what they are doing wrong. The more freedom of critizising the government is removed, the less able the government is at knowing what the people wants, and the less able at being democratic it becomes.
    I have made it clear - it is you who refuse to read what is stated. Violence is not protected Speech nor is it consistent with the concept of Freedom of Speech.

    THe government has the obligation to preserve itself and the state. The people have the moral obligation to insure that the government acts in their best interest.

    When the two clash - ie the government does not serve the people - then the democratic and protected under the concept of Freedom of Speech course of action is peaceful protests against the government and the advocation of the recall process to remove the current government.

    Violence is not protected speech. When the government goes so far that it requires the violent overthrow of the government - don't expect the government to allow for the advocation of its violent removal. Violence and its advocation does not equates to protected speech in a democratic society.
    O well, seems like 'some' people decide to ruin a perfectly valid threat. Nice going guys... doc bean

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    Mystic Bard Member Soulforged's Avatar
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    Default Re: What is Freedom Of Speech ?

    Quote Originally Posted by Redleg
    A direct causation is not a causal relationship.
    Care to demonstrate your tesis?
    Sedition is an act against the established government. Liberalists and sedition does not necessarily go hand and hand. One can be a liberal without advocating the violent overthrow of the established authority.
    Never said that. And you said that "not necessarily". Not all principles of liberalism are respected, many are restricted, many are restricted with out reason, I think this exception made by sedition is not unreasonable looking at it from the point of view of the state, I just don't like it, call it philosophic intuition.
    Must be you - the cause is the speech - using the word Fire when there is no fire.
    And what about saying the word fire when there's fire? Anyway, that's pointless.... What you've to measure here is what's the probability of a disaster happening when saying such things, and even then there's no crime unless there's an actual disaster or some person injured at least.
    Civil cases more to point is between individuals who have a disagreement. Slander is a civil case, based upon a public utterance.
    Exactly.
    The American Civil War. I don't even have to use a hypothecial situation. There is no sedition speech currently that I know of in the United States that is prosecutable by the United States Government. Sedition speech requires the advocation of force to remove the established authority.
    But what would constitute sedition right now? Is for example the advocation in a TV show "sedition"? The example of theather is also pretty good... What's sedition following the interpretation of the american courts? By the way you gave even a better example with the Whisky Rebellion, I liked it, it demonstrated your point quite well, but everything changes with time, and I'm talking about an alternative interpretation that might or might not be inferred for the Constitution of your country or the republican or liberalist principles in general that many other countries uphold in general.
    Of course because Sedition is not considered covered under the 1st Ammendment which is often refered to as Freedom of Speech.
    So you don't make any difference between advocation of sedition and sedition?
    Then you were not listening.
    Yes I were. "It will have the same effect - hate speech is in the preception of the reciever not your intent. The power of the spoken word still exists regardless of your attempt to equate it to "magic."" Is there a causal relationship considering the response? For example you shoot another person with a gun, the cause of the injure or the death is the shot, it's like when we had that discussion about drugs and causation.
    Incorrect - I am speaking of a concept that goes way beyond the law but into how an individual acts. With Freedom comes responsibility is a concept that means you have a responsiblity to your fellow man to exercise your Freedoms in a reasonable manner.
    Then it's deligence. Fair enough. However not all moral obligations to your fellow man are reasonabily translated into laws. Also how is that a menace of overthrowing the state hurts your fellowman? The menace is directed to the state, not the society. And add to that the fact that under an opressive government you might be very well aiding your fellow man, not hurting him.

    Anyway Red, I think that, as I said we've axiological disagreements on this one, so let's agree to disagree.
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    Feeding the Peanut Gallery Senior Member Redleg's Avatar
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    Default Re: What is Freedom Of Speech ?

    Quote Originally Posted by Soulforged
    Care to demonstrate your tesis?
    Its been demonstrated several times in reality. Just go into a crowded theather or club and yell fire - and see it happens.

    Never said that. And you said that "not necessarily". Not all principles of liberalism are respected, many are restricted, many are restricted with out reason, I think this exception made by sedition is not unreasonable looking at it from the point of view of the state, I just don't like it, call it philosophic intuition.
    A valid viewpoint

    And what about saying the word fire when there's fire? Anyway, that's pointless.... What you've to measure here is what's the probability of a disaster happening when saying such things, and even then there's no crime unless there's an actual disaster or some person injured at least.
    Not exactly - there is no crime if the fire is reality - the crime happens when their is no fire.
    But what would constitute sedition right now? Is for example the advocation in a TV show "sedition"? The example of theather is also pretty good...
    A television show is not reality for the most part - so I would not make a judgement based upon anything on the televsion.

    What's sedition following the interpretation of the american courts? By the way you gave even a better example with the Whisky Rebellion, I liked it, it demonstrated your point quite well, but everything changes with time, and I'm talking about an alternative interpretation that might or might not be inferred for the Constitution of your country or the republican or liberalist principles in general that many other countries uphold in general.
    Not much time tonight to go in detail on that question - will get back to it later.

    So you don't make any difference between advocation of sedition and sedition?
    Sedition is sedition.

    Yes I were. "It will have the same effect - hate speech is in the preception of the reciever not your intent. The power of the spoken word still exists regardless of your attempt to equate it to "magic."" Is there a causal relationship considering the response? For example you shoot another person with a gun, the cause of the injure or the death is the shot, it's like when we had that discussion about drugs and causation.
    The cause of the death is the individual who used the weapon - not the shot.

    Then it's deligence. Fair enough. However not all moral obligations to your fellow man are reasonabily translated into laws. Also how is that a menace of overthrowing the state hurts your fellowman? The menace is directed to the state, not the society. And add to that the fact that under an opressive government you might be very well aiding your fellow man, not hurting him.
    Correct that is why the concept of Freedom of Speech creates so many dilimia's (SP) for people. It is an ethical concept open to several different interpations. My viewpoint is not necessarily correct - but neither is it necessarily wrong. Rights are tangible ideas for the most part - where the cutoff between what is allowable (SP) free speech and what is not is determined not only by the society but the state. Hince we go back to my opening thought in this discussion.

    Anyway Red, I think that, as I said we've axiological disagreements on this one, so let's agree to disagree.
    If you seperate the matter of sedition and the advocation of sedition from the discussion - you will most likely discover that our viewpoints are the same on Freedom of Speech.

    But to give you another examble of why the spoken word has power - the concept of Freedom of Speech demonstrates it very well. Without Free Speech there is no Free Society. That is why the individual who desires to have Freedom of Speech must exercise that Freedom with responsiblity.
    O well, seems like 'some' people decide to ruin a perfectly valid threat. Nice going guys... doc bean

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    Mystic Bard Member Soulforged's Avatar
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    Default Re: What is Freedom Of Speech ?

    Quote Originally Posted by Redleg
    If you seperate the matter of sedition and the advocation of sedition from the discussion - you will most likely discover that our viewpoints are the same on Freedom of Speech.
    Let's leave it at that then.
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    The very model of a modern Moderator Xiahou's Avatar
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    Default Re: What is Freedom Of Speech ?

    Freedom of speech? I'll tell you one thing it's not... It's not passing a law that makes it illegal for citizens to publicly criticize elected officials.

    Spoiler Alert, click show to read: 
    How ironic that Sen. John McCain was heckled during a recent commencement speech. He has worked so hard to suppress others' right to protest and have their voices heard.

    McCain was booed and heckled as he delivered a commencement speech at The New School in New York last Friday. The main gripe seemed to be the senator's support for the war in Iraq, which has given the people of Iraq the right to protest and speak freely.

    As this was going on, a federal court was telling the Christian Civic League in Maine it can't run a radio ad next month when the Senate is set to take up the Marriage Protection Amendment. Reason: The ad tangentially criticizes Sen. Olympia Snowe, who faces a primary June 13.

    The McCain-Feingold campaign finance law, which was supposed to end the alleged corrupting influence of money in politics, makes it a criminal act for any ad to even mention a politician 30 days before a primary or 60 days before a general election.

    The Maine ad that tries to corrupt the political process mentions that Snowe, a co-author of McCain-Feingold, "unfortunately . . . voted against the Marriage Protection Amendment two years ago." The "big money" behind it amounts to $3,992, provided by an anonymous donor who agreed to cover the radio buy.

    A three-judge panel of the U.S. District Court in Washington, D.C., ruled that the ad "might have the effect of encouraging a new candidate to oppose Sen. Snowe, reducing the number of votes cast for her in the primary, weakening her support in the general election, or otherwise undermining her efforts to gather support, including by raising funds for her re-election."

    Well, duh. Meanwhile, Maine newspapers, radio and TV stations, are free to influence the election, spending their corporate dollars on editorials or news coverage that is often slanted one way or the other. But a group of private citizens banding together in common cause cannot, for they'd be committing the crime of attempting to participate in the political process. link


    I hope all American voters remember what McCain and Feingold have done to our freedom of speech when we choose our next president.
    "Don't believe everything you read online."
    -Abraham Lincoln

  12. #12
    Feeding the Peanut Gallery Senior Member Redleg's Avatar
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    Default Re: What is Freedom Of Speech ?

    Quote Originally Posted by Xiahou
    Freedom of speech? I'll tell you one thing it's not... It's not passing a law that makes it illegal for citizens to publicly criticize elected officials.

    I hope all American voters remember what McCain and Feingold have done to our freedom of speech when we choose our next president.
    I don't think the act will be upheld if it is ever challenged. On its face it seems unconstitutional and should generate sometime in the near future a constitutional crisis.

    However most Judges do not want their decisions questioned either - so they will most likely indeed rule in favor of such a restriction of speech in the political process.
    O well, seems like 'some' people decide to ruin a perfectly valid threat. Nice going guys... doc bean

  13. #13
    The very model of a modern Moderator Xiahou's Avatar
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    Default Re: What is Freedom Of Speech ?

    Quote Originally Posted by Redleg
    I don't think the act will be upheld if it is ever challenged. On its face it seems unconstitutional and should generate sometime in the near future a constitutional crisis.

    However most Judges do not want their decisions questioned either - so they will most likely indeed rule in favor of such a restriction of speech in the political process.
    Sadly, it was upheld by the SCOTUS back in 2003. Of course, it was the usual suspects + O'Connor that made the majority of the 5-4 split in favor of wiping their asses with the Constitution. Since then, O'Connor has been replaced by Alito- so we might hope for a better result if it somehow gets brought before the courts again.
    "Don't believe everything you read online."
    -Abraham Lincoln

  14. #14
    Feeding the Peanut Gallery Senior Member Redleg's Avatar
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    Default Re: What is Freedom Of Speech ?

    Quote Originally Posted by Xiahou
    Sadly, it was upheld by the SCOTUS back in 2003. Of course, it was the usual suspects + O'Connor that made the majority of the 5-4 split in favor of wiping their asses with the Constitution. Since then, O'Connor has been replaced by Alito- so we might hope for a better result if it somehow gets brought before the courts again.
    It will just require an individual to go in front of the courts again I believe. This is where the ACLU could make some money with many - bringing these type of Freedom of Speech issues back into the limelight of thier organization.
    O well, seems like 'some' people decide to ruin a perfectly valid threat. Nice going guys... doc bean

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