Originally posted by mjr
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The Power of the ANTIFA Myth
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Originally posted by mjr View PostWhy? Because you're a militant atheist who probably thinks most religious people are morons?
I'm sure there are people who want the Bible classified as "hate speech".
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Originally posted by Gravekeeper View PostYes, that simply isn't feasible. Moving the responsibility onto a private company will just result in said company either over correcting to avoid the financial penalty or simply leaving Germany as a market altogether. The nebulous nature of the internet makes it a very difficult problem to tackle online, but that approach isn't going to cut it.
It also passes the buck, as you illustrated. A private company is free to remove any speech or content from its site. It doesn't have an obligation to protect speech as its not a public forum nor a public entity. In fact you've straight up given it a financial incentive to do the opposite.
Besides, Large social media networks can't keep up with the amount of garbage on them as is and they rely on reactive user reports. You're not going to get Facebook to hire god knows how much additional staff it would take to pro-actively screen all content on its site.
Well, at least one of the parties currently negotiating for the new government has made strong claims that the law needs to be "reworked". Of course, their original claim was that "we will make sure it will be the shortest-lived law in history!", so I'm not holding my breath.
But, honestly: I'm beginning to get why people vote for the AfD (basically, our version of Trump).
Originally posted by Gravekeeper View PostThreats are already legally covered. As for disrupting events, that depends. Protesting is kind of the lifeblood of democracy. Freedom of speech is not freedom from consequence, etc etc. Now, an event should not be disrupted with violence obviously. But protest and counter protest are integral features.
In the US, you have instances of students disrupting the lecture of professors they disagree with, or speakers they don't want to hear, by heckling or other kind of noisemaking. In Germany, meetings and congresses of the AfD are disrupted - attendants forced to run a gauntlet of protesters, harassed and shoved, managers of locations receiving death threats for renting their venue to a legitimate, if despised, political party - all in the name of protecting people from them.
Because if the speech delivered by the AfD, or Milo Yannopoulus(?), or Christina Hoff Summers, is classified as "violence", then committing actual, physical violence somehow becomes okay, even an act of self-defense. And I find this horribly wrong.
Originally posted by Gravekeeper View PostCareful yes, but carte blanc, no. But I mean, all laws should be implemented carefully.
Originally posted by mjr View PostMany evangelical Christians are also derided for "hate speech" when they speak out against gay marriage, or are in favor of "traditional" marriage.
Laugh at them? Sure, go ahead. Stop them from speaking? No. Never."You are who you are on your worst day, Durkon. Anything less is a comforting lie you tell yourself to numb the pain." - Evil
"You're trying to be Lawful Good. People forget how crucial it is to keep trying, even if they screw it up now and then." - Good
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Originally posted by Canarr View PostExactly. But it's all done in the name of fighting hate speech - a term that lacks any kind of clear definition - so it's supposedly okay.
They always try to conflate "hate" with "offense" as if no one could ever tell the difference between the two.
Originally posted by Canarr View PostBecause if the speech delivered by the AfD, or Milo Yannopoulus(?), or Christina Hoff Summers, is classified as "violence", then committing actual, physical violence somehow becomes okay, even an act of self-defense. And I find this horribly wrong.
Yolo Minneapolis is truly an awful human being and if he's going to be given a public soapbox, he should get a public response. But again, I don't mean he should be beaten with sticks or anything. Even if I would find that personally entertaining. =p
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Originally posted by Gravekeeper View PostWell, the definition isn't the problem with that one it's the implementation. As for definition, I've never thought the term "hate speech" was that vague. But I find opponents of such laws try to pretend like its a complete mystery as to what hate speech is.
They always try to conflate "hate" with "offense" as if no one could ever tell the difference between the two.
We have laws against personal insults - if I call you an asshole, you can file charges.
We have laws against libel or slander - if I claim that you're a thief, you can file charges.
We have laws against threats - if I tell you that I know where you live, and I'm coming for you tonight, you can file charges.
We have a law against "Volksverhetzung" - if I make public calls to form a mob and kill all Canadians, you can file charges.
A lot of what I would say is legitimately hate speech is already covered by existing laws. So what more is actually needed?
Originally posted by Gravekeeper View PostThreats, harassment and violence are all already covered by law. I'm okay with a public event being disrupted by public opinion like Yolo Minneapolis being run off a college campus. I'm also okay with a private event throwing out anyone it deems a disruption.
Yolo Minneapolis is truly an awful human being and if he's going to be given a public soapbox, he should get a public response. But again, I don't mean he should be beaten with sticks or anything. Even if I would find that personally entertaining. =p
DISCLAIMER: None of the following examples illustrate my own beliefs.
If someone organizes a rally to inform of the problems trans people face in today's society, you'd be okay with people showing up to drown them out with a bullhorn and, "STICK WIT THE SEX YE BORN WIT!"?
If a women's group organised a demonstration for victims of sexual assault, you'd be fine with people showing up to chant, "REGRET IS NOT RAPE!" so their speech couldn't be heard?
At a protest about discrimination of gay people in the armed forces, you wouldn't mind counter-protesters screaming, "FAGS DON' BELONG IN OUR ARMY!"?
Really?"You are who you are on your worst day, Durkon. Anything less is a comforting lie you tell yourself to numb the pain." - Evil
"You're trying to be Lawful Good. People forget how crucial it is to keep trying, even if they screw it up now and then." - Good
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Originally posted by Canarr View PostBoth definition and implementation. At least, under German law, hate speech is not a legal term, but somehow it's supposed to serve as basis for enforcement.
Originally posted by Canarr View PostYou're okay with disrupting someone's public speech, as long as the interruptors feel strongly enough about it?
Really?
If I organize a rally in a public space and speak, anyone else is free to organize a counter protest. A private venue is a different matter, which is why I specified public.
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Originally posted by Gravekeeper View PostAh, German law doesn't define hate speech but they just passed a law using hate speech as benchmark? That could be a problem, yes. >.>
Originally posted by Gravekeeper View PostIf both sides are in a public venue both are equally entitled to their speech providing neither is breaking any laws. I may find your examples morally reprehensible but provided they don't cross a line into hate speech then everyone is equally entitled to speech in a public space.
If I organize a rally in a public space and speak, anyone else is free to organize a counter protest. A private venue is a different matter, which is why I specified public.
My issue is that I don't see the right to assembly or to free speech actually and adequately granted if simultaneously someone else is allowed to disrupt your event and thus, render it useless. In my opinion, it would be the government's responsibility to ensure that anyone holding a sanctioned event in public actually has the opportunity to conduct that event as planned (provided they break no laws doing it, of course). Yes, the government must allow for counter-protesters, but should keep both sides from disrupting each other.
I realize this may prove difficult in practice, but I believe this is an essential part of organized, democratic protest. Otherwise, there would be nothing keeping someone like, say, Trump from disrupting any protest against him by just paying for a truck with a sound system on it, blasting "MAKE AMERICA GREAT AGAIN!" at a volume higher than the protesters'."You are who you are on your worst day, Durkon. Anything less is a comforting lie you tell yourself to numb the pain." - Evil
"You're trying to be Lawful Good. People forget how crucial it is to keep trying, even if they screw it up now and then." - Good
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Originally posted by Canarr View PostMy issue is that I don't see the right to assembly or to free speech actually and adequately granted if simultaneously someone else is allowed to disrupt your event and thus, render it useless. In my opinion, it would be the government's responsibility to ensure that anyone holding a sanctioned event in public actually has the opportunity to conduct that event as planned (provided they break no laws doing it, of course). Yes, the government must allow for counter-protesters, but should keep both sides from disrupting each other.
If you just organized a rally on social media with no permit, etc, though you don't really have any elevated right to the public space you're occupying.
Originally posted by Canarr View PostI realize this may prove difficult in practice, but I believe this is an essential part of organized, democratic protest. Otherwise, there would be nothing keeping someone like, say, Trump from disrupting any protest against him by just paying for a truck with a sound system on it, blasting "MAKE AMERICA GREAT AGAIN!" at a volume higher than the protesters'.
Are you referring to the white supremacist rally in Tennessee that got drowned out by counterprotestors playing La Bamba? Because I personally found that hilarious. They had no permit or anything though and the police kept everyone separate.
https://twitter.com/BuzzFeedNews/sta...48677124214785
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Ultimately yes - it's up to the government to keep things secure.
The fallacy of Black Bloc or people who either tacitly or overtly deify them is that regardless of what you think of someone's politics, the government MUST intervene when a group impinges on individuals rights.
You don't have the right to smash a glass window. You don't have a right to vandalize another's property. It is not up to a counter-group to police that, it's up to the Government by design primarily because that prevents ideological blood feuds. That's sort of government 101 actually and we're not breaking any ground Plato hasn't already covered.
Where a bunch of people on the left are starting to go wrong (and where militiamen/Nazi's have been for a while) in their interpretation of things, is how far they're willing to extend the public's authority into the deprivation of the "other's" rights. The problem is, to some extent conservative ideology is sort of baked into the military/police cake though so it has a massive tendancy to blur the lines. You see it in oddities where Conservative hate unions, except for policemen unions. They hate the "Government", but love the Military (a part of the government).
I think that's to some extent why you start to see larger groups of leftists that tack radical left these days. If you continually see the military or police forces used more commonly against people "like you", there is a tendency to normalize the thought of the public taking extralegal measures.
I still come down on my normal side though - the government allows a proxy for which public disagreements can be settled. It is the constant refusal of individual stakeholders to war in governance that's the issue. As long as it is more appealing for Mitch McConnel/Paul Ryan to play politics rather than compromise/pass needed laws the public will continue to radicalize and act out, largely because there's no legal catharsis that can possibly occur. You need compromise. You need people talking to each other.
Failing to do that or to have your moderates mix only leads to radicalization and dehumanization of others. Which is ultimately what ANTIFA/Nazi's exploit. In the current mode of politics, they're a feature, not a bug.
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Originally posted by Gravekeeper View PostIf you have a sanctioned event and contention is expected then yes, the government has a responsibility to keep things civil. Really, any contentious event where protesters and counterprotestors are expected should have police on hand to keep things orderly. Police in the US have been doing a particularly piss poor job of that as of late.
If you just organized a rally on social media with no permit, etc, though you don't really have any elevated right to the public space you're occupying.
Originally posted by Gravekeeper View PostWell, there would be the fact Trump is a member of the government for starters so that would be a huge can of worms. >.>
Which is actually another issue I have with the new German anti-hate speech law: it is so easily abused, and if you have the funds, the possibilities are staggering. All you'd need is a few dozen minimum wage employees, some office space, and computers. Then you can have them working eight hour days flagging the social media accounts of your political opponents.
Originally posted by Gravekeeper View PostAre you referring to the white supremacist rally in Tennessee that got drowned out by counterprotestors playing La Bamba? Because I personally found that hilarious. They had no permit or anything though and the police kept everyone separate.
Originally posted by TheHuckster View PostSeriously? How is a law like that enforced? Imagine how different customerssuck.com would be if that law was routinely enforced globally.
Actually, my example was wrong; "asshole" isn't one of the actionable insults by the law. Only personal insults that are intended to demean the other person are unlawful - so, calling a CS rep a "useless idiot" would qualify, yes."You are who you are on your worst day, Durkon. Anything less is a comforting lie you tell yourself to numb the pain." - Evil
"You're trying to be Lawful Good. People forget how crucial it is to keep trying, even if they screw it up now and then." - Good
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Originally posted by Canarr View PostYes. Which is why I specified "sanctioned" events in my last post. And you're right: the US police hasn't been doing a great job protecting anyone's rights to assembly or speech lately, Left or Right.
Originally posted by Canarr View PostWhich is actually another issue I have with the new German anti-hate speech law: it is so easily abused, and if you have the funds, the possibilities are staggering. All you'd need is a few dozen minimum wage employees, some office space, and computers. Then you can have them working eight hour days flagging the social media accounts of your political opponents.
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Originally posted by Canarr View PostActually, my example was wrong; "asshole" isn't one of the actionable insults by the law. Only personal insults that are intended to demean the other person are unlawful - so, calling a CS rep a "useless idiot" would qualify, yes.
This law just seems waaaay beyond egregious hate speech and into "Call 911! My feelings are hurt!" We've been calling this situation a strawman, but it sounds closer to reality for Germany if calling someone an idiot is against the law.
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Originally posted by Gravekeeper View PostWell, the definition isn't the problem with that one it's the implementation. As for definition, I've never thought the term "hate speech" was that vague. But I find opponents of such laws try to pretend like its a complete mystery as to what hate speech is.
They always try to conflate "hate" with "offense" as if no one could ever tell the difference between the two."You are who you are on your worst day, Durkon. Anything less is a comforting lie you tell yourself to numb the pain." - Evil
"You're trying to be Lawful Good. People forget how crucial it is to keep trying, even if they screw it up now and then." - Good
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Originally posted by Canarr View PostA tiny update to the hate speech topic...
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