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135 points toomanyrichies | 45 comments | | HN request time: 1.735s | source | bottom
1. megamike ◴[] No.45862207[source]
“the First Amendment is a cheap thing if all it provides is the assurance that one may say what a current majority is willing to hear.” Charles Rembar
replies(3): >>45862262 #>>45862288 #>>45862380 #
2. getcthbf67 ◴[] No.45862262[source]
As a contrararianI'm silenced a lot. How do you suggest alignment can happen if more persuasive dissenting voices are allowed to be heard?
replies(4): >>45862266 #>>45862342 #>>45862489 #>>45862517 #
3. michael_michael ◴[] No.45862266[source]
Silenced by whom?
replies(1): >>45862304 #
4. theendisney ◴[] No.45862288[source]
I wouldnt have imagined at the time that the worse part of electronic messages is that they could one day legaly be written in your name. I thought things coudnt be worse than not being allowed to speak (which was already normal at the time)
replies(1): >>45862308 #
5. theendisney ◴[] No.45862304{3}[source]
Even the smallest authority may want to force others back in line.
replies(1): >>45862337 #
6. jfengel ◴[] No.45862308[source]
They also had their own messages removed.

It's not clear to me that they're guaranteed a platform on their work email, but having been allowed to set a message and then having it removed and then replaced with a different one is not a good look for free speech.

7. ceejayoz ◴[] No.45862337{4}[source]
“Your ideas suck and you should stop espousing them” is free speech too.
8. epistasis ◴[] No.45862342[source]
Contrarian on taxes, spending, organizational issues, democracy versus monarchy?

Or it, you know, those contrarian views? You know the ones.

(Personally, I'm a contrarian about the presence of fire in crowded theaters, and boy have I been silenced)

9. bofadeez ◴[] No.45862380[source]
I think we can all agree on this. It would just be nice if there was consistent enthusiasm for the first amendment when it comes to actual taboo ideas. Are you quoting this when you hear about right wing extremists being canceled or jailed in Europe? In the 1970s, Jewish lawyers at the ACLU defended the American Nazi Party’s right to march in Skokie. Not out of support, but to uphold the principle of free speech for all. What happened to intellectual honesty?
replies(5): >>45862400 #>>45862434 #>>45862502 #>>45862643 #>>45863621 #
10. SilverElfin ◴[] No.45862400[source]
> What happened to intellectual honesty?

It’s gone. The ACLU itself is pretty anti free speech these days and happily looks the other way when censorship on private social media platforms aligns with their ideological views. People have been writing about free speech issues at the ACLU for about a decade now:

https://www.tabletmag.com/sections/news/articles/is-the-aclu...

replies(5): >>45862409 #>>45862551 #>>45862567 #>>45862604 #>>45863282 #
11. ◴[] No.45862409{3}[source]
12. gusgus01 ◴[] No.45862434[source]
I mean it depends on what we are talking about. The case you mention was about the right to peacefully assemble, and that the swastika does not count as "fighting words" and thus not grounds to say the assembly isn't allowed. In the case of Europe, they don't have the same constitution as the USA so I'm not sure how to compare that, and if those extremists are merely being silenced over swastikas or calls for the deaths of people since you didn't specify.

Plus the comparison to Europe and that specific case is especially untenable because if the specific case in Europe was in Germany, then they have a special relationship with the swastika.

replies(1): >>45862451 #
13. bofadeez ◴[] No.45862451{3}[source]
People in Europe are also human beings and so they also have a natural right to free speech. They just happen to live in oppressive governments willing to use violence against them for expressing their natural right to speak their opinion.
replies(3): >>45862484 #>>45862603 #>>45863642 #
14. SilverElfin ◴[] No.45862484{4}[source]
Exactly. It’s interesting that despite many countries sharing classic liberal political attitudes don’t have constitutional protections for free speech that go as far as the US. In my view free speech is the most fundamental requirement for any free society and democracy can’t work without it. But as we see with the UK right now and others, speech is impeded frequently.
replies(1): >>45862861 #
15. fnordpiglet ◴[] No.45862489[source]
Why is alignment necessary? In our system compromise is the typical alignment sought where no single view dominates the decisions or direction. With enforced alignment no compromise is more than not necessary it’s not possible. That’s the dysfunction of the present because there’s a perception that holding office entails enforcing alignment, and opposing voices not only need not be heard but are forcefully silenced. However the system we have in the US doesn’t allow for that, and explicably, it’s even more dysfunctional than normal. Sooner or later they have to stop and compromise, over throw the system, or be removed. That’s precisely how it’s designed to work.

So, you shouldn’t be silenced, your opinions should be heard, and to the extent they’re reasonable, they should be considered proportional to your ability to influence. The more to which this is prevented or ignored the more unstable the system is.

16. singpolyma3 ◴[] No.45862502[source]
Free speech is out of vogue
17. mpalmer ◴[] No.45862517[source]
What exactly do you think you deserve that you're not getting?
18. FireBeyond ◴[] No.45862551{3}[source]
Sadly, agreed. The ACLU used to be known as a stalwart on this, fighting for the right of the KKK to hold marches etc. The "their speech might be reprehensible, but we need to fight for all free speech" perspective.

Now, they're uninterested in a lot of these issues.

And I say this as someone very liberal.

You can also separately debate where the line is on the topic of say "absolute free speech", but whatever the ACLU used to fight for, it fights for a distinct subset only, now.

replies(1): >>45863631 #
19. FridayoLeary ◴[] No.45862567{3}[source]
Yeah. It died during COVID.
replies(1): >>45863207 #
20. throw101010 ◴[] No.45862603{4}[source]
People in Europe live in actual democracies (for the majority). The laws restricting speech were born through democratic processes.

Who do you think you are to pretend to know better than these citizens? You seem to want to impose some unbridled "free" speech that seem to have pretty disastrous effects in the only country where it supposedly exists... is this your idea if "freedom"?

We have tested the limits of tolerence at the cost of literal tens of millions of deaths during the last World War in Europe, I don't think we need any lesson on how we should run our societies regarding free speech because we have done a lot of painful learning.

Looking at the direction/unstability of the American system currently it's not impossible that its people will do the same kind of learning soon unfortunately, might be better to focus on this rather that trying export ideas that we democratically rejected, with purpose.

replies(1): >>45862633 #
21. bediger4000 ◴[] No.45862604{3}[source]
Come, come, my good sir! US citizens know that censorship on private social media platforms is NOT a First Amendment issue! While it may be censorship of a sort, it's not done by the US government, and therefor is allowable. This is middle school civics in the USA, old boy! There's nothing, nothing, in the US constitution that says anyone else must pay to promulgate your opinions. Freedom of speech is freedom of government suppression in the USA. But like almost everything else in the USA, it's up to you to pay for it.
replies(3): >>45862632 #>>45862645 #>>45863835 #
22. terminalshort ◴[] No.45862632{4}[source]
It is a 1A issue when they are censoring due to government pressure
replies(1): >>45862696 #
23. bofadeez ◴[] No.45862633{5}[source]
People in USA live in a constitutional republic based on self-evident natural rights given by god. We just have (somewhat) democratically elected representatives.

In an "actual democracy" with no constitutional rights, the majority can (legally) genocide the minority - and that's happened more than a few times in "actual democracies" in Europe in the very recent past.

You should probably think deeper about what you're advocating for.

replies(2): >>45862681 #>>45862797 #
24. danaris ◴[] No.45862643[source]
> In the 1970s, Jewish lawyers at the ACLU defended the American Nazi Party’s right to march in Skokie.

Well, that doesn't mean that

a) they were right to do so then, or

b) a better understanding can't have been reached since then.

The Paradox of Tolerance is a very real thing. If you want to make free speech absolutism a religious principle within your own beliefs, go wild, but for those of us who just want to make this world the best place we can to live in, we have to consider what the consequences of different kinds of speech are.

And the consequence of being tolerant of hate speech is that the speech of those being hated diminishes. Their freedom diminishes. Their safety diminishes. Sooner or later, they are driven out of communities that permit hate speech against them.

"Free speech for all", in the sense that absolutely anyone is fully free at any time to say anything they want, and everybody remains equal in this, is a fantasy. And American jurisprudence has rejected that level of "free speech" since very early on—there are laws against libel, incitement to violence, false advertising, and other forms of speech.

replies(2): >>45862804 #>>45863162 #
25. ◴[] No.45862645{4}[source]
26. estimator7292 ◴[] No.45862681{6}[source]
We genocided the native Americans. Our president wants to genocide brown people. The government is almost wholly owned by wealthy individuals and corporations. A majority of our government is actively working against the good of humanity, much less the interests of the nation.

America now has a literal secret police abducting real people on the actual streets in broad daylight.

Upon losing the previous election our president staged a coup and faced no consequences and won a reelection.

We are no longer a great, free nation, and you really need to understand that fact. America has been lagging behind the rest of the free world for half a century or more. Pretty much everyone has it better than we do.

replies(2): >>45863104 #>>45863238 #
27. bediger4000 ◴[] No.45862696{5}[source]
Not what I'm arguing, I agree with you. Nobody is compelled to carry your speech, with a rare "common carrier" exception. Which social media is not.

You've got me thinking. I'm sure there's government pressure on social media to not carry certain posts, or allow certain human access. That's a pretty clear 1st Amendment violation. But it shades off. What about say, NSA using it's total information awareness feed of the entire internet to let HN know when a terms-of-service violation happened. Is that OK? What about if the NSA selectively notifies Truth Social of TOS violations? What if the NSA sends an official lawyer around to Facebook to get them to modify TOS a particular way? What if the DoJ sends someone to Paul, Weiss to get them to send someone else around (pro bono!) to hint that modifying TOS a particular way would be beneficial to Bluesky? What if Zuckerberg calls up Trump and asks him how he'd like TOS to read? I'm not sure where the line is.

replies(1): >>45863199 #
28. bdangubic ◴[] No.45862797{6}[source]
funniest thing I’ve read in a long time - cudos mate, well done
29. deeg ◴[] No.45862804{3}[source]
> The Paradox of Tolerance

This phrase needs to be used (and understood) more often. People who act in bad faith use this to their advantage and make our society worse. Look at the response to the Kirk murder: people were fired for daring to say something negative after his death.

30. Kim_Bruning ◴[] No.45862861{5}[source]
On paper, free speech in the US appears sacrosanct. But in practice, top gear once did this:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pKcJ-0bAHB4

Maybe played up slightly for TV? But the impression is given that -in practice- they could not exercise their free speech in person in the US, but were fine broadcasting it in the UK.

replies(1): >>45863203 #
31. jalapenos ◴[] No.45863104{7}[source]
Who's the "we" here? You and your posse genocided native Americans? How are you not behind bars?
replies(1): >>45863171 #
32. jalapenos ◴[] No.45863162{3}[source]
Pretty standard narcissistic attitude: I'm smarter than everyone else, I know that if they hear the Nazi stuff, they won't be able to tell it's demented nonsense because they're not as smart as me.

So the only way to keep society safe is super smart people like me get to control what other people can say - reasoned as always in such a sophisticated way.

As always, society carries on only so long as its enemies are kept at bay.

replies(1): >>45863216 #
33. anonymouskimmer ◴[] No.45863171{8}[source]
Whenever someone uses "we" to refer to a body politic, and doesn't otherwise specify, it's meant to refer to the collective polity throughout its history.

So, the democratic-republican "we". As compared to the royal "we".

As to why no one was behind bars? Because "we" also made those bars.

replies(1): >>45863209 #
34. anonymouskimmer ◴[] No.45863199{6}[source]
> I'm not sure where the line is.

The line is always where a criminal violation seems likely to occur, including criminal negligence. Otherwise the government has no business butting in, unless subpoenaed as a witness by a court in a civil matter.

Edit: I guess the government also has a right to respond if it, or its policies, are a target of criticism or lies. But it should do this in the court of public opinion, or in an actual court if said speech breaches criminal law or a civil tort. Though in the latter cases it would be held to the highest standard. It has no right to otherwise shut down anyone's speech regardless of where it occurs.

35. ◴[] No.45863203{6}[source]
36. cruffle_duffle ◴[] No.45863207{4}[source]
That should have been their hay day. The government pulled enough absolute nonsense to keep them busy for decades. But instead they seemed more interested in some bullshit like prisoners rights to masks or something.

When trump was first elected I gave those guys like $300/month to fight the good fight against something I was told was a threat to my freedoms. The joke was on me though… because they very same set of people I thought cared about that stuff turned out to very much not care at all about literally anything they claimed to. They let the world burn to play politics.

In the end I wound up voting for trumps second term and will never ever vote for a single democrat again in my life. As for the ACLU, what a shame.

37. jalapenos ◴[] No.45863209{9}[source]
Are the native Americans also in that we? If so why did they genocide themselves - sounds a dumb thing to do
replies(1): >>45863387 #
38. cruffle_duffle ◴[] No.45863216{4}[source]
Covid policies in a nutshell. The funny part was all those smart people still to this day don’t understand how badly they got played. I guess many didn’t though. Many of the most ardent supporters were the recipients of vast amounts of upward wealth transfer… it takes an immense level of privilege to support any of that nonsense.
39. bofadeez ◴[] No.45863238{7}[source]
> We genocided the native Americans

That's also bad. But two wrongs don't make a right. Natives should have been afforded citizenship and constitutional rights also. The solution isn't to undo progress and take rights away from people again. I thought you were progressive?

> Our president wants to genocide brown people.

This discredits you quite a lot, since I've never heard even the most left-wing public figures insinuate such a wild unsubstantiated thing. If true, that would be deplorable also.

Whether what you're saying is true or false has no bearing on the truth value of what I said. You're just making unrelated angry hyperbolic claims that lack any nuance at all.

40. anonymouskimmer ◴[] No.45863387{10}[source]
Their polities weren't then part of the US polity, so they'd have a separate we. Now they are part of the US polity, so they could include themselves in that we.

But to honestly answer your sarcastic question: There were a bunch of them, and they typically didn't include their fellow natives in their collective understanding of "we" until later years. At the time, and even prior to colonization, various tribes did indeed commit, or participate in, genocide on other tribes. Just like the pseudo-collective "Europeans" did among their tribes.

Some history:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crow_Creek_massacre

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/French_and_Indian_Wars#Indigen...

41. watwut ◴[] No.45863621[source]
Funny how free speech is always meaaured by "are ypu helping nazi enough" and never be "did you helped those feminists and progressives enough".

If your definition of free speech is "nazi should be allowed to silence thwir critics" then I dont care about your hypocrisy.

replies(1): >>45863654 #
42. watwut ◴[] No.45863631{4}[source]
Why is free speech defined by freedom of nazi and never by freedom for left wing people?

Nazi are popular now and sympatisants are political leaders. It is not their defense what defines freedom, it is everybody elses rights that define lack of it.

replies(1): >>45863708 #
43. bofadeez ◴[] No.45863654{3}[source]
You're confused. Silencing people is the thing 1A protects against.

But yeah a lot of people are against free speech now too. It's just morally and ethically bankrupt, obviously.

But see? You're welcome to have embarrassing opinions that offend people. Say more!

44. bofadeez ◴[] No.45863708{5}[source]
I'm glad I live in a country where nothing you say or think or do can ever take away my natural right to speak any opinion in a peaceful way. If you don't already have freedom too, I hope someday your government will stop oppressing your people and let them express their opinions in a peaceful way.
45. Erem ◴[] No.45863835{4}[source]
It is actually done by the government too. Case in point the Tennessee man who was arrested and jailed for a month. Why? for social media posts critical of Charlie Kirk