[Vision2020] Freedom of expression

Reggie Holmquist reggieholmquist at u.boisestate.edu
Sun Dec 12 13:39:50 PST 2010


Freedom of Speech is a right.  It protects citizens against their
government.  I find it amusing when person A engages in hate speech and then
person B admonishes person A and afterward person C shames person B for not
respecting freedom of speech.  I'm not saying whether or not NSA is engaging
in hate speech, but it should be clear to everyone that what is posted on
their front page is ugly, disrespectful, and inappropriate.  Saying that
NSAs front page is ugly, disrespectful, and inappropriate is not the same
thing as saying the government should do something about it.

What you appear to be saying is that anyone who is offended by NSAs website
should STFU about it because if they say anything it will somehow hurt
freedom of speech.  You seem to forget that the people who are offended by
NSAs website ALSO have freedom of speech.  I find it a tiny bit hypocritical
of you to accuse others of a tendency to "shun these sorts of debates,"
while at the same time doing the exact same thing yourself.  It seems to me
that folks like Nick and Joe are trying to HAVE the debate, and that
*you*are the one who is shunning the debate.

-Reggie



On Sun, Dec 12, 2010 at 1:07 PM, Paul Rumelhart <godshatter at yahoo.com>wrote:

> I just thought I'd weigh in here with a little diatribe of my own.
>
> I think the freedom of an individual or group of individuals to express
> themselves is sacrosanct.  The freedom to express your opinion should be
> held dearly by everyone, if they want to live in a free society.
>
> There are very few limits that should be placed on speech, in my humble
> opinion, most having to do with statements of facts and not opinions.  I
> agree with libel laws, for example.  On the other hand, I disagree with
> obscenity laws probably universally.  If groups want to get together and
> form islands of information in which certain ideas are suppressed, I'm
> for that, too, as long as other options exist.  For example, if someone
> wanted to create a separate internet targeted at children that enforced
> it's own censorship, I would be OK with that.  If parents were OK with
> their kids surfing unrestrained on the Big Bad Internet, then they
> should be allowed to do so without repercussions if their child ends up
> on a porn site or a site about Islam or whatever your favorite boogey
> man is.
>
> As an aside, this is why I support Wikileaks.  Our government works *for
> us*.  They should only have secrets in very narrowly defined areas for
> very specific reasons.  And no, "they shouldn't see it because it will
> make our leaders look like hypocrites" does not qualify.  The people
> behind Wikileaks are exposing secrets that shouldn't be secrets in a
> reasonable world.
>
> According to my views on freedom of expression, political correctness is
> a disease that should be purged from the  world.  Instead of helping, it
> just sweeps the problem under the rug.  If a person hates blacks because
> of an incident when they were younger, or because they just don't like
> people who are "different", then they should be free to express that
> opinion.  Others will likely disagree, and a dialogue will probably
> ensue, but this is healthy.  This tendency by people to shun these sorts
> of debates is unhealthy for society (in my opinion, anyway).
>
> In an effort to totally ostracize myself from the community, I might as
> well go ahead and add that I also disagree with some of the child
> pornography laws as they exist on the books, as they relate to freedom
> of expression.  These laws have been expanded so much under the guise of
> "save the children" that they are insane.  In Australia, one man was
> arrested for having downloaded a drawing of Bart Simpson engaged in
> having sex, and was convicted under that countries child pornography
> laws.  In Iowa, another man was arrested for possessing manga comics
> from Japan that contained drawings of children having sex.  Was Bart
> Simpson actually hurt by this?  Or the fictional Japanese schoolgirl?  I
> can understand the prohibition against possession of real child porn
> (because it creates a market for such things) though I don't agree with
> it completely.  I think it should be a prohibition against
> *distribution* of child pornography, not simply "possession", if for no
> other reason than people might be likely to hand it over to law
> enforcement without the fear of going to jail themselves.  Prohibition
> against "virtual porn" is crazy and needs to be fought.
>
> So what does this mean to us?  It means that if something offends you,
> you should suck it up and learn to live with it.  Grow some thicker skin
> and see if you can find a sense of humor on sale somewhere.  Freedom of
> expression, if that's a concept you agree with, has to trump "freedom
> from being offended".  The minute you allow the idea that some things
> are just too horrible to be read or viewed, then you've just thrown the
> concept of freedom of expression out the window.  Now you'll have a
> slippery slope where the definition of "too horrible" tends to match the
> ideals of the people who are in power at any given moment.
>
> The odd irony for people who really believe in freedom of expression is
> that they most often end up defending things that they might vehemently
> disagree with.  They defend the speech of people they simply don't like
> or don't agree with, and they defend speech they are personally offended
> by because the speech that everyone agrees with is not threatened.
>
> Very little offends me, but even if I was offended by the NSA website,
> which I wasn't, then I would still be fighting for their right to be as
> inane with their metaphors as they wish.  I applaud them, really, for
> not rushing to change the page in an orgy of political correctness.
>
> Paul
>
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