Free speech and threat to security of state.

Nilgiri

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@Nilgiri @T-123456 @Saithan @Joe Shearer if you guys are bored then you can read the above to get even more bored :p :p :p

To quote Joe....I read HISTORY...owie my head hurts!

I'll just say I have my strong opinion on the 1st amendment as I am staunch libertarian (in the North American sense of it).

Govt's have done far too much evil when they amass enough control/power. Their scope regarding legislative and executive must be very well defined...and negative rights (for them) w.r.t inherent rights of the individual (that well predated the formation of the particular govt) is just about the best way to set it up.

The tort exception clause (starting with libel and slander and working its way up to more serious matters) must be very precise and defined too...i.e freedom of expression is not absolute....and that is precisely what you bring up with the Schenk case....as expression can indeed infringe on other rights. The way the US defined this judicially I believe is that if the speech violates other inherent rights, it stops being just speech but a call to action (and thus an expression).

When you make a direct criminal threat against someone or yell "fire!" in crowded theatre or ask someone to go commit assault on someone else etc....this "speech" is not 1st amendment protected, because it carries weight of direct action violating other individual rights.

But neither did Trump do this (call for the DC march to enter and storm the capitol and break the law), nor did Bernie do this when he complained about republican congresspeople... prompting that Baseball game nutcase to go shoot at the congresspeople there (and nearly murder Steve Scalise). The actions of individuals interpreting 1st-amendment protected speech and then doing crime on their volition, starts and ends with the individual(s).....as just imagine the number of people you would need to lock up if this was applied broadly as a whole (someone interpreted what you said to do something that you didnt directly call for at all.... and now you are responsible for that person's interpretation and action too).

Now was it pretty gross what Trump did since the election with his free speech? Sure. But he has his right to say it as long as it stays within the 1st amendment. Same for every other politician and individual.

Now I am fine with (competitive and numerous) private publications/forums/media-groups setting rules (forums such as this one), restricting, censoring and editing their content (to rules they deem)...and then letting society consume that as it sees fit (if you do not like it, buy something else to read, go somewhere else to interact etc)....as long as they are clear and open they are doing it and thats the rules and bias etc... (unlike say CNN which claims its a neutral strictly factual news organisation).

Their "violation" of the 1st amendment principle does not really apply as they are not an elected govt but merely private publication. Just like you have lot of rights in your private domicile (and also over your custodians like children till they reach age of majority) compared to public open area.

i.e if you get banned from an online forum, or a newspaper bans having conservative writers.... its not the same thing as what a govt can do to you if it goes by some slippery slope of judging your intent on

But the overreach when they take on public utility size (monopolies etc) is definitely something that needs to be addressed....given the scale of the principle violation (and the trust the public put into it).

It is frankly ridiculous what facebook has been doing banning people that voice "stop the steal"....by arguing what a tiny minority of them interpret that to do (and ignore applying this in other instances of the same argument).

Or apple, google and the rest deciding they know better regarding what ought to be a platform or not...given the appreciable size and trust reposited into them to be internet public utility in various fashion (server hosting and so on).

True principled lefties calling this all out the same as I do on the right have really earned my respect on it.

The capitol riot thread has some good videos I have posted (replies 245 and 250):

 

Joe Shearer

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Not in Western Europe,we only laugh at the US and its system of almost anything.

It cant work because of cultural differences.
Democracy needs at least a century to start working.
Name a ''young'' country where it works.
Its never about the country but its people.
@Saiyan0321
If he was Indian, or Pakistani, I would have pointed at his point cited and said he was quoting Ambedkar. As it is, I can only point to Ambedkar's general perspicacity.
 

Joe Shearer

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To quote Joe....I read HISTORY...owie my head hurts!

I'll just say I have my strong opinion on the 1st amendment as I am staunch libertarian (in the North American sense of it).

Govt's have done far too much evil when they amass enough control/power. Their scope regarding legislative and executive must be very well defined...and negative rights (for them) w.r.t inherent rights of the individual (that well predated the formation of the particular govt) is just about the best way to set it up.

The tort exception clause (starting with libel and slander and working its way up to more serious matters) must be very precise and defined too...i.e freedom of expression is not absolute....and that is precisely what you bring up with the Schenk case....as expression can indeed infringe on other rights. The way the US defined this judicially I believe is that if the speech violates other inherent rights, it stops being just speech but a call to action (and thus an expression).

When you make a direct criminal threat against someone or yell "fire!" in crowded theatre or ask someone to go commit assault on someone else etc....this "speech" is not 1st amendment protected, because it carries weight of direct action violating other individual rights.

But neither did Trump do this (call for the DC march to enter and storm the capitol and break the law), nor did Bernie do this when he complained about republican congresspeople... prompting that Baseball game nutcase to go shoot at the congresspeople there (and nearly murder Steve Scalise). The actions of individuals interpreting 1st-amendment protected speech and then doing crime on their volition, starts and ends with the individual(s).....as just imagine the number of people you would need to lock up if this was applied broadly as a whole (someone interpreted what you said to do something that you didnt directly call for at all.... and now you are responsible for that person's interpretation and action too).

Now was it pretty gross what Trump did since the election with his free speech? Sure. But he has his right to say it as long as it stays within the 1st amendment. Same for every other politician and individual.

Now I am fine with (competitive and numerous) private publications/forums/media-groups setting rules (forums such as this one), restricting, censoring and editing their content (to rules they deem)...and then letting society consume that as it sees fit (if you do not like it, buy something else to read, go somewhere else to interact etc)....as long as they are clear and open they are doing it and thats the rules and bias etc... (unlike say CNN which claims its a neutral strictly factual news organisation).

Their "violation" of the 1st amendment principle does not really apply as they are not an elected govt but merely private publication. Just like you have lot of rights in your private domicile (and also over your custodians like children till they reach age of majority) compared to public open area.

i.e if you get banned from an online forum, or a newspaper bans having conservative writers.... its not the same thing as what a govt can do to you if it goes by some slippery slope of judging your intent on

But the overreach when they take on public utility size (monopolies etc) is definitely something that needs to be addressed....given the scale of the principle violation (and the trust the public put into it).

It is frankly ridiculous what facebook has been doing banning people that voice "stop the steal"....by arguing what a tiny minority of them interpret that to do (and ignore applying this in other instances of the same argument).

Or apple, google and the rest deciding they know better regarding what ought to be a platform or not...given the appreciable size and trust reposited into them to be internet public utility in various fashion (server hosting and so on).

True principled lefties calling this all out the same as I do on the right have really earned my respect on it.

The capitol riot thread has some good videos I have posted (replies 245 and 250):

@Saiyan0321

You notice that this could have been lifted word for word from Ayush' comment?
 

Kaptaan

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Not in Western Europe,we only laugh at the US and its system of almost anything.

It cant work because of cultural differences.
Democracy needs at least a century to start working.
Name a ''young'' country where it works.
Its never about the country but its people.
Free speech is a luxury in so many ways. A luxury of the stable, prosperous unified cultures and countries. As you just pointed out not all countries are on the same developmental timeline despite being in 2021. Free speech is afforded and paid by generations previous to us. If the previous generations have not 'paid' for the stability that underwrites free speach do not expect stability in the presence and also expect free speach to be trammelled.

Take present day Turkey. Would you agree that the regime of General Evren helped to establish a order which allowed the emergence of a stable, relatively prosperous Turkey today? You know how many were killed, muzzled in early 1980s to create some order in Turkey.

I could write chapter after chapter. But bottom line is this. There can never be established free speech [within the meaning as we accept in western liberal democracies] without massive social, political engineering of the populations. Populations are made of people. People have diverse views. People think democracies thrive on diversity. That is absolute nonsense. Democracies thrive only after they have made monolith of their populations. Only when everybody thinks and has similiar POV can consensus evolve.

When a consensus evolves [which goes against natural order] most often by force, social and political manipulation [citizens go to schools and are conditioned to think similiarly] a society can have free speech with stability undermining it. If you look at USA the consensus that exists was brought about after much bloodshed with Civil War being a major event in making of USA.

The recent events have shaken that consenus and the effect has been the use of censor to limit free speech by big monoplies who feel threatened. This confirms my contention that free speach is informed by the luxury of stability which in turn is underwritten by consensus. When that is shaken it's effects are felt on free speech.
 

mulj

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Free speach is a luxury in so many ways. A luxury of the stable, prosperous unified cultures and countries. As you just pointed out not all countries are on the same developmental timeline despite being in 2021. Free speach is afforded and paid by generations previous to us. If the previous generations have not 'paid' for the stability that underwrites free speach do not expect stability in the presence and also expect free speach to be trammelled.

Take present day Turkey. Would you agree that the regime of General Evren helped to establish a order which allowed the emergence of a stable, relatively prosperous Turkey today? You know how many were killed, muzzled in early 1980s to create some order in Turkey.

I could write chapter after chapter. But bottom line is this. There can never be established free speach [within the meaning as we accept in western liberal democracies] without massive social, political engineering of the populations. Populations are made of people. People have diverse views. People think democracies thrive on diversity. That is absolute nonsense. Democracies thrive only after they have made monolith of their populations. Only when everybody thinks and has similiar POV can consensus evolve.

When a consensus evolves [which goes against natural order] most often by force, social and political manipulation [citizens go to schools and are conditioned to think similiarly] a society can have free speach with stability undermining it. If you look at USA the consensus that exists was brought about after much bloodshed with Civil War being a major event in making of USA.

The recent events have shaken that consenus and the effect has been the use of censor to limit free speach by big monoplies who feel threatened. This confirms my contention that free speach is informed by the luxury of stability which in turn is underwritten by consensus. When that is shaken it's effects are felt on free speach.
Your best post written on this forum.
 

mulj

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My eminent friend reminds me of the doggerel children's verse, about "...the little girl, with a little curl...":

"When she's good, she's very, very good..."

My eminent friend reminds me of the doggerel children's verse, about "...the little girl, with a little curl...":

"When she's good, she's very, very good..."
When credit is due earned, it is earned.
 

Kaptaan

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My eminent friend reminds me of the doggerel children's verse, about "...the little girl, with a little curl...":

"When she's good, she's very, very good..."
Mmmm I will take that as a tangential compliment ....
 

Joe Shearer

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Mmmm I will take that as a tangential compliment ....
LOL.

You will notice my adherence to the wise old adage,"Discretion is the better part of valour."

Jokes apart, I lost no time in reproducing your note in a forum where there are Bangladeshi, Pakistani and Indian members.
 

Saiyan0321

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@Saiyan0321

You notice that this could have been lifted word for word from Ayush' comment?


Yep. Very similar yet as I said, the fundamental right of free speech is not solely for political speech so the limitations are inherent in many cases. Even the best of the jurists and judges disagree with free speech concepts and what should be applied. The US systems for checks are also imperfect and as @Kaptaan and @T-123456 and @Saithan societies like yours and ours and we must also understand that free speech will always have a limit but what is that limit? What defines it? For example we often call western nations and their theories as the bastion of free speech theories but what happens when someone in the west uses the free speech against the state structure? The US court faced this problem multiple times and each time tried to balance limitation and freedom. Maybe our court judgment is the solution which adjudged that restrictions and limitations are to be defined conservatively rather than liberally.
 

Saithan

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@Kaptaan is right in that free speech is being taken for granted by many. So I’d argue that the realization of that would in a way ensure proper use of free speech.

This won’t rule out that some people will use it politically for provocations to further their ambitions, but I doubt we can ever truly safeguard against that.

Though I think teaching about free speech, and how it’s been abused would be best way of enlightening people.
 

Nilgiri

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Yep. Very similar yet as I said, the fundamental right of free speech is not solely for political speech so the limitations are inherent in many cases. Even the best of the jurists and judges disagree with free speech concepts and what should be applied. The US systems for checks are also imperfect and as @Kaptaan and @T-123456 and @Saithan societies like yours and ours and we must also understand that free speech will always have a limit but what is that limit? What defines it? For example we often call western nations and their theories as the bastion of free speech theories but what happens when someone in the west uses the free speech against the state structure? The US court faced this problem multiple times and each time tried to balance limitation and freedom. Maybe our court judgment is the solution which adjudged that restrictions and limitations are to be defined conservatively rather than liberally.

Dunno who this Ayush fellow is, but he seems a well-reasoned and cognisant chap. Maybe you guys can bring him here for a chat?

Concerning these lines:

"free speech against the state structure"

"restrictions and limitations are to be defined conservatively rather than liberally."


I was about to launch into a whole kind of different (than I eventually did) long spiel about:

A) Wisely thinking about when the shoe will be on the other foot (regarding any opponent's speech and right to their belief/opinion however abominable you may find it etc)

B) Defining and Questioning Caesar before rendering things unto him "that which are his" given his vast power. (Doing the same for all human authority in general)

C) The very root difference between plato and aristotle (and why I always will align with the latter regarding this)

i.e how these (among still further points) all rest with collectivism w.r.t individualism (especially considering the collective is made of individuals and we all exist/perceive as the latter only too)....but I thought better of it (i.e more theory based dabble).

Such things rest clearly in my head (and in excellent stories/movies like "The Minority Report"), but I do them no proper justice to summarise (the wise and learned probably already can intuit much about what I'd say)....and I have no time and interest to flesh these out to proper scope at the current juncture.

Let me say I give people that push or lean towards collectivism (And inevitably some kind of authoritarianism) over individualism (by whatever argument that rests in their head for it) a full benefit of the doubt generally (that they act in good faith)...but that their approach is fundamentally and grossly wrong to me (especially given that most people that end up coming to power by such views mostly do not share their good faith especially with time).

i.e people that would subscribe to as you put it "conservative restrictions and limitations" on the individual (rather than the collective) as the default position.

I give them this benefit of the doubt given I once also shared some of that ideology (or at least was somewhat closer to it than now).

But I have long seen its logical and practical flaws (past the moral ones) and even great folly at times.

Such folks most likely have not talked face to face (at any length) with victims who experienced first-hand indelible excesses of collectivism...and both lived to tell the tale and for some reason (known only to them) chose to share it much later with a idealist spring chicken upstart like me.

One can read all the books they want, watch all the documentaries they want to, even watch interviews and read testimonies of such victims....but nothing compares to having one tell you what they saw and lived through, face to face. Not even close. So let me dabble into the lived application side of this to contrast with my more usual "theory" escapades.

3 stand out to me the most.

1 (Chinese woman, my 2nd mother almost) I'll share her and her family's tale in the China series.

1 (Polish man) I don't think I'll ever share anything about, the depravity he witnessed makes me almost nauseous and the nihilist side of me (which I abhor) enshrouds and lingers on my mood.

But the 3rd I'll give a telling short summary here.

Daughter of an Ukrainian "Kulak"....for a whole 2 - 3 hours she ("Baba") recounted to me (her face barely changing - something that I'll never forget) the whole story in her little village of Ukraine.

I forget how the whole conversation started exactly. I think I was the first brown person she had ever had a real long talk with (I am a close friend of her grandson, and we were checking in on her while visiting her neck of the woods) and she was naturally inquisitive about my origins.

When I answered India (and gave some context and perfunctory related conversation), she (being a lady of emotional gravitas) moved onto some story in the news she had come across about female infanticide and other horrific stories (in India)...."they're doing that to babies??"

I still remember how my good friend (her grandson) tried to steer the conversation away (so as to not offend me, he did warn me beforehand about her "topics") but stopped when he saw I was fine with this all and I gave some solemn answers (which impressed his dear "Baba").

Anyway seeing something seemed out of order (attention being on India, and I being a guest and she the host), she proceeded to (slowly at first, but much faster with time) tell me as much as she could and wanted to about how Ukraine faced far worse when she was young.

I kept stiff upper lip at the time...but after her son (my friend's dad) filled in more details much later, I more often than not find it quite hard not breaking into tears when I dwell on it all.

You see my friend, without face to face recounts (of which I will spare you the horrid details) like this, people often grossly overvalue what govt/collective is in the end and underrate the terrible power it has at its disposal (and really without much effort if designed, arranged or atrophied badly).

The restrictions and limitations must always be put on THEM. They are there to serve the people (with the trust and power we give them) at our pleasure, not the other way around.

The constitution is a contract WE have with the govt, not the other way around.

All of this is always up for our (peaceful) debate and (peaceful) change as we see fit too..a govt has NO right to intervene in any of that.

It is not a coincidence that authoritarian govts (that later do the atrocious evil actions at immense scale) always go after free speech first...before the rest of the freedoms in their way (of whatever "greater" goal).

In this (Baba's story) case, it all initially involved the govt "conservatively" putting limits and restrictions on what the "Kulaks" could say/do especially in any unsightly "anti-state" and "subversive" speech or organisation they could attempt (as the govt's chosen expedient scapegoat noose tightened around them).

Then with that precedent established for a while, it inevitably turned into meeting quotas of failure-assigning as the state's signature program failed even more (and thus a wretched exercise unfolded and accelerated into simply finding more "Kulaks" by broadening the criteria for this as the state needed and desired - if the original threshold was the ownership of 4 cows, it was dropped to 3, then to 2 and even 1 ).

Then finally came the crushing effect of the man made (and state enforced) famine.

You see her father, a number of uncles and her 2 older brothers all were taken away (and never seen again) with very much the argument of "speech against the state structure".

Neither did it end there, and the truly gut-wrenching part of the story (on rest of family incl. her) goes on as the famine kicked in ...."like it was just yesterday"....and how few in her immediate lot even survived....

When you know these stories (intense part of hers keeps going for a while after, incl ww2 and her most astonishing trip to Germany and then the UK and then finally to Canada), you will (if a human with even the slightest moral principle) by default hold every govt (and the very concept of it) in the highest suspicion as a default like I do.

Nothing can be taken for granted, every thing they do must be built/proven past it...and the populace must always be as educated, aware and ready as it possibly can for the worst regarding govt.

They all have the ability to change/morph just like that. The system must make it as difficult as possible for them to do that....that needs as many rights invested with the people and as much of the govt focused and defined and limited as possible.

Collectivism at large to me should be absolutely minimal+defined and can only sustainably exist only where it has completely rationally proven its need for (and no more than that, it must be kept hemmed in there, things like security, law + order w.r.t constitution implementation... that individuals cannot reasonably provide at the scales needed)....its power where its allowed to exist must be balanced and hedged extremely well.

Any enlightened soul or group of souls on this matter (requiring good perspective and debate on the individual vs collective) that set up a constitution/govt, must always assume the worst down road (assume the worst people coming to power) and set the system to handle that worst case scenario.

i.e for example always assume some branch of govt will go rogue/tyrannical by any number of ways....so design the other branches to slow down + limit + reign it in.

A deep study into just 1 year of the weimar republic from 1932 - 1933 (same period as the famine I speak of in ukraine) will tell you all the answers why...instead of "Kulaks" and "etc" it was "Jews" and "etc".

Germany even had a democracy, had a constitution, had well established courts of law and legal system at the time. It had produced a very good chancellor (Streseman) fairly recently too.

Thus if you can backwork what was required to make the events of 1932 - 1933 as impossible as possible (which it wasnt even close to at the time clearly given what ended up actually happening), you have understood the broad contours of my argument.

But most people do not study or read about this enough, much less interact with those that saw it firsthand ( in the weimar downstream case, it's the polish gentleman I referred to).

This all leads to and affirms why a constitution must have certain negative rights for the govt (those that are inherent inalienable rights of the individual)

This must include no infringement on well-defined + robust free speech, free assembly, free press, free religion/belief. Especially given these are the very first canaries in the coalmine for the citizenry....for the toxic gas lurking...quite literally.

I end with quote by Jean "Who am I?" Valjean:

Si je me tais, je me damne
Si je parle, c'est moi qui me condamne.


(“If I stay silent, I am damned.... If I speak, I am condemned.”)

To me, I (imperfect human) would rather speak up and speak the truth and be condemned (by another imperfect human agency) rather than be damned (by untruth, grossest sin and fouled honour).

I won't spoil the story for what Jean Valjean chooses (for any that havent read it)...and what his personal circumstances were that made it quite difficult to choose.

But the point is this moral process at the best default level comes from the individual, not the collective (imperfect human agency)...as @Saithan has summarised above.
 

VCheng

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