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EU Moving to Ban Online Hate Speech

WED Fan writes "Several members of the EU Parliament are moving to ban online hate speech. 'The draft of the declaration, which heise online has seen, calls on providers in somewhat vague language to make provisions against "hate pages" part of their standard terms and conditions.'"

452 comments

  1. Yeah, and... by Khaed · · Score: 5, Insightful

    ...How long before the definition of "hate" is expanded to speech politicians don't like?

    1. Re:Yeah, and... by mpickut · · Score: 4, Insightful

      This is why the first amendment matters. You can say what you want about the US, but our founding fathers got a few things right. Matt Pickut Sigs are for losers

      --
      Sigs are for losers.
    2. Re:Yeah, and... by harrkev · · Score: 5, Funny

      ...How long before the definition of "hate" is expanded to speech politicians don't like?
      The logical error in your statement is that you assume that there will be some period of time where this WON'T happen.
      --
      "-1 Troll" is the apparently the same as "-1 I disagree with you."
    3. Re:Yeah, and... by gillbates · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Or expressions of religious belief?

      This is little more than a thinly veiled attempt by the EU to outlaw religion (both Muslim and Christian religions believe homosexuality to be immoral; the reasoning goes that even condeming immoral behavior (as opposed to people)is sufficient to trigger the statute.

      IIRC, a similar law has been passed in the Netherlands, with pastors being warned that there are certain sins they are no longer allowed to mention in public.

      Even if you are an atheist, the premise is troubling. I would be likewise disturbed if questioning the existence of God was made illegal - certainly this development is not going to expand and enlighten public discourse on sensitive subjects.

      Truly a troubling development.

      --
      The society for a thought-free internet welcomes you.
    4. Re:Yeah, and... by Rosco+P.+Coltrane · · Score: 2, Interesting

      ...How long before the definition of "hate" is expanded to speech politicians don't like?

      This is already the case. French right-wing politician Jean-Marie Lepen once publicly declared that the Nazi gas chambers were a detail of history (which, however horrible, they technically are, since history concerns much more than 3 years in some spots of Germany and Poland). Mr. Lepen was sued in court and condemned for having said that.

      --
      "A door is what a dog is perpetually on the wrong side of" - Ogden Nash
    5. Re:Yeah, and... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Indeed, the true measure of the freedom of speach is being able to tolerate speach you don't like. Many political parties in europe are banned, which I think is a travesty. In a free society people should be able to express their political views, no matter how distastful.

    6. Re:Yeah, and... by couchslug · · Score: 1

      Politicians?
      How about religious fanatics? Criticizing a religion is controversial enough (as if superstition deserved protection) but these laws will obviously be used to stifle religious debate. Religion IS politics, but the debate will be manipulated (first, by cartoon-hating Muslims since they are the last active religion in the EU) and these laws will be part of that.

      --
      "This post is an artistic work of fiction and falsehood. Only a fool would take anything posted here as fact."
    7. Re:Yeah, and... by Tekzel · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I dispise this development. While I am not a fan of hate, I am less a fan of this kind of censorship. People need to just grow a frigging spine and be less offended by stuff, then we wouldn't need this kind of ridiculousness. Who defines what hate speech is? I guarantee you it will not be a reasonable definition.

    8. Re:Yeah, and... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually, to make your argument more general, The EU wishes to outlaw bad thoughts. Religious beliefs are just a set of thoughts / ideas. If you want to hate homosexuals, then hate them. Saying it is in the name of Christianity is just an excuse or reason for that thought.

      If this passes, it will be scary times indeed.

    9. Re:Yeah, and... by treeves · · Score: 1

      But the politicians are only doing it because others are demanding that they do it.

      --
      ...the future crusty old bastards are already drinking the Kool-Aid.
    10. Re:Yeah, and... by katani · · Score: 5, Informative

      Just because we have a first amendment doesn't mean that the powers-that-be will follow it.

      For example, consider the Alien and Sedition acts, passed by the Fifth congress (1798) under the direction of John Adams. The Federalists at that time were trying to consolidate their hold on the government. The Alien and Sedition Acts were passed, as part of a Federalist blitz to prepare to defend the United States from French attack. Never mind the fact that France currently busy invading Europe, making an attack on the US unlikely. The Federalists were fearful of foreign subversion by French and Irish immigrants, especially since both groups were active in the Jeffersonian party, the Federalists opposition. To counter this threat, the Federalists passed the Alien and Sedition Acts.

      Part of the A&S acts, the Sedition Act, "made it a crime to publish 'false, scandalous, and malicious writing' against the government or its officials." (Wikipedia: Alien and Sedition Acts). Publishing such offensive information against the government would lead to fines and imprisonment. This act was used to stifle the Jeffersonian opposition, and lead to the imprisonment of several key Jeffersonian printers, such as David Brown.

      Fortunately, all of the A&S acts, except the Alien Enemies Act, were repealed. However, the fact is that the constitution was blatantly violated for the reason of protecting the nation from the dangerous French subversives.

      The scary part is, our congress and president are now casting similar laws (*cough*Patriot Act*cough), to protect us from dangerous Islamic terrorists.

    11. Re:Yeah, and... by Pantero+Blanco · · Score: 2, Informative

      ...How long before the definition of "hate" is expanded to speech politicians don't like?


      "Hate speech" is just a label placed on a subset of what some politicians don't like. Since politics differ from country to country, the meaning changes along with the politicians. In Canada, publicly disparaging Muslims or homosexuals without a list of references is "hate speech". In some European countries, claiming the number of Jews killed in the Holocaust is less than six million is "hate speech". The US has a somewhat vague cultural definition of it, but it doesn't hold much legal water, rendering it more of a character assassination weapon than a criminal charge.

      As far as I'm concerned, if one person is threatening another with violence without provocation, they're already violating an existing law in most countries, and there doesn't need to be another one. If they aren't threatening another with violence, it's none of the government's business.
    12. Re:Yeah, and... by extra+the+woos · · Score: 1

      In reality didn't most of the people in the concetration camps die even worse deaths? Ie starvation or horrible diseases? That is what I had figured out from doing some reading. The gas chamber would have been BETTER than the deaths many in the concetration camps received. Torture, suffering, dying of starvation over weeks and weeks. Shudder. All the talk of gas chambers makes the camps look LESS horrific than they really were, imho.

      The idea that the Nazis wanted to kill other groups of humans is less scary than the fact that they saw the people they hated as NOT EVEN HUMAN.

      (no karma bonus as it's off topic)

      --
      replacing it with NEW Folger's Crystals! (lets see if they notice the difference)
    13. Re:Yeah, and... by moronoxyd · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Many political parties in europe are banned, which I think is a travesty.

      I can't talk for all those parties and all members of the EU, but here in Germany a party is going to get banned when it doesn't accept the democratic basis of the country's society.

      Why should a democracy allow and even support a group with the declared aim to destroy that democracy?

      You shouldn't assume that parties get banned lightly.
      A lot of people call for banning two right-winged (and I mean _right-winged_, not just 'very conservative') parties here in Germany. But because they don't openly talk against democracy and because their actions stay within the limits of the law, they are free to do their political work.

      Every freedom hast limits and has to have limits.

    14. Re:Yeah, and... by rlp · · Score: 1

      > ...How long before the definition of "hate" is expanded to speech politicians don't like?

      Too late.

      --
      [Insert pithy quote here]
    15. Re:Yeah, and... by Goaway · · Score: 1

      Very long. The EU actually has a functioning democratic system with checks and balances on powers to prevent that kind of thing from happening. This may seem strange to those who are not used to it, but it is actually the case, and it works fairly well.

    16. Re:Yeah, and... by iminplaya · · Score: 3, Funny

      but our founding fathers got a few things right.

      But our new step daddy is out to take care of that.

      --
      What?
    17. Re:Yeah, and... by rossz · · Score: 1, Insightful

      It's already happening. I know of an instance where a "pro troops" sign was ripped out of someone's hands. When asked why they were against free speech, the person responded, "That's hate speech. Hate speech shouldn't be protected." And let's not ignore the numerous instances where criticism of radical islamic fundamentalism is denounced as hate speech by politicians in the EU. The EU needs to grow some balls and stand up to those bastards.

      --
      -- Will program for bandwidth
    18. Re:Yeah, and... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "both Muslim and Christian religions"

      Right, jew.

    19. Re:Yeah, and... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Were that the case, we wouldn't even be having this conversation.

    20. Re:Yeah, and... by Teun · · Score: 4, Informative

      Or expressions of religious belief?

      This is little more than a thinly veiled attempt by the EU to outlaw religion (both Muslim and Christian religions believe homosexuality to be immoral; the reasoning goes that even condeming immoral behavior (as opposed to people)is sufficient to trigger the statute.

      What a rubbish! I can equally claim it's some overly religious tribes that are fuelling this type of "Moral" legislation.
      Not that the Socialists would be above it, as a matter of fact any political or other group, left or right, has enemies it would sometimes like to silence.

      IIRC, a similar law has been passed in the Netherlands, with pastors being warned that there are certain sins they are no longer allowed to mention in public.

      Living in The Netherlands I can tell you your memory is failing in a catastrophic manner.

      Even if you are an atheist, the premise is troubling. I would be likewise disturbed if questioning the existence of God was made illegal - certainly this development is not going to expand and enlighten public discourse on sensitive subjects.

      Truly a troubling development.

      I would sooner say you are troubled to voice such outrageous claims...

      Europe is a continent with many very different cultures that have fought bitterly in a not so distant past, just take the troubles in the Balkan.
      It does not take much imagination to see new flare ups of extremely damaging violence in parts of Europe when certain scrupulous groups and individuals would not be constrained.

      It is regrettable this type of legislation is needed but in countries that have had this legislation for many years the advantages have generally outweighed the worries.
      --
      "The likes of Facebook and WhatsApp are free to those whose privacy is of zero value."
    21. Re:Yeah, and... by frostoftheblack · · Score: 1

      Although I agree with you that we have done the same sort of thing in the US (which I would disagree with, as I am a proponent of complete First Amendment rights), this is not the same. The EU is doing this to eliminate discourse on hate. Whatever the US did was for national security. I'm not sure which one is worse.

      --
      Do not mark in this space. For official office use only.
    22. Re:Yeah, and... by blackest_k · · Score: 2, Informative

      French right wing politician um thats spinning it a little isn't it?

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jean-Marie_Le_Pen

      "Jean-Marie Le Pen (born June 20, 1928, La Trinité-sur-Mer, France) is a French far-right nationalist politician, founder and president of the Front National (National Front) party."

      "He has been charged with Holocaust denial several times, and has unsuccessfully sued some who had accused him of this."

      right wing i would think gwb et al, This guys more reminiscent of the KKK I guess by your reckoning Stalin was a left leaning liberal...

    23. Re:Yeah, and... by Headcase88 · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Why should a democracy allow and even support a group with the declared aim to destroy that democracy?
      I'd still argue they should be able to run. If the majority of people believe that a dictatorship is the way to go, then, in a real democracy, that's the way it's gotta go. My guess is that the chances of that happening are nil anyway.

      The exact same spirit applies to free speech. Anyone should be able to deny the holocaust openly. It's up to society at large to consider and then dismiss such claims with their own free thought, research, and insight, rather than be protected from this kind of speech by censors. That's how one learns about things, and many governments are blocking it out.
      --
      "When the atomic bomb goes off there's devastation...but when the atomic bong goes off there's celebraaaaation!"
    24. Re:Yeah, and... by slysithesuperspy · · Score: 1

      Democracy has shown itself to be pretty shit, and you would have to be pretty brainwashed to think democracy is freedom. A good example of it being shit is even the idea that these bureaucrats are talking about such a law this story is on.

      By banning parties that do not share "democractic values" could on one hand it could stop a dictator, perhaps. But on the other hand, it doesn't support a continued decentralisation of government, so it might get the country stuck in the status quo.

    25. Re:Yeah, and... by PopeRatzo · · Score: 2, Insightful

      If religion were a drug, it would have been taken off the market as unsafe long ago. If by religion you mean "hating homosexuals, single mothers, university professors and liberals", then maybe an attempt to outlaw "religion" begs for some serious discussion.

      If by religion you mean "a personal relationship with one's creator", I don't think any law against hate speech is going to have a negative effect on people of faith. Most of the faithful Christians, Jews and Muslims I have encountered seem to be able to practice their faith without spewing venom.

      I'm tired of people using religion as a screen to hide their ugliness behind. As a believer, their hate is an embarrassment.

      --
      You are welcome on my lawn.
    26. Re:Yeah, and... by einhverfr · · Score: 1

      I can't talk for all those parties and all members of the EU, but here in Germany a party is going to get banned when it doesn't accept the democratic basis of the country's society.

      Unfortunately, that is a very blurry line. I can understand the desire to ban a party after the experience of the Nazis when that party seeks to exclude some group on the basis of ethnicity or religion from the process.

      However, I cannot agree with it. First, the Nazi party itself was banned and that didn't stop them from taking power. I would in fact argue that the freedom of speech is not the freedom to say unpopular ideas but rather the freedom of the public to hear and rebut dangerous ideas. Without that right of rebuttal, such ideas grow in dark places.

      Secondly, where do you draw the line. Take the following comments: Which should be banned in the political scene?

      1) "All Muslims mean to destroy our society and should be prevented from participating in our democracy."

      2) "Islam is inherently a religion idealizing its own legal and social blueprint above others and is therefore dangerous to our democracy. Perhaps we should seek ways to limit the involvement of Mulsims in our political process because the religion is fundamentally at odds with the democratic nature of the state."

      3) "Islam is inherently a religion of law idealizing its own social blueprint. While not all Muslims endorse this aspect of Islam, the structure of the religion as a whole is problematic to our society. I would like to suggest that anyone not willing to devote him or herself to our system of government should not participate. Just as we ban Nazis, so we should ban those Muslims who are not willing to devote themselves to our (not their) laws."

      Note that all three statements above are functionaly identical. All seek to ban a religious group from politics, but they become increasingly based on the very logic of banning political parties. Those that state facts even state correct ones to my knowledge.

      On a personal note, the fact that Islam is a religion emphasizing its own blueprint is something I find very troubling to our society, but I do think that banning Muslims from the political process would be hypocritical and is even more dangerous to the freedoms we hold dear (I am from the US).

      I would note however that unlike the US, the EU does not have any robust protection of freedom of expression. Sure there are protections but they have exceptions which allow for large amounts of speech to be effectively banned.

      However Constitutional law can be shown to be less important than culture. Unlike the UK, the US does not have an explicit individual right to bear arms as part of our Constitutional documents (the English Bill of Rights does, however). However, given the general firearms controls in the UK and the move to ban swords too (which has the Sikh population justifiably up in arms) and the comparative lack of such controls in the US, we can show that constitutional protections of any sort can only continue to exist if there is sufficient popular support for them. We cannot rely on the courts to secure our freedoms but by our actions and words we can hope to make a difference every day.

      --

      LedgerSMB: Open source Accounting/ERP
    27. Re:Yeah, and... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

      "Why should a democracy allow and even support a group with the declared aim to destroy that democracy?"

      Are you actually *that* brainwashed?

      Because maybe there is possibly a better form of government than a democracy? Or, more clearer, a more pure, direct form of democracy than the present government?

      I'm a minority. Sort of. Rather, I'm perceived as a minority. I'm half "Asian." I live in the US, where hate speech is generally not prohibited. The best thing about free speech, in my view, is that it helps me identify people that I, in turn, probably should stay away from, e.g. people who are bigots, rascists/"one-blood" purists.

      When you ban *speech* of a group, or the peaceful assembly of that group, *I* can no longer protect myself and must depend wholly on the government for that protection. When everything is hush hush, that's bad for me to identify those I associate with, because it's illegal for them to say anything. If you give people a freedom, they will exercise it, rightly or wrong, and it's the wrongly I want to know about so I can address, question, and/or avoid as the situation deems fit.

      When these groups march, I look at the crowds to measure my society. When you ban such marches, I no longer have an idea, *at all*, because such participation is wholly illegal, versus distasteful.

      I should also point out, most of those rascists, bigots, and ignorant asses are employed by some government entity; in my area, it's about 50% of the local police. Strange how governments tend to protect against that they define need protecting and disabling self-protection.

      What ends up happening is that the hate speech goes purely underground, it lives on strongly, never addressed; the pure act of banning that speech *makes it true to some point* to some since there is no longer any debate, confrontation, to show that the opposite is/may be true (i.e. that you should not be a rascist).

      Also, a standard becomes established, fix in law. How often have we seen laws not keep up with the times? What is now hate speech can change; in the 1910s and 1920s, "Jap" simply was short for Japanese (you see it on product labels, i.e. Japanese enamel). Now it's considered a slur by most (I don't personally). In turn, having a law cover some speech but not others, does it mean the uncovered speech is NOT hate speech, although may clearly be so? You're going to find cases where some people are talking about crackers in a supermarket aisle when some oversensitive white dude walks by and complains; quite frankly, this is NOT what we need government for or to get involved with (besides being petty, governemnt also screws it up when it makes a socially regulated issue a legal one).

    28. Re:Yeah, and... by Headcase88 · · Score: 1

      Canada, publicly disparaging Muslims or homosexuals without a list of references is "hate speech".
      That sounds like the Canadian government I know. "If you wish to make a hate speech, follow this 18-step process. Step one: fill out a Z48 form with B and C attachments listing your references using the formatting guidelines outlined in appendix 3". Now that's putting our hard-earned* taxes to work!

      * earned through moderate effort to be honest
      --
      "When the atomic bomb goes off there's devastation...but when the atomic bong goes off there's celebraaaaation!"
    29. Re:Yeah, and... by dexomn · · Score: 1

      You know what they say; put your money where your mouth is. =)

    30. Re:Yeah, and... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Here's the reason, from John Stuart Mill's On Liberty:

      First, if any opinion is compelled to silence, that opinion may, for aught we can certainly know, be true. To deny this is to assume our own infallibility.

      Secondly, though the silenced opinion be an error, it may, and very commonly does, contain a portion of truth; and since the general or prevailing opinion on any subject is rarely or never the whole truth, it is only by the collision of adverse opinions that the remainder of the truth has any chance of being supplied.

      Thirdly, even if the received opinion be not only true, but the whole truth; unless it is suffered to be, and actually is, vigorously and earnestly contested, it will, by most of those who receive it, be held in the manner of a prejudice, with little comprehension or feeling of its rational grounds. And not only this, but, fourthly, the meaning of the doctrine itself will be in danger of being lost, or enfeebled, and deprived of its vital effect on the character and conduct: the dogma becoming a mere formal profession, inefficacious for good, but cumbering the ground, and preventing the growth of any real and heartfelt conviction, from reason or personal experience.
    31. Re:Yeah, and... by Khaed · · Score: 1

      Am I the only one who had Hitchhiker's Guide flashbacks reading that?

      "This isn't the PRESIDENTIAL hate speech request form..."

    32. Re:Yeah, and... by myowntrueself · · Score: 1

      Why should a democracy allow and even support a group with the declared aim to destroy that democracy?

      So if democracy is to be overthrown at all, you'd rather it happened by some means *other* than through the ballot box? Maybe a violent revolution would be preferable?

      Personally, I think that every ballot sheet should have a "None of the above" option. If enough people tick it then you get anarchy.

      --
      In the free world the media isn't government run; the government is media run.
    33. Re:Yeah, and... by Myopic · · Score: 1

      The founding fathers got almost everything right. They were remarkably prescient. Then again, they had the benefit of capitalizing on a revolution in a way which would last, by enshrining revolutionary ideals in a Constitution. Over time, that Constitution has very consistently preserved freedom and justice and good governance, when it is respected. Unfortunately, the Constitution is largely ignored today. The only parts that mean shit these days are the amendments, and even still about a third of the amendments are regularly ignored. The actual body of the Constitution has been abandoned for about seventy years, or about two hundred years, depending on who you ask.

      To re-establish real freedom, the US will have to undergo another revolution, there is no way to evolve from the current state to a state of justice. Luckily, while we are very much imperfect, we are still closer to perfection than, say, any other country.

    34. Re:Yeah, and... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      right-wing baptist spokespersons don't speak for all christians -they're a tiny minority. The vatican speaks for the vast majority of christians, but they don't speak for all christians either.

      And don't forget - satanists are typically christians too, as satan as conceived of by your typical satanist is a christian angel.

    35. Re:Yeah, and... by renegadesx · · Score: 0

      Its funny how the Jews cop the most when it comes to whatever is wrong with religion, but I have found them to be the most tollerent (besides Budhdists).

      Christians are all over the place, every church have slightly different beliefs that you cant really be a religion, but more of a template for religion.

      Mormans, JW's and Muslims seem to be the most intollerent, Catholics (the actual people) seem to be growing more tollerent (though the Vatican not changing)

      --
      Make SELinux enforcing again!
    36. Re:Yeah, and... by gillbates · · Score: 0

      Europe is a continent with many very different cultures that have fought bitterly in a not so distant past, just take the troubles in the Balkan. It does not take much imagination to see new flare ups of extremely damaging violence in parts of Europe when certain scrupulous groups and individuals would not be constrained.

      I agree with this; but I would point out that in the 200+ years the US has been around, France has had no less than four governments, and Germany has had six. During the same time period, the US struggled with issues of Manifest Destiny (and the "Indian problem"), slavery and the Civil War, the Great Depression, racism, and the Cold War. In spite of these challenges, the US has remained relatively stable from a civil perspective. It seems that whenever there are problems in Europe, rather than discussing the issue, they take up arms and slaughter each other.

      Interestingly, the US has more cultures and the cultures we have are farther separated ideologically from each other. It was the US in which the term "Melting Pot" was coined. We have cultural divides larger than Europe, and yet manage to get along without much violence.

      I guess I have a different perspective because I'm Christian and understand the nature of evil, but I'd like someone to point out any case in history where yielding one's freedoms to another didn't result in oppression and even greater evils. The US has been relatively stable even during periods of unrest because the population has always had recourse to change the government without having to resort to violence. If certain people feel they are being unfairly excluded from the political process because of their deeply held beliefs, it is an invitation for revolution in which the strongest party wins. This would be consistent with Europe's history, and it seems they have not learned a thing from the history of their past 200 years.

      --
      The society for a thought-free internet welcomes you.
    37. Re:Yeah, and... by yndrd1984 · · Score: 1
      Why should a democracy allow ... a group with the declared aim to destroy that democracy?

      If the people chose to end the democracy, then the democratic thing to do is to end it. Otherwise it's no longer a democracy anyway, because the people aren't allowed to make the choice!

      Every freedom hast limits and has to have limits.

      Yes, that's the old "my right to swing my fist ends at your nose" bit. But this kind of thing says that if I even talk about swinging my fist (in any way), you should react as if I hit you.

      If that's what you advocate, that fine, but you're no longer advocating a free society.

    38. Re:Yeah, and... by Wackston · · Score: 1

      What is it about Slashdot...

      EU Law != Utterances of Member of European Parliament on poluist-theme-du-hour.

      Murmoring from MEP's is even less significant than cant from congressmen since it is
      national governments (through the council of ministers) who have ~80% of the power in
      EU. MEPs (when the politics gets rough or involves money) also mostly take the the
      whip of national parties.

      'nuff said.
            Andrew

    39. Re:Yeah, and... by KinkyClown · · Score: 2, Insightful

      It seems that whenever there are problems in Europe, rather than discussing the issue, they take up arms and slaughter each other.
      .. and while this is being said the US is planning to invade Iran while still trying to convince the world the invasion in Iraq was not for the oil price...

      We have cultural divides larger than Europe, and yet manage to get along without much violence.
      I believe you still have problems with gun control and gangs...

      I guess I have a different perspective because I'm Christian and understand the nature of evil...
      So naturally, me being an atheist, I can not understand the nature of evil and therefor must be evil?

      I'd like someone to point out any case in history where yielding one's freedoms to another didn't result in oppression and even greater evils
      Finally something we can agree on...
    40. Re:Yeah, and... by eMbry00s · · Score: 1

      Europe, and all individual countries therein, also have constitutions. All of these include free speech protection, it's just that to politicians, it matters as little in EU as it does in USA.

    41. Re:Yeah, and... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It already IS expanded to speech JEWS don't like...
      It's the JEWS, stupid...

      They need to censor any dissent from their 'Holycause' story. They need to shut people up who talk about AIPAC and all the Zionist JEWS in the Whitehouse and Congress, stealing billions of dollars of YOUR money to fund wars for ISRAEL. They need to silence any evil white people who dare to suggest that mass immigration is a JEW invention to destroy all white countries.

      It's the JEWS, stupid...

    42. Re:Yeah, and... by PuercoPop · · Score: 1

      wtf..... You want to tell people what is acceptable as a religion?... If they hate gays and do so based on their faith what the fuck is your problem, maybe is it reminds you of the irrationality of your beliefs? The problem isn't hate Speech is hate Crimes.

    43. Re:Yeah, and... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What's better is the flaw in the logic. They're passing a law that tells the ISPs to make it part of their service agreement. If they passed a law making it illegal in the first place, then what would be the point of the ISP service agreement being changed.

      European politicians often place laws into effect to make the world feel like they're doing something to solve a problem they couldn't touch with a 10 foot pole. After all, I can get a totally unlimited web site with good bandwidth in Antigua in 5 minutes using anonymous payment, why would I host it in the EU if I wanted to make noise.

      Maybe the EU politians do in fact think it matters and that's why they pass a law they know is useless in the first place.

      Things are working pretty good these days in Europe, not so much the states during the current police state dictatorship (no habius corpus!, so statement justified), so it's far more important that the politicans try not to fuck things up more than necessary. A law like this would make people thing that the government is hard at work trying to solve an unfixable problem. Although people will see it's useless, they'll at least realize they've been heard. That's often the most important thing.

    44. Re:Yeah, and... by Prysorra · · Score: 1

      I know people found it funny, but this guy does have a point - the difference is whether it's law.

    45. Re:Yeah, and... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Bad arguments should be countered with good arguments, not with laws and bans. If their policies really are so anti-democratic and flawed it should be easy expose them as such.

      And as a citizen of the European Union, I deplore the efforts of your country to export your twisted views on free speech to the rest of us. (http://www.iht.com/articles/2007/04/19/news/eu.ph p)

    46. Re:Yeah, and... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If the people chose to end the democracy, then the democratic thing to do is to end it.

      The problem with this is it leaves little option to reinstate democracy if people should later change their mind. One of the main points of democracy is that you should later be able to undo your 'mistakes'

    47. Re:Yeah, and... by Skunkhead · · Score: 1

      I'd still argue they should be able to run. If the majority of people believe that a dictatorship is the way to go, then, in a real democracy, that's the way it's gotta go. My guess is that the chances of that happening are nil anyway.
        You are referring to the dictatorship of the majority, not democracy. Democracy is more than majority rule, with indivual rights and opposition and whatnot. And it did happen. Sorry for Godwins Law, but Hitlers Party had nearly the majority, and came to power with the help of other right-wing parties using the democratic rules of Germany of the time.

      The exact same spirit applies to free speech. Anyone should be able to deny the holocaust openly. It's up to society at large to consider and then dismiss such claims with their own free thought, research, and insight, rather than be protected from this kind of speech by censors. That's how one learns about things, and many governments are blocking it out. I truly envy the US for their society, which, at large, seems to cope with that. I just don't have that trust in my fellow Europeans, especially my fellow Germans. The generation of my grand-parents voted for one of the biggest dictators, and i want to be damn sure that this doesn't happen again.
    48. Re:Yeah, and... by master_p · · Score: 1

      Banning a fascist or nazi party is different from outlawing words of hate. I may call you 'german pig' all day long, but as long as I do nothing to harm you, I am only making a fool of myself.

      Where does speech banning stop? is it hate speech to say things against mega-corporations, for example? against politicians? where is the line drawn between criticism and hate?

      It may be that every freedom has its limits, but there are limits to those limits as well.

    49. Re:Yeah, and... by heinousjay · · Score: 1

      I missed the memo in the US. When did we lose free speech? Was this right around the time the dissent stopped?

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    50. Re:Yeah, and... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > I guess I have a different perspective because I'm Christian and understand the nature of evil

      Funny. After reading about witch hunts, homophobia, crusades, anti-semitism and inquisitions, I thought that historically Christians had a very poor sense of good or evil. Not to take away cruelty from other religious orders but I find your pat-on-own-back remarks amusing. The minute someone defines good or evil using one reference to the supernatural, I would be convinced that they have no sense of the same since such definitions are not amenable to rational and objective argumentation.

      > but I'd like someone to point out any case in history where yielding one's freedoms to another didn't result in oppression and even greater evils.

      Trouble is, you are confused about what constitutes "freedoms". Using your language, you could say, the Nazi "freedoms" of anti-semitism were taken away after the war. So long as EU meticulously defines free speech, there isn't going to be a problem. In US, we already have slander laws. Slander is more personal. Hate speech is basically slander of entire groups. People should not be able to get away with propagating factually incorrect aspersions at will.

    51. Re:Yeah, and... by digitig · · Score: 3, Informative

      Europe has similar protections. They're enacted differently, but the end efect is the same. If a State or the Federal Government tried to enact similar legislation in the USA, my understanding is the constitutionality could be challenged in court; if it's enacted in Europe its compliance with human rights treaties can be challenged in court.

      As the saying goes, "There's more than one way to do it".

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    52. Re:Yeah, and... by eMbry00s · · Score: 1

      PATRIOT act has had a pretty damn large chilling effect. We haven't "lost" free speech in Europe either (I'm not including Russia in Europe, since even though half of it is technically within the geographical area of Europe, it is not a member of the European Union.)

    53. Re:Yeah, and... by dajak · · Score: 1

      There are many more countries and borders in Europe than in North America, making it easier for one society to export its shit to its neighbours. Most of the smaller countries are stable: radical changes of system of government only occur coincident to attack or occupation by a bigger country, being France, Germany, or Russia in most cases. Don't generalize these three to "Europe".

      Here in the Netherlands we have two major points of discontinuity over our existence - nazi occupation during WWII and the occupation by France during the Napoleonic wars (17 years) - and five high profile political murders - of which two were by foreign powers (England and Spain), two others (prime ministers lynched) during the stresses of a major war with a bigger power, and the last one recently (Fortuyn) with no apparent external reason. Even in the case of nazi occupation the system survived unscathed, and the population remained loyal to the monarch in exile. A presidential system would not easily be able to survive an occupation lasting much longer than than the mandate of the elected leaders in exile, which is a point in favour of monarchy for smaller countries that tend to get occupied regularly.

    54. Re:Yeah, and... by mwlewis · · Score: 1

      Yeah, the PATRIOT act sure shut up those guys at DailyKos, HuffingtonPost, DemocraticUnderground, The View, ...

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    55. Re:Yeah, and... by PopeRatzo · · Score: 1

      If they hate gays and do so based on their faith what the fuck is your problem

      You sir, are the problem. Can I be more clear?
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    56. Re:Yeah, and... by eMbry00s · · Score: 1

      The PATRIOT act has made the judical system less transparent, this EU act will (hopefully) not. Both EU countries and USA have constitutions, both were made to protect free speech, both are being circumvented by current legislators. My original post tried to show that there isn't much difference, and that your American constitution is in no way the only one in the world.

      This tangent doesn't really matter, but it should also be noted that if somebody was shut up by the PATRIOT act, you wouldn't hear about it since they can be taken "away" without trial.

    57. Re:Yeah, and... by nickos · · Score: 1

      It's already happened in Sweden. Around a year ago Laila Freivalds (minister of foreign affairs from The Social Democrats) used the Mohammad cartoons as a pretext to have a rival party's website (the Sweden Democrats) shutdown, but luckily she was found out and forced to resign.

      As an atheist, I hope this declaration will not make it impossible to be critical of religion...

    58. Re:Yeah, and... by Talchas · · Score: 1

      You do realize that we have some pretty dumb hate speech laws here in the states too? They may or may not be as bad as the EU's but we have them.

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    59. Re:Yeah, and... by nickos · · Score: 1

      Europe, and all individual countries therein, also have constitutions.
      The UK does not have a written constitution.
    60. Re:Yeah, and... by mwlewis · · Score: 1

      Are we talking about the same PATRIOT act? How can someone be taken away without trial? Certainly, there are some investigative things that can be done without going through a judge, but let's assume your argument is correct. Maybe you mean that they could be designated as enemy combatants or something, but I didn't think that was the PATRIOT act. Even if it were, just because there's no trial doesn't mean we wouldn't have heard about it. If someone were 'shut up' by taking them away to, say Guantanamo, or a naval brig in South Carolina, I think someone would notice their absence, and we'd all hear about it--ever heard of Jose Padilla?

      But regardless of the effects on the judicial system, you didn't even attempt to back up your assertion that the PATRIOT act has chilled free speech in the US, whereas the whole point of this EU proposal is to restrict speech. The only legislative [direct] attack on free speech in the US that I'm aware of (note: I'm not claiming that my knowledge is exhaustive here) is the McCain-Feingold campaign finance law. If those outlets I mentioned are the result of "chilled" speech, then what would un-chilled speech be like?

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    61. Re:Yeah, and... by eMbry00s · · Score: 1

      Ah, oops. My argument is still valid for most EU countries, though.

      For the sake of staying on topic, I want to note that this Move to Ban Hate-Speech is likely to be rejected by some countries since it does go against their constitutions. I say some because others might not reject it. Sweden, for example, labels any (hate)speech that incites violence or threats as illegal.

      Back to our argument again, the US constitution hasn't really helped ensure that any and all speech is protected - we've often seen content hosters pull down websites, most recently with DMCA notices in hand.

      Now, this is the choice of the content hosters - they could have allowed the material to continue residing on their servers if they had a penchant for lawsuits. But it still shows that your constitution does not protect you when normal laws make you a criminal. If your normal laws can affect constitutional ones in such a way, then you are in the same seat as the UK - where the constitution-like effects are implemented as normal laws instead of special ones.

      Also note that this Move to Ban Hate-Speech hasn't specified wether content blocking is to be done by hosters or ISPs, so it is a very preliminary suggestion rather than a law, at best. If they decide that ISPs should censor things, we're in a bad seat over here in the EU - but I don't see that happening yet.

    62. Re:Yeah, and... by mpe · · Score: 1

      ...How long before the definition of "hate" is expanded to speech politicians don't like?

      That's easy, exactly zero seconds! Politically correct "hate" will, as usual, not be be restricted at all. (Quite possibly encouraged.)
      The only vaguely interesting thing which might happen is where politically correct in part of the EU is politically incorrect in another part of the EU. Combined with a high proportion of politicians being complely hypocritical.

    63. Re:Yeah, and... by eMbry00s · · Score: 1

      Ah, no, I haven't heard of Jose Padilla - but even when assuming you hear of every action that is taken against somebody under the PATRIOT Act, you still won't hear anything from those who have been subjected to it's chilling effect. Those who have been frightened into not speaking because of bad prospects will hardly go public about it.

      Assuming that this is not a good enough argument that speech is not fully protected in the US, have a look at the more accurate parallels between this "Move" and the DMCA (censorship-wise) that I posted in this same thread, in reply to another poster: http://slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=232255&cid=188 82723

      Also note that the FCC has a ban on "indecent" things in certain situations (on TV/radio.) Is this relevant? I say yes.

    64. Re:Yeah, and... by Yvanhoe · · Score: 1

      Valerie Palme is a CIA agent.

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    65. Re:Yeah, and... by mpe · · Score: 1

      Why should a democracy allow and even support a group with the declared aim to destroy that democracy?

      It really depends what they want to replace the existing system of government with.

    66. Re:Yeah, and... by mpe · · Score: 1

      the pure act of banning that speech *makes it true to some point* to some since there is no longer any debate, confrontation, to show that the opposite is/may be true (i.e. that you should not be a rascist).

      Banning something also acts as very effective "free advertising". This holds as much for a political party as for a movie or song. There are also people who may be attracted to a political group simply because it is banned...

    67. Re:Yeah, and... by mwlewis · · Score: 1

      Yes, there are certain limits to speech, but you're really confusing things here. The FCC is based on the public ownership of the airwaves. There's a big difference between allowing someone to say something, and providing a forum (even if they're willing to pay for the privilege of using it) for the speech. Copyrights are also, obviously, a limit on speech, whether we're talking DMCA or not. You still haven't provided anything approaching an argument here.

      People can decide they're frightened into not speaking for any stupid reason, well founded or not. To say that the PATRIOT act has chilled free speech, though, should be backed up with something. Is there less dissent now than before? I can't see how anyone could argue this. Are the dissenters just a few high profile people, while the masses have been cowed into silence? Judging by the number of anti-Bush bumper stickers and invective filled postings on the internet, I'd have to say that the masses haven't been cowed into silence. A few crazy conspiracy theorists might have been scared into hiding, but they do that to themselves anyway. And there are plenty of them that are very public (9/11 Truthers, for instance, who still think that 9/11 was a Rovian plot).

      I'm assuming you live in the EU, so you probably don't have direct knowledge of what's going on in the US on a daily basis (also evidenced by the fact that you hadn't heard about Padilla). Just like we Americans get [rightly] told to not believe everything we hear in the domestic press about the rest of the world, you shouldn't always believe everything you hear about us.

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    68. Re:Yeah, and... by mpe · · Score: 1

      The exact same spirit applies to free speech. Anyone should be able to deny the holocaust openly.

      As well as investigate or just discuss the evidence.

      It's up to society at large to consider and then dismiss

      Actually would more be a case of "dismiss", "accept" or "come to different conclusions".

      such claims with their own free thought, research, and insight, rather than be protected from this kind of speech by censors.

      If point of view requires censorship of any opposing viewpoints even the imprisonment of anyone who dosn't agree with it. What does that tell you about the actual evidence (and logic) for that position?

    69. Re:Yeah, and... by Goaway · · Score: 1

      ...what?

    70. Re:Yeah, and... by mpe · · Score: 1

      By banning parties that do not share "democractic values" could on one hand it could stop a dictator, perhaps.

      Or it could help elect one. Depending exactly who is defining "democratic values".

    71. Re:Yeah, and... by malsdavis · · Score: 1

      This is little more than a thinly veiled attempt by the EU to outlaw religion

      This is why people who know absolutely nothing about what they are talking about shouldn't post.

      The "European Convention on Human Rights" is a pivotal piece of EU legislation which was passed by the EU parliament and has influenced laws which have now been implemented by the governments of all EU states. A large and specific section demands "freedom of religion". To overturn this would require the complete upheaval of the European Convention on Human Rights to be agreed by every EU state.

      To say the on-line enforcement of existing law would somehow entice 27 countries to throw out their human rights laws is utterly ridiculous and shows a complete lack of understanding of basic legislative principles (in any state, let alone the EU).

    72. Re:Yeah, and... by mpe · · Score: 1

      Bad arguments should be countered with good arguments, not with laws and bans.

      Remember too that bad arguments can be defended by laws and bans...

    73. Re:Yeah, and... by Dan541 · · Score: 1

      My guess is Not long

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    74. Re:Yeah, and... by eMbry00s · · Score: 1
      Well, I didn't start out with an argument either. I kneejerked a response to somebody who wrote

      This is why the first amendment matters. You can say what you want about the US, but our founding fathers got a few things right.

      I thought it implied that "the europeans" had done something wrong, which I think is wrong for a number of reasons (there not being any union between europeans at that time, and many europeans getting constitutions along the way.)

      The long argument after that has probably been useless to anybody but myself (as I'll explain soon,) and I apologize for it.

      Just like we Americans get [rightly] told to not believe everything we hear in the domestic press about the rest of the world, you shouldn't always believe everything you hear about us.

      Ah, yes. I always find myself having to revise my world view again and again, as things I've previously taken for granted (eg UK constitution) turn out to be false. I appreciate the process, though. :)
    75. Re:Yeah, and... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      great post katani! You forgot about the War Powers Act, which is the basis for our government today.

    76. Re:Yeah, and... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I remember watching some VH1 documentary on Heavy Metal music and when some churches got burned I believe it was in the Netherlands; everybody got worked up that it was the work of the satanic 'Heavy Metal' music that was causing it and they passed some laws to counter the so called problem.
      That is kind of summarizing it but I am sure the issue went deeper than that.

    77. Re:Yeah, and... by An+Onerous+Coward · · Score: 1

      1) What did the "pro troops" sign actually say?

      2) Do you comprehend the difference between a single individual identifying something as "hate speech" and taking steps to remove or destroy it, and society as a whole trying to do the same thing? While the consequences of an entire society choosing wrongly are more dramatic, it's unlikely that society would settle on the same heuristic as your sign-ripper. Of course, that depends on the answer to question #1.

      I'm personally ambivalent about the whole discussion. Government power can be dangerous, and especially when it comes to power over how the political discourse is conducted. But I also believe that much of what gets labeled "hate speech" goes beyond merely reprehensible, to actually undermining the foundations of a tolerant, pluralistic democracy.

      Example: If I say, "I'll shoot any queers what show up to tomorrow's city council meeting," that's probably already illegal in the U.S., since it constitutes a direct threat of violence. But if I mention my concealed carry permit, mention my intention to show up at the city council meeting, and go on a long diatribe about how the homosexual agenda is destroying everything good and decent in the world, and should be stopped by any means necessary... Well, no direct threat has been made, but homosexuals would get the message that it might be dangerous to show up to that meeting. It doesn't matter whether or not you think someone who skips the meeting is in need of a spine; democratic participation shouldn't be the privilege of the bravest among us.

      As someone who has been on both sides of a lot of different issues in his life, I know how dangerously warped your worldview can get when you're getting all your information from a single viewpoint. The ubiquity of hate sites guarantees that some highly frustrated members of our society are going to get the misimpression that the most blatant forms of racism, sexism, religious intolerance, and homophobia are reasonable, normal, and sanctioned by a large fraction of society. Such people go on to do things that make it harder for the targets of their rage to participate in democracy, which is a bad thing. Nobody should have to make a brave stand against bigotry in order to tell politicians how they feel about the proposed changes to the municipal water fee schedule.

      Is a ban on hate speech a good idea? Probably not. It will have all sorts of unforseen consequences. I'm sympathetic to the people who say such a ban will merely drive the poison underground, where it can fester. But it's also important to remember that society does control many harmful speech acts (libel, for example). This is wise, because some speech acts are far more valuable than others. Given a choice between a ban on "hate speech" and a ban on government-critical speech, I'd gladly go for the former, because I believe the benefits of the latter are obvious, whereas the people who defend the right to speak hate can only really say, "Yeah, but as nasty as it is, banning it would be worse."

      They're probably right. But it's not an obviously settled issue for me.

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    78. Re:Yeah, and... by Moofie · · Score: 1

      "The EU is doing this to eliminate discourse on hate. Whatever the US did was for national security. I'm not sure which one is worse."

      What's the difference?

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    79. Re:Yeah, and... by frostoftheblack · · Score: 1

      As far as the issue of free speech, there is no difference and they should both be allowed (the speech that is). I just found it interesting to note that the intention of their respective bands differed.

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    80. Re:Yeah, and... by Moofie · · Score: 1

      Whereas I think the intention is precisely the same. It is the lust for power. Sure, it's wearing a different frock, but I don't think they're different in the least.

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    81. Re:Yeah, and... by PuercoPop · · Score: 1

      You apparently failed reading comprehension..... 90% of the post in this topic see you as the problem. Trying to outlaw thoughts.... You can be as clear as you want. I still think you are an imbecile as bad as those as those that go around beating people because they are gays.

    82. Re:Yeah, and... by jgrahn · · Score: 1

      PATRIOT act has had a pretty damn large chilling effect. We haven't "lost" free speech in Europe either (I'm not including Russia in Europe, since even though half of it is technically within the geographical area of Europe, it is not a member of the European Union.)
      Neither are Norway, Switzerland and several others.
    83. Re:Yeah, and... by Teun · · Score: 1

      Pretty good wrap-up!

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    84. Re:Yeah, and... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      right-wing baptist spokespersons don't speak for all christians True.

      -they're a tiny minority. False.

      The vatican speaks for the vast majority of christians, False.

      but they don't speak for all christians either. True.

      And don't forget - satanists are typically christians too, as satan as conceived of by your typical satanist is a christian angel. BS
    85. Re:Yeah, and... by yndrd1984 · · Score: 1
      I think you're mixing the words "good" and "democracy" together. Democracy might be a good system, but that doesn't mean that every good idea about government is a basic part of democracy. No system is perfect, and people have (for example) democratically passed laws in favor of slavery.

      I guess I'm just saying that a good system can still lead to bad consequences. That's probably why there are so few pure democracies - most countries try to fix some of the rough spots with constitutions, charters, etc.

    86. Re:Yeah, and... by rossz · · Score: 1

      I made a mistake. It wasn't a pro troops sign. The exact words on it were "Win the War or lose to Jihad!" Would you consider that hate speech?

      Of course I know the difference between an individual making a statement and taking steps to destroy it. However, when a politician makes a statement, it should be considered that politicians official policy. When enough politicians do that, it becomes government policy.

      --
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    87. Re:Yeah, and... by An+Onerous+Coward · · Score: 1

      I'm not sure if the sign is "hate speech" or not. It feels like it to me, in that it seems to be saying that the bulk of the Islamic world wants to destroy us, and that those feelings are inseparable from the religion of Islam itself. But it's not easy to gauge author's intent on a slogan that short.

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    88. Re:Yeah, and... by rossz · · Score: 1

      The religious leadership of the islamic world has been taken over, for the most part, by fundamentalist extremists. These religious leaders constantly preach that the western world (and the Jews) must be destroyed. I'd say the sign is a statement of fact so long as this so-called religion of peace is lead by lunatics.

      --
      -- Will program for bandwidth
    89. Re:Yeah, and... by PopeRatzo · · Score: 1

      I think we agree, Puerco, all religion is idiotic.

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  2. Finally by zantolak · · Score: 5, Funny

    At last, freedom from speech!

  3. I hate this ban by EntropyXP · · Score: 0, Funny

    *BANNED*

    --
    "No one will really be free until nerd persecution ends."
  4. garn! by Stanistani · · Score: 1

    I really hate this, and having said that, can't vacation in Belgium any more.

    1. Re:garn! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Is that what you do on vacations? Give speeches?

  5. I hate people like this by glomph · · Score: 0, Troll

    You just have to hate people who are smart enough to preempt free speech. They want it to be like America?

    1. Re:I hate people like this by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think you're trying to simultaneously use too many layers of sarcastic and stupid. You might want to go with just one of each. And be sure to raise your eyebrows, like Jon Stewart, so we know which is which.

  6. What is Hate Speech? by ArcherB · · Score: 4, Insightful

    How do they ID hate speech? Is a cartoon Mohamed hate speech? How about a cartoon Jesus (South Park anyone?)

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    1. Re:What is Hate Speech? by TFGeditor · · Score: 1

      The whole notion of "hate speech" is bullshit anyway. True freedom of speech means I can write/say "Linux users are monkey butts" or "Microsoft users are hamster butts" with legal impunity. It is my *opinion* and none of the government's damned business.

      Let the government and its minions take a flying leap at the nearest alimentary orifice.

      --
      Ignorance is curable, stupid is forever.
    2. Re:What is Hate Speech? by ScentCone · · Score: 1

      How do they ID hate speech? Is a cartoon Mohamed hate speech? How about a cartoon Jesus (South Park anyone?)

      You don't get it, do you? Just asking that question is hate speech, as pliable as that nonsensical concept is for all those that thrive on being victims and profiting from victims they've defined into existence. Because it implies that the Politically Correct Nanny Police might, themselves, be mistaken... and that means that you hate forcible-nurturing, holier-than-thou, elitist, professional It-Takes-A-Village socialist-types. Calling it what it is, and pointing that stuff out, takes away some of their power - and you're seeing the EU take steps to make that erosion of their power illegal. Ugh.

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    3. Re:What is Hate Speech? by leereyno · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      "Hate speech" is the invention of leftist subversives who got tired of losing all the arguments and decided upon a strategy of outlawing the debate.

      "Hate speech" is therefore the expression of ideas and especially facts that the left cannot competently refute.

      It is easy to ID hate speech. it is the expression of any idea or fact that the left wishes would go away.

      The less success the left has arguing against a particular idea or fact, the more likely it is to be branded as "Hate Speech."

      A milder version of this is the "I'm offended!!" strategy whereby the left silences its political opponents through the over-application of etiquette.

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    4. Re:What is Hate Speech? by faolan_devyn_aodfin · · Score: 1

      I doubt the African tribal communities had that in mind when they created the "it takes a village to raise a child" philosophy. And secondly, that phrase applies to tribalism, not socialism. They may have similarities here and there but they are radically different especially when it comes to moral views.Tribalism believe it or not does allow for individual freedoms and recognition of the individual, whereas purist socialism does not -- amongst other differences. You have to remember that tribalism is also extremely varied in practice and suited towards smaller sects.

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    5. Re:What is Hate Speech? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ITT Baaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaw left left bawwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwww leftist baaaaaaaaaaawwwwwwwww

      Cry more

    6. Re:What is Hate Speech? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're just pissed off because my giant cock stretched out your wife's vagina, and now she's is too big for your micro-dick.

    7. Re:What is Hate Speech? by 99BottlesOfBeerInMyF · · Score: 1

      The whole notion of "hate speech" is bullshit anyway. True freedom of speech means I can write/say "Linux users are monkey butts" or "Microsoft users are hamster butts" with legal impunity. It is my *opinion* and none of the government's damned business.

      I don't think either of your examples would qualify as hate speech under the law being proposed. Freedom of speech is an important human right, but like all rights it is limited in that when it conflicts with other rights, that conflict must be resolved by law. In the US, for example, yelling "fire" in a crowded theater may very well get you thrown in jail because your right to free speech does not trump all the other theater patrons rights to not be trampled upon. Like wise, you can't go on your TV station the night before the election and report that one of the candidates was just found raping corpses without going to jail for slander. You can't make a television advertisement that says your product will make people live twice as long when you know that isn't true because of false advertising laws.

      So considering free speech in those terms, what "hate speech" may or may not qualify. In the US, this mostly is calls for illegal and violent action such as "jews are the minions of satan and I want you to all go down to their evil temple and kill every man woman and child you find." To me, that seems like free speech versus freedom to live (another important right). The EU law calls out this same behavior, but they also call out some more vague terms, such as speech that incites hate. For me, the vagueness of this terminology seems inappropriate to me and subject to abuse. That is why right now I'm inclined to oppose the proposed legislation.

    8. Re:What is Hate Speech? by TFGeditor · · Score: 1

      On the other hand (to borrow from your example--and not that I hate Jews), writing/saying "I think Jews (or black,s or Hispanics, or Germans, or ???) are the spawn of Satan and deserve to burn in hell) likely *would* be considered "hate speech." Such speech does not suborn violence or other illegal acts, nor does it infringe anyone's rights, yet becomes "illegal" under hate speech doctrine, which *is* an unjustifiable infringement of free speech.

      --
      Ignorance is curable, stupid is forever.
    9. Re:What is Hate Speech? by 99BottlesOfBeerInMyF · · Score: 1

      Such speech does not suborn violence or other illegal acts, nor does it infringe anyone's rights, yet becomes "illegal" under hate speech doctrine, which *is* an unjustifiable infringement of free speech.

      Actually, it is highly unclear if that speech would or would not be illegal under the proposed legislation, which is just as bad in my opinion. Somewhere there is a line where inciting people to hate others is likely to lead them to violence towards those others, and that is a pretty blurry line making this sort of legislation very difficult to create. One might argue that your example does not incite violence but, "Jews deserve to die" might, because it falls in between actually calling for people to commit murder, and calling for an otherworldly punishment for them. It advocates death for them, which is a lot closer to appealing to people to specifically kill them.

      I also understand the state of affairs that is pushing such legislation. The number of different cultures with a history of violent, irrational beliefs with regard to one another, all living in close proximity is creating a lot of crime and suffering, which is increased by people who use religious and political forums to feed those same beliefs. Personally I'd rather that logic and reasoning were brought back as the cornerstones of both education, and qualification for immigration, but I do understand the difficulty of the problem.

    10. Re:What is Hate Speech? by An+Onerous+Coward · · Score: 1

      Nah, it's not that. We just recognize that it's very difficult for a person to be a valuable, productive member of society while simultaneously feeling that society doesn't give a flying fuck about them. PC speech simply means, when you're speaking, try to be mindful of the feelings of the people you're speaking about.

      At least, that's my opinion on the matter. Don't bother hunting down long lists of "political correctness gone amok". I already know that it's taken too far by certain people at certain times in certain places. But rather than incoherently ranting about the brainwashed, monolithic left wing, why not give some actual examples of obviously true ideas that "the left" brands as hate speech because it has no answer for them?

      I suspect the list will tell us a lot more about you than it will about "the left" or about political discourse in this country.

      --

      You want the truthiness? You can't handle the truthiness!

    11. Re:What is Hate Speech? by TFGeditor · · Score: 1

      "The number of different cultures with a history of violent, irrational beliefs with regard to one another, all living in close proximity is creating a lot of crime and suffering, which is increased by people who use religious and political forums to feed those same beliefs. Personally I'd rather that logic and reasoning were brought back as the cornerstones of both education, and qualification for immigration, but I do understand the difficulty of the problem."

      Here is a fact damn few will acknowledge: Interracial prejudice, bigotry, and hatred has existed as long as Man has excisted, and will continue to exist as long as Man exists. The roots probably lie in interspecies or intertribal conflicts predating language. Whatever the reason, hate is a reality, and no amount of education or legislation will ever change that.

      Frankly, it is probably better to give hate speech (short of calls for real-world violence) free reign rather than try to stifle it. "Venting" hatred with words relieves pent-up frustration and ameliorates violent propensities. Stifle that release, and sentiments fester then burst as acts of real violence.

      --
      Ignorance is curable, stupid is forever.
    12. Re:What is Hate Speech? by An+Onerous+Coward · · Score: 1

      Socialism isn't Communism, and I think some amount of socialism is not only compatible with individual freedom, but necessary to it.

      The ITAVTRAC philosophy (as interpreted by tribal African cultures) isn't the same thing as the collectivist ideals of the American left wing. The former is enforced primarily by one-to-one social relationships, the latter requires elaborate, bureaucratic (in the neutral sense of the word) large-scale political institutions. We lefties invoke the ITAVTRAC mantra to evoke what the two philosophies have in common: the idea that a society needs to take some responsibility for the success of the individuals who compose it.

      --

      You want the truthiness? You can't handle the truthiness!

    13. Re:What is Hate Speech? by 99BottlesOfBeerInMyF · · Score: 1

      Here is a fact damn few will acknowledge: Interracial prejudice, bigotry, and hatred has existed as long as Man has excisted, and will continue to exist as long as Man exists. The roots probably lie in interspecies or intertribal conflicts predating language. Whatever the reason, hate is a reality, and no amount of education or legislation will ever change that.

      Reason and logic are tools a human can use to understand the world and make proper decisions and effective actions. It will not remove the emotion of hate, but it may change the way people deal with it. An irrational person will blame the failings in their life on another race or religion because it is easy. They will believe the illogical and unsupported accusations of rabble rousers. A rational person will understand with some certainty the real reasons for what happens in their life and will not blame it on a religion or genetic trait of others, but upon their own actions and the way our society is constructed and the limitations of our abilities. Instead of irrationally attacking others to release their emotions, they can understand those emotions and channel them to take real actions to change things for the better. Before this happens, however, they need the mental tools to do so.

      Frankly, it is probably better to give hate speech (short of calls for real-world violence) free reign rather than try to stifle it. "Venting" hatred with words relieves pent-up frustration and ameliorates violent propensities. Stifle that release, and sentiments fester then burst as acts of real violence.

      It is now and for a long time has been resulting in real world violence against other races and religions and nations and any other group that someone can villain-ize as a way to gain power. A man gets angry because he is poor and can't find a job and needs to vent that anger. If that man hears a speech about how it is all the indians taking our jobs, he may well use them as a scapegoat and attack a person of that race while uttering racial slurs. The attacked person then tells others and probably reacts with racism in the other direction and the situation escalates. If, on the other hand, that same man is not given a scapegoat by an organized movement or political speaker, he will still probably find a scapegoat and lash out, but since he will not be lashing out at the same person or thing that other people are, it is just a regular act of violence and does not lead to the same type of escalation and formation of polarized "sides" which make the violence an ongoing process, bigger than any of the individuals involved. In this latter case it is not a white american attacking an indian immigrant, but just an angry guy attacking some other guy.

      The concept behind stopping hate rhetoric is to break that cycle where people form semi-organized self sustaining hate groups. I doubt it would work, but there is some logic to the idea that does capitalize upon human nature, rather than trying to change it.

    14. Re:What is Hate Speech? by TFGeditor · · Score: 1

      "Reason and logic are tools a human can use to understand the world and make proper decisions and effective actions. It will not remove the emotion of hate, but it may change the way people deal with it. An irrational person will blame the failings in their life on another race or religion because it is easy. They will believe the illogical and unsupported accusations of rabble rousers. A rational person will understand with some certainty the real reasons for what happens in their life and will not blame it on a religion or genetic trait of others, but upon their own actions and the way our society is constructed and the limitations of our abilities. Instead of irrationally attacking others to release their emotions, they can understand those emotions and channel them to take real actions to change things for the better. Before this happens, however, they need the mental tools to do so."

      Surely you realize the fallacy in this. My sig sums it succinctly: ignorance is curable, stupid is forever. One can educate the ignorant, but instiling reason or the capacity for rational thought in the stupid (inferior) mind is not possible. Sorry, education will not work, nor will coercion.

      "The concept behind stopping hate rhetoric is to break that cycle where people form semi-organized self sustaining hate groups. I doubt it would work, but there is some logic to the idea that does capitalize upon human nature, rather than trying to change it."

      You acknowledge the fallacy of trying to change human nature (wich I believe is instinct). Yet you reference "capitalizing" on human nature to subvert/redirect actions based thereon. I guess I do not understand. Are you suggesting infringing "hate speech" as a means to derail group-think/mob mentality? Or the sharing/proliferation of ideas?

      I am not being sarcastic, I really do not understand what you mean.

      --
      Ignorance is curable, stupid is forever.
    15. Re:What is Hate Speech? by 99BottlesOfBeerInMyF · · Score: 1

      Surely you realize the fallacy in this. My sig sums it succinctly: ignorance is curable, stupid is forever. One can educate the ignorant, but instiling reason or the capacity for rational thought in the stupid (inferior) mind is not possible. Sorry, education will not work, nor will coercion.

      Values can be taught, including the value of using reason. Logic is a formal process as is rhetoric and they certainly can be taught and can enable anyone to learn to better make decisions. In any case, the verdict on nature versus nurture has been in for a long time. Basically, nurture is dominant with nature accounting for 20-40% of success in intellectual endeavors depending on the endeavor and the study (using separated genetic twin, double blinds only). Education can and has already made a huge difference. My assertion is that education is focusing on the wrong things in many cases, such as memorization of facts and appreciation for literature, whereas it should be stressing basic tools for thinking, like logic and reason.

      Yet you reference "capitalizing" on human nature to subvert/redirect actions based thereon. I guess I do not understand. Are you suggesting infringing "hate speech" as a means to derail group-think/mob mentality? Or the sharing/proliferation of ideas?

      The hate speech most people are concerned about is public forum and within large organizations. Mass violence that is a self sustaining cycle is the result of escalating actions between groups that are self-identifying and which have a common belief and opposition. Without all of these characteristics, the cycle does not continue. If there is not reinforcement of one given common belief and an attachment to a specific opposition, then the cycle does not build. The idea of stopping hate speech is not to stop people from irrationally blaming others or having prejudices, but to prevent them from identifying one opposition group consistently with an idea, as opposed to many ideas and many opposition groups without consistent attachment so violence does not build between two groups.

      It is not really an easy concept to explain, but there has been some success at re-engineering society via these mechanisms. There aren't a lot of Nazis in Germany anymore. If you haven't read it, I strongly recommend you pick up the book "Freakonomics." It is a quick read and very entertaining, but it contains one interesting story that might help you understand the idea conceptually. It tells how superman decimated the KKK in real life.

    16. Re:What is Hate Speech? by TFGeditor · · Score: 1

      "If you haven't read it, I strongly recommend you pick up the book 'Freakonomics.' "

      I have seen this book frequently referenced,Have not read it, but will.

      "It tells how superman decimated the KKK in real life."

      Decimated? Perhaps in a larger sense, but the KKK is alive, if not "well." I live in the "South," and can tell you that KKK beliefs/worldview are *very* alive and well; perhaps not proliferated in public forum (the odd KKK rally/march notwithstanding), but most certainly in private discourse.

      Ingrained ideas (specifically racial hate, which, as previously stated, I believe is instinct/genetic memory) cannot be erased. Behavior (and, to an extent, speech) based thereon can be "regulated" as to place and means, but this only succeeds in driving the ideas and sharing of same underground. Out of sight might be out of mind, but not out of existence.

      So, we are back to the original point that infringing speech is wrong, even if it is someone's notion of "hate speech." Leave speech alone, and it will rise or fall on its merits and the perception/reason of the hearer. Regulate behavior, not speech.

      There was a time when speech about independence, King George, rights, and taxes to the Crown was considered sedicious and thus "unpopular" in some estimations. Government sought to quash this speech, but, firtunately,did not succeed.

      Limiting free speech (and I hate to use this hackneyed phrase) is a "slippery slope." One man's "hate speech" (and I am sure there was a lot of "hate speech" directed at Great Britian in general and the Crown and it minions in particular) is another man's speech of liberty and freedom.

      In the U.S., it is now possible to receive a visit from the FBI for saying/writing "I hate [president's name] and hope he dies!" It would not surprise me to witness in my lifetime the same speech-chilling penalty for "I hate [political party name] and hope they all die!"

      In the days since the Virginia Tech homicidal maniac attacks, students have been arrested for writing assignments that someone found "disturbing," although no individuals or specific institutions were named.

      When you start drawing lines around speech, they inevitably become blurred, usually to the detriment of free people.

      --
      Ignorance is curable, stupid is forever.
    17. Re:What is Hate Speech? by Lord+Kano · · Score: 1

      15 years ago, political correctness was what people used to call "common courtesy" If someone didn't like certain language, the polite thing to do was to not use it in their presence.

      It changed, it became about ways to silence unpopular speech. It became about preventing people from asking questions that you didn't want to answer.

      LK

      --
      "Hi. This is my friend, Jack Shit, and you don't know him." - Lord Kano
  7. Governments vs the Internet by CrazyJim1 · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Gotta love how some governments think they have power over the internet.

    1. Re:Governments vs the Internet by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm just that that they'll probably get there sooner than we think =(

    2. Re:Governments vs the Internet by alphamugwump · · Score: 1

      I don't know how effective the "great firewall of china" is, but from reading the news, it seems to be fairly effective. I don't think it's necessarily a given that the wild and wooly internet will always win.

      Admittedly, given the peer-to peer nature of it, the internet is much harder to censor than real life. And once we get real wireless, they won't be able to cut you off at the ISP as easily. But still, it is possible, and it's very scary.

  8. This is a hate page by Higaran · · Score: 1

    Isn't this article a "hate page" it's even in the topic. But then again, you could take all the anti MS stuff around here for the same thing.

  9. does this mean by phrostie · · Score: 0

    they are going to quit bitching about each other?

  10. This is a bad thing. by Skadet · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The preamble to the declaration mentions anti-Semitism, Islamophobia and anti-Romany campaigns. Should the providers refuse to act more forcefully the five initiators of the declaration have vowed to pressure the European Commission into drafting appropriate legislation.
    This is a bad thing. Freedom is based upon the ability to express your ideas without the threat of Government backlash. Some ideas can be called "bad", certainly, but they should not be preemptively squashed because of the possibility that they might turn into action.

    It's the beginning of a slippery slope that ends up where web pages, emails, documents, or speech that is anti-establishment becomes illegal as well. It's important to set precident with the less-obvious things early on so this slope is avoided altogether.
    1. Re:This is a bad thing. by RomieGalaxy · · Score: 1

      Agree with 100% - you have to be able to know you can say whatever you want without having someone at your doorstep soon after to take you away. The original rules about copyright infringement (you can talk about, but not reuse) was the only thing that really worked, but even that gets abused.

    2. Re:This is a bad thing. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's the beginning of a slippery slope that ends up where web pages, emails, documents, or speech that is anti-establishment becomes illegal as well. It's important to set precident with the less-obvious things early on so this slope is avoided altogether.

      Except that this is just an extension to the interwebs of laws that Europe has had since WWII. Your definition of freedom hasn't existed there since then. So if it's a slippery slope it's not very steep (or slippery) since they seem to be doing fine regarding individual rights.

    3. Re:This is a bad thing. by OS24Ever · · Score: 1

      The thing that bothers me is that the definitions of those three main areas can cover almost anything.

      You can be 'islamaphobic' because you belive that they should not be able to hide behind a veil in identification photos and a person needing to identify you can require you to remove said covering to confirm the identity.

      You get told you need to respect their religion and force the 'non-believer' into doing things like forming special queues for them, special rooms for them, all because their guys need the women hidden so hard because they can't control their passion.

      Why do *I* have to bow down, cow tow, and do things to not offend their religion? What makes their right to assemble and whatever override mine? When did that happen?

      I mean I shouldn't be able to go smear ham in their face or dangle bacon over their heads sure, thta's what I'd call pretty damn islamaphobic. But asking them to be a part of the rest of society and not force their beliefs on me (alcohol in a cab, guide dogs in a cab up in MN) seems to be a two way street to me.

      Of course did what I just type violate this new EU law even though I'm posting from china on a system in the united states?

      --

      As a rock-in-roll Physicist once said, No matter where you go, there you are.

    4. Re:This is a bad thing. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's political correctness gone mad. I've been called Islamophobic for stating the fact that the prophet of Islam, Mohammad, had sex with a 9 year old kid despite Islamic books and hadiths stated that he married Aisha when she was 6 and consummated the marriage when she was 9. If repeating Islamic scriptures is Islamophobia, then what do the scriptures actually do and why do muslims keep referring to them? Now, at least I don't get prosecuted like the pastor in Victoria, Australia who was convicted of hate speech for reading the Quran verbatim.

    5. Re:This is a bad thing. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Verbatim, right. Just like your fairy tales about your heroic 'truth spreading' actions. Dumbass.

    6. Re:This is a bad thing. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Are you saying Mohammad didn't have sex with a nine year old kid? Go to the library and check out the hadiths:

      Sahih Muslim Book 008, Number 3310:
      'A'isha (Allah be pleased with her) reported: Allah's Apostle (may peace be upon him) married me when I was six years old, and I was admitted to his house when I was nine years old.

      Sahih Bukhari Volume 7, Book 62, Number 64
      Narrated 'Aisha:
      that the Prophet married her when she was six years old and he consummated his marriage when she was nine years old, and then she remained with him for nine years (i.e., till his death).

      Dumbass!

    7. Re:This is a bad thing. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why don't you go and read the Koran? I think you'll find it very interesting.

  11. wait a minute by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

    I thought Europe was a bastion of freedom and civil rights. Oh wait, it isn't that at all.

    1. Re:wait a minute by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      European youths taking more of an interest in weaponry would be a good step Yeah, like the American-bred youth in Virginia Tech and in Iraq.
    2. Re:wait a minute by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You, sir, are a fucking dumbass. I hope the 'bad guys' come and kick your retarded, inbred ass.

      Oh my the capatcha for my post is "quagmire", you know like that thing Yankee Imperialist Bastardistan is stuck in with their campaign to bring unbridled capitalism, sorry, freedom, to the Iraqi people.

    3. Re:wait a minute by ari_j · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Um. One Asian-bred youth at Virginia Tech murdered 32 mostly American-bred people (modulo a Holocaust survivor here and there). And I don't even know what point you are trying to make about Iraq. You're probably just an idiot or a troll, but I did have to at least clear up that the murderer at Virginia Tech was not born in America and, if Virginia Tech were not a defenseless victim zone, he may have been the second or third to die instead of the 33rd.

    4. Re:wait a minute by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think the only idiot here is you. The GP post went so far over your head that it isn't even funny.

    5. Re:wait a minute by WED+Fan · · Score: 1

      They have proclaimed that all people are equal, have equal rights, should have equal lives. Much like Karl Marx. Actually, their premise is exactly that of Karl Marx, and leads the same place: Communism.

      The facts are:

      • Not everyone is equal - they may be born equal, arguably, but choices they make, choices their parents make, limit their equality
      • Not every nation, culture, creed, or faith is of equal value - to apply some sort of sliding moral window to each is to eventually allow great evil to slip through
      • Those who figure it out, deserve the benefits of figuring it out
      • Not everyone deserves an equal footing
      • In order for there to be:
        • Success, someone must be failure
        • Good, there must must be evil
        • Those that help, there must be those to be helped
      • Scores must be kept, someone must win, someone must lose, and sharing is nice in kindergarten, and only productive when its a strategic decision that works until you have the ability to kill your competition
      • life sucks, get over, try to win
      --
      Politics is the art of looking for trouble, finding it everywhere, diagnosing it incorrectly and applying the wrong fix.
    6. Re:wait a minute by ari_j · · Score: 1

      Maybe you should either (a) point out what I said that wasn't true or (b) at least make yourself look like a fool non-anonymously.

    7. Re:wait a minute by Chrisje · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I know it's a flamebait/troll, but you, sir, are a blithering idiot. Let me take the time to reply anyhow.

      > proclaimed that all people are equal, have equal rights, should have equal lives

      No, Yes, No. The EU-countries tend to declare all citizens have equal rights, and thus the right to an equal opportunity for education, future, etc etc. Nothing in there says we're all equal.

      > They have inspired fear of capitalism

      No they didn't. For crying out loud, companies like HP see more than 43% of their total revenue coming from the EU nowadays. Plus, the Dutch invented bloody capitalism together with the Jews. First stock-exchange, first publicly traded company in the world. Hell, the EU has forgotten more about capitalism than the US ever knew.

      > leads the same place: Communism.

      I don't see how a capitalist system with huge tax breaks for corporations and still a Social policy equals Marxism. To give you an example, in Holland the Dutch Communist party *went bankrupt* at the end of the eighties, and the word communism hasn't been heard since then.

      > America/Israel/The Jews/Christians vs. Islam, the Middle East, Europe, Russia, China, the UN.

      I find this particularly interesting. Are there no Christians in the Middle East, Europe, Russia and the UN? Again, Christianity in its current form (including the trinity and the divinity of Jezus) was decided upon by papal edict somewhere around 380 AC.

      Protestantism, Calvinism, Lutheran and all that were established during the 15th Century. The Middle East and Europe already had large Christian populations before Columbus ever thought he reached India. Hell, we've forgotten more about Christianity than the US will ever learn.

      Israel, by the way, is also in the Middle East. It shares the same food, music and general culture of hospitality with the Arab nations in the vicinity. Then again, you wouldn't know that since you seem to be a bit of a redneck retard.

      > WWIII was US against the USSR

      Heh. Nobody outside of the USSR and the US actually cared much about this. There hasn't been a WWIII. It was all a scam to relieve you of your 19-year old sons and your tax money.

      > WWV will be America vs. Communism

      Way you folks are handling yourself, by the time WWV rolls around the smoldering ruins of what once was the US won't be participating in it, I assure you. The way things are going, China, India and the EU will get bigger and bigger financial clubs to swing, and the US will diminish.

      China is even proving today that hard-line communism will also long vanish by that time. I don't know what you're smoking in your shack in Ohio, but neither the US nor Communism will be factors of importance in the future.

      > because the US stood united

      No they didn't. Ever seen Vietnam war demonstrations? Ever see Iraq war demonstrations? Ever saw the debate about abortion, euthanasia or further wars going on? There is no such thing as the United States standing United. The constitution calls for that. Which is one of the few saving graces of the US, for that matter.

      Hell, if the Japs hadn't bombed pearl-harbor the US wouldn't have gotten involved in WWII. Then their role in WWI was minimal at best. Lastly, WWIII was a figment of your own (McCarthy, anyone?) feverish imagination. So just quit talking bollocks, OK?

    8. Re:wait a minute by teh+kurisu · · Score: 1

      European youths taking more of an interest in weaponry would be a good step.

      European youths taking more of an interest in voting would be a good step.

      With regards to weaponry... well, many Scottish youths have access to knives and carry them on a regular basis. Do they use them for political change? Nope. They use them in muggings and gang fights. If we introduce guns to the mix, how do you think this behaviour will change?

      It's not like gun ownership has any effect on US politics except for a desire to keep ownership legal. You still have a two-party system that favours big business.

    9. Re:wait a minute by dintech · · Score: 1

      The kid spent his most formative teengage and young adult years in America. He mostly has an American background. For all intents and purposes he was ingrained with American culture. Get over it.

    10. Re:wait a minute by digitig · · Score: 1

      I thought Europe was a bastion of freedom and civil rights. Oh wait, it isn't that at all. Really? Which European countries call themselves "The Land of the Free"?
      --
      Quidnam Latine loqui modo coepi?
    11. Re:wait a minute by osee · · Score: 1

      He(AC) was probably referring to the unarmed victims in Virginia Tech and the numerous armed American victims in Iraq.

      Weapons don't necessarily make a difference. You can be shot just as dead holding a gun...

    12. Re:wait a minute by daem0n1x · · Score: 2, Informative

      In most countries in the EU, people can say just about anything they want, like in the US. Inciting others to commit crimes is a crime, like in the US.

      There are some exceptions, like in France where there are special laws to protect the Jews. You will be arrested in France if you deny that the Holocaust existed.

      In some countries, there are even extremist right-wing parties. In my particular country, the fascist ideology is forbidden, because we had a fascist dictatorship for 48 years that ended in '74. But, in my opinion, the prohibition of fascism wouldn't be necessary, because many of the things that constitute fascism would be made crimes by other laws, like race supremacy or encouraging the use of violence. The same for left-wing extremists, and by the way, extremists of any kind.

      I don't like the idea of the nazi scum being able to propagate their bullshit freely. But maybe it would be better to just let them speak. They would lose much of their strength if people just ignore them, making them look silly.

      About being a bastion of civil rights, your affirmation sounds just like anti-Europe senseless bashing. Just look at the vast majority of countries in the World, and you'll find that the freedom enjoyed in Europe, US, Canada and a few others is not the rule, but the exception. My people only knew what freedom was exactly 33 years and 1 day ago. And it feels fucking gooooood!

    13. Re:wait a minute by ari_j · · Score: 1

      If that's the case, my assumption to the contrary is based on the frequent trolls who call American soldiers murderers. So, if you're right, mea culpa.

    14. Re:wait a minute by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      many Scottish youths have access to knives and carry them on a regular basis. Do they use them for political change? Nope. They use them in muggings and gang fights.
       
      That's because they're Scottish.

    15. Re:wait a minute by callmetheraven · · Score: 1

      Cho was Korean-bred, moron.

      --
      You can have my SIG when you pry it from my cold, dead hands.
    16. Re:wait a minute by callmetheraven · · Score: 1

      With regards to weaponry... well, many Scottish youths have access to knives and carry them on a regular basis.
      Ah, so just because Scottish youths don't put their knives to good use, nobody else should be allowed to have weapons either. That's good politician doublethought if I ever saw it. Is there a way you can rephrase that to include the words "what about the children?"

      It's not like gun ownership has any effect on US politics except for a desire to keep ownership legal.
      Not true. Have you ever considered that factions within the US government who would have liked to have a Chrystallnacht of their own could not because our citizens are well armed?
      --
      You can have my SIG when you pry it from my cold, dead hands.
    17. Re:wait a minute by teh+kurisu · · Score: 1

      Ah, so just because Scottish youths don't put their knives to good use, nobody else should be allowed to have weapons either. That's good politician doublethought if I ever saw it. Is there a way you can rephrase that to include the words "what about the children?"

      Just saying that the assertion that weapons are used for the preservation of democracy and not criminal activity is blatantly wrong. Quite the opposite, in fact.

      Not true. Have you ever considered that factions within the US government who would have liked to have a Chrystalnacht of their own could not because our citizens are well armed?

      Saddam Hussein managed to rule Iraq with an iron grip despite the fact that gun ownership in Iraq is extremely high. What would be different about the US? Considering that the US public were remarkably accepting of whatever Dubya did in the run-up to Iraq, because he was the commander in chief.

    18. Re:wait a minute by Old+Benjamin · · Score: 1

      The US did stand United. Back during WWII anyway, which is the last war we truly won. >Heh. Nobody outside of the USSR and the US actually cared much about this. There hasn't been a WWIII. Actually the Cold War involved the whole world. The US and the USSR brought the fight to just about every island nation there is >Israel, by the way, is also in the Middle East. It shares the same food, music and general >culture of hospitality with the Arab nations in the vicinity. Then again, you wouldn't know >that since you seem to be a bit of a redneck retard. Yeah. Except for almost every other country in the Middle East has tried to kill them. Many times. Not to mention the speeches every other day about how evil Israel is.

      --
      "The quickest way to end a war is to lose it" -Orwell
    19. Re:wait a minute by Chrisje · · Score: 1

      > Actually the Cold War involved the whole world. The US and the USSR brought the fight to just about every island nation there is

      Hm. Except for some peace demonstrations in the Netherlands and other European countries that made clear we'd refuse having the US' warheads on our continent, the lyrics to some songs by Donald Fagen off his album "The Nightfly", and one particularly amusing Frankie Goes to Hollywood video, I don't recall much of a hubbub about the cold war. When you say "every island nation", I guess you must refer to the UK (a limited gene-pool anyhow) or a couple of kingdoms in Micronesia, because it sure as shit didn't make a big bang where I grew up.

      Meanwhile, in Sweden, we've have had access to the finest Cuban cigars since the dawn of time. Calling the Cold War WWIII is a wee over the top, wouldn't you say?

      > Yeah. Except for almost every other country in the Middle East has tried to kill them.

      Sadly enough, this is not an entirely just representation of what happened. Lebanon and Jordan, the next door neighbors, have never been too prone to "kill Israel". True, they were sucked into conflict due to pressure from Syria and Egypt back in the day ('67 and Yom Kippur wars) but they've never been of the invading kind. Even now it's mainly Syria and Iran that pose threats to peace in the Middle East, not necessarily Egypt, Saudi Arabia, the Emirates, Kuwait, Lebanon (the government) or Jordan.

      Then again, this is not unique to Israel either. Remember the Assyrians? Probably you don't because Assyrians are nigh extinct today. They were crack engineers with a rich legacy of art and high culture, and had empires (3) that spanned most of the Middle East as you know it. People tried to kill them off repeatedly however, and in the end all but succeeded. Then there is the minor issue of the Ottoman empire, the Macedonians, the Crusaders and all others (Romans, Greeks, British to name but a few) trying to invade the entire Middle East and wipe out Arabic (semitic, anyone?) culture. What happened to the Hettites, Luddites and Philistines, by the way? Allegedly they got wiped out by the Israelites (read Exodus for that one).

      Both the Arabs and the Jews, in other words the semitic people, have endured their fair share of the rest of the world trying to kill them.

      > Not to mention the speeches every other day about how evil Israel is.

      Some of those speeches are mis-translated from Arabic for dramatic effect, and some of those speeches are blatantly correct. I live in Israel, and I can tell you that for its many virtues, it still is an Apartheids-regime. If you're not Jewish Israeli, you're simply a second rate citizen. When reminded of this, the average Israeli then has the gall to claim "our Arabs are treated better than they'd be in Syria". If you'd replace "our Arabs" with "our Niggers", you'd get the picture more clearly perhaps.

      Then there are many speeches on Israeli TV that claim the entire Arabic/Muslim world is Evil. The propaganda machines on both sides of the conflict do a swell job of demonizing the other side, and this is not unique to the League of Arabic nations. I also refer to the hate-speech type of "news" you get in the US about the Muslims.

      Lastly, I've talked to people I really like in Israel (HP colleagues, hairdressers, friends of mine that are quite liberal and like the occasional doobie) who have the most scary and amazing views on how to achieve peace. Some folk here think we ought to militarize the entire nation, march to Damascus and Beirut and kill the current government to "instill common sense into the region once more". This proves to me that the Syrians and Iranians might not be the only ones in the Middle East that have a bit of the old Xenophobia going, now doesn't it?

      So, please, tell me how Israel is totally Unique and Different from their brethren in the Middle East. I'm dying to hear an argument that bears close and objective examination.

    20. Re:wait a minute by Chrisje · · Score: 1

      > The US did stand United. Back during WWII anyway, which is the last war we truly won.

      I forgot to reply to this one. I already stated in a previous comment that if it hadn't been for the bombing of Pearl Harbour, I am highly doubtful the US would have entered that fight in the first place. Hell, companies like IBM weren't exactly shirking the Nazis for business partners, now were they? And I do remember a fair share of divided opinions on the subject before the die was thrown, if I'm not mistaken.

      So, *we truly won* the War, says the American.

      Now I'm not going to downplay all the Americans did in WWII, absolutely not. But I must say that I'm not convinced the Nazis would have won that one if the US hadn't gotten involved. Remember that the Italian forces were getting slaughtered by Greek peasants (since 450 AC, the Roman Empire hasn't produced much of an army, you see), the Norwegians were fighting themselves to death in the resistance, the Russians completely decimated whatever armored forces Germany could muster, and the Brits did admirable jobs in the North-African theatre, the Battle of Britain and on the Atlantic and the North Sea. Hell, most of the European continent had its fair share of forces that were trying to subvert the regime in one way or another. Vive la resistance, I would almost say.

      Ultimately, there was too much resistance on all fronts for that Reich to last, that much is plain. Like I said, I am aware of and I respect the sacrifice many Americans made to shorten the war. Along with the thousands of Canadians and Aussies that fought on the Allies' behalf. But for a US citizen to claim "we truly won" the thing is an act that down-plays the other forces at work to the degree of being insulting and ignorant.

      Ever heard of the KNIL? Koninklijk Nederlands Indie-Leger it means. It's what the Dutch had in Indonesia when the Japs invaded it. I have family members that fought hard in the Pacific, I have family members that spend 6 years in Japanese camps and Japanese whorehouses. The remnant of the KNIL also did its thing, along with many others in the Pacific, against the Japanese. Again, dropping the bomb shortened the proceedings, but I sincerely doubt it was the only factor that ended it, if you catch my drift.

    21. Re:wait a minute by Old+Benjamin · · Score: 1

      I'm not saying other countries didn't win. I'm just saying we did.

      --
      "The quickest way to end a war is to lose it" -Orwell
  12. No, only speech the gov't doesn't like by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You won't be able to get enough of that... :-P

  13. Godwinning this Topic by rolfwind · · Score: 0, Troll

    Hitler also hated free speech. Except for the "correct" thoughts of his side.

    Europe, grow up.

    1. Re:Godwinning this Topic by fiannaFailMan · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Hitler also hated free speech. Except for the "correct" thoughts of his side. Europe, grow up.
      Where do you stand on the Don Imus case and his freedom of speech?
      --
      Drill baby drill - on Mars
    2. Re:Godwinning this Topic by jcr · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Imus' freedom of speech was never at issue. He can say whatever he wants, and his employers can fire his ass if he's not bringing in the money anymore because people get sick of him.

      -jcr

      --
      The only title of honor that a tyrant can grant is "Enemy of the State."
    3. Re:Godwinning this Topic by fiannaFailMan · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Imus' freedom of speech was never at issue. He can say whatever he wants, and his employers can fire his ass if he's not bringing in the money anymore because people get sick of him.
      He wasn't fired because he wasn't bringing money in. On the contrary, the case actually boosted the amount of coverage he was getting. I'd never even heard of the fella until that all blew up. He was fired because he exercised his 'freedom of speech' and society determined that doing so in the way he did was unacceptable. Maybe not illegal, but definitely unacceptable. It now sets a precedent where no radio DJ dare refer to 'nappy-headed hoes' not because of any statutory provisions but because of a redefinition of what is socially acceptable. Is it a good thing or a bad thing that this particular freedom of expression has been curtailed?
      --
      Drill baby drill - on Mars
    4. Re:Godwinning this Topic by EllisDees · · Score: 4, Insightful

      In this country, you have the right to say just about anything you like, including "nappy headed hoes." Nobody, however, has any obligation to listen to you or provide you with a venue to do so. Don Imus can stand on any street corner in the US and repeat that phrase over and over and he'll never wind up in jail over it.

      Societal disapproval is not the same as illegal.

      --
      -- Give me ambiguity or give me something else!
    5. Re:Godwinning this Topic by extra+the+woos · · Score: 1

      Imus will probably get a bigger job or write a book and make even more money, or god knows what. He's famous now. Before this no one had heard of him. Grats to him.

      Being able to be fired or made fun of because of public outcry over something you've said or done is FINE. He has free speech just as the rest of society can shun him or his employer can fire him for saying something dumb. Personally, I don't think he should have apologized one bit. He shoulda called all the offended people nappy headed hoes too, but whatever.

      The difference here is he isn't being threated with charges or put in jail or anything like that.

      Society is free to stop giving the guy any money. His employer is free to fire the guy. The government isn't going to come after him, though. Huge, HUGE difference.

      Say I worked for a company that was ran by a jewish guy. I then go out into the street a few years later with a huge "jews worship satan and are all fags" sign. I get fired because my boss was offended. This does not mean i odn't have free speech. The government isn't going to come arrest me. Instead, society is goign to laugh at me for being an idiot, I'll lose my job, and people will make fun of me for saying something dumb. Doesn't mean I don't have free speech. If, like in some places in europe, you could get in trouble from the government for saying something like that, then we wouldn't have free speech.

      --
      replacing it with NEW Folger's Crystals! (lets see if they notice the difference)
    6. Re:Godwinning this Topic by NeutronCowboy · · Score: 1

      He was fired because several large advertisers publically distanced themselves and their money from the show. No advertisers, no money, no show - no matter how many listeners you have. That, ultimately, is why I think he got fired. Doesn't change a lick about the fact that what he said showed him to be racist and sexist, but that's beside the point.

      Freedom of expression means that you can say whatever you want, and I can't enlist the government to sop you from saying what you want. However, it doesn't mean that I'm forced to subsidize anybody's attempts to make themselves heard. Don Imus could get into pod-casting (though there's no guarantee he'll be carried by iTunes). Due to the ISPs common carrier clause, they'll take his money and host pretty much whatever he wants. So Don, you wanna talk about nappy-headed hos - go get a server, a T1 (or 10), and set up shop on the internet. But don't complain that your constitutional rights were infringed, because they weren't. Your constitutional right to be an ass does not preclude my constitutional right from calling you on it, and pressuring your advertisers to drop you like a hot potato.

      I have to stay, I'm stumped by the amount of people who misinterpret the first amendment as a requirement for others to stay silent when they say anything.

      --
      Those who can, do. Those who can't, sue.
    7. Re:Godwinning this Topic by anti-pop-frustration · · Score: 2, Interesting

      The Imus case is a perfect illustration:
      Europe: Hate speech is banned by law (state censorship)
      US of A: Hate speech is curtailed through auto-censorship (commercial censorship)

      The question is, in the end, which model is the more restrictive one ?

    8. Re:Godwinning this Topic by dreampod · · Score: 1

      Freedom of Speech does not mean immunity from the consequences of that speech. Imus generated a great deal of negative opinion and while his coverage may have increased, there were a number of advertisers who had threatened to pull their business from the network. The network, not the government pulled his show off the radio. Freedom of Speech only covers the government suppressing speech - private individuals are allowed to ignore or punish speech that they don't agree with in any (legal) way that they choose. In the Imus case we have a excellent example of social pressure limiting him from a soapbox that gives his attitudes legitimacy. He can call anyone he wants a 'nappy-headed hoe' now, but he will have to do it without his radio show. NBC is under no obligation (other than contractual) to provide him a soapbox, and when it threatened their bottom line they dumped him. Until the latest outrage NBC had tolerated his intolerant speech because none of their sponsors had received any pressure over their presence on his show. I think that this is a great thing - it shows that the free market can enforce a certain amount of decency on the air. I'll admit that I like it a lot less when the social pressure is coming down on me for an unpopular opinion, but if you can't take the heat then stay out of the kitchen.

    9. Re:Godwinning this Topic by Copid · · Score: 1

      I'm not the grandparent, but I don't see it as a good thing or a bad thing. Sometimes, when you say mean things, people get offended. That's just the way society works. If others learn a lesson and mind their manners, that's just a result of society's reaction to bad behavior. If you really want to say things like that, go right ahead. Just be aware that a large segment of society doesn't particularly approve. Personally, I think that the whole social dynamic that was exposed in the process was interesting. I like Matt Taibbi's take on it quite a bit.

      --
      An interesting anagram of "BANACH TARSKI" is "BANACH TARSKI BANACH TARSKI"
    10. Re:Godwinning this Topic by Teun · · Score: 1

      He might not end up in jail that easily but chances are he'd end up in hospital or even dead.
      It' just that aspect what has thought the Europeans a historic lesson, there are limits to what a democratic society can bear before it falls victim to it's own liberties.

      Many of us Europeans prefer some legal tools to stop the idiots.

      --
      "The likes of Facebook and WhatsApp are free to those whose privacy is of zero value."
    11. Re:Godwinning this Topic by Shihar · · Score: 1

      No, all of his sponsers dropped him because they did not want to be unassociated with him. Further, black members of NBC were pissed off and told NBC and started to threaten to quit. This is free speech at its finest. Say what you want, but don't expect other people to like what you say. Further, Imus is hardly a victim. Imus is a millionaire. Not only is he a millionaire, but he is a millionaire likely to pick up a big fat contract from satellite radio if he so desires.

      Freedom of speech is not promise that people have to associate with you. The KKK can run around screaming for blacks to go back to Africa, but it isn't like anyone is obligated to give them coverage. Freedom of speech is as much about saying whatever you damn well please as it is being able to freely associate or not associate with whomever you damn well please.

      Imus free speech rights are have been perfectly protected... as have the rights of all the people who decided to speak negative things about him or refuse to give him money to continue speaking.

    12. Re:Godwinning this Topic by plasmacutter · · Score: 1

      He was fired because he exercised his 'freedom of speech' and society determined that doing so in the way he did was unacceptable

      if by "society" you mean a few, shrill extremists who feign oversensitivity to attack people they dont like than sure, "society" determined that doing so was unacceptable.
      --
      VLC FOR MAC IS DYING! IF YOU DEVELOP, PLEASE SAVE IT!!
    13. Re:Godwinning this Topic by EllisDees · · Score: 5, Insightful

      >The question is, in the end, which model is the more restrictive one ?

      No contest. The one where you can actually end up in jail for something you've said.

      --
      -- Give me ambiguity or give me something else!
    14. Re:Godwinning this Topic by Rakarra · · Score: 1
      He wasn't fired because he wasn't bringing money in. On the contrary, the case actually boosted the amount of coverage he was getting.

      Coverage is pointless if you don't bring the money in. Pets.com got tons of coverage with their Superbowl ads, not that that really improved their business any. He was dropped by the station because the sponsors dropped him after the controversy flared up. They dropped him because they didn't want to be associated with him. Freedom of speech means you can say what you want, but it doesn't mean that people have to provide you a forum for it if they don't want to, nor does it mean anyone has to agree with you or has to support you in it.

    15. Re:Godwinning this Topic by fyngyrz · · Score: 1
      Many of us Europeans prefer some legal tools to stop the idiots.

      Oh, us American types do, too. Our tool to stop the idiots is called the "1st amendment." It just isn't working very well right now. Free speech zones, radio and television censorship, permits required to assemble, that sort of thing. We've got some legislators and judges that can't read plain English, and that tends to break things.

      --
      I've fallen off your lawn, and I can't get up.
    16. Re:Godwinning this Topic by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

      Oh please you can't even say "fuck" on US tv..

    17. Re:Godwinning this Topic by fyngyrz · · Score: 1
      US of A: Hate speech is curtailed through auto-censorship (commercial censorship)

      Well... not really. In the US, first the government created artificial scarcity by denying the people access to the airwaves unless they were rich, in which case they were sold the right to broadcast for many miles. Then we applied direct censorship and religious preference to the resource, via the FCC. "Obscenity" and other religious impositions, you see. Since it is the government that artificially made radio a commercial enterprise, you can still lay the blame for "commercial" censorship, as you call it, at their feet.

      Without the government, anyone could have access to the airwaves. There's nothing magical or technically difficult about running a radio station. Takes about $50 worth of parts to reach all over a small town, and there are many available channels and bands upon which we could do so. But that's all a pipe dream. We're not allowed to have anything like that. That would require... a free country. Nothing like that around here.

      --
      I've fallen off your lawn, and I can't get up.
    18. Re:Godwinning this Topic by jcr · · Score: 1

      He wasn't fired because he wasn't bringing money in.

      He lost several major sponsors in the week before they canned him. His boss decided he wasn't worth the trouble anymore.

      -jcr

      --
      The only title of honor that a tyrant can grant is "Enemy of the State."
    19. Re:Godwinning this Topic by jcr · · Score: 1

      Before this no one had heard of him.

      He was the #2 shock-jock in the country, right after Howard Stern, and ahead of Rush Limbaugh. Lots of people had heard of him.

      -jcr

      --
      The only title of honor that a tyrant can grant is "Enemy of the State."
    20. Re:Godwinning this Topic by fiannaFailMan · · Score: 1

      Racist.

      --
      Drill baby drill - on Mars
    21. Re:Godwinning this Topic by Gareth+Williams · · Score: 1

      The Imus case is a perfect illustration: Europe: Hate speech is banned by law (state censorship) US of A: Hate speech is curtailed through auto-censorship (commercial censorship)

      The question is, in the end, which model is the more restrictive one ?

      No it isn't. The question is: which model is the more dangerous one?
      Clearly the former.

      Historically, oppressive governments have been very quick to both (a) gain control of the media; and (b) stifle dissenting / critical opinions voiced publically, in order to solidify their power. Heck, not just historically - take a look around the world today. China is a classic example of this tactic in current use.

      Freedom of the press and freedom of speech / expression for individuals is a principle intended as a defence against the government. That's a very basic point. Heck, I'm not even American and I understand that much :)

      That does not mean there are not social consequences attached to what you say - you're still responsible for your actions. This is something a lot of people don't grasp. If you're a radio host your job is to keep the listeners entertained and the advertisers happy - in short, to keep the cash coming in. If you want to be a sexist and racist dickhead on the air then nobody can arrest you for that - which is as it should be - but you shouldn't expect your employer to wish to continue your employment when you're bringing his station into disrepute and losing him money.

      Where the line is drawn is at the point when the state can arrest you purely for holding certain opinions (and obviously having expressed them, thus people know you hold them). That is a dangerous position to be in, because it is the state who gets to decide which opinions are 'wrong' - one of the key defences against oppression is removed.

      That doesn't automatically mean you are living under an oppressive government, of course, or even that you are moving toward one - it simply means that it would be that much easier for your government to become so in the future. I doubt anybody could argue that the present government in Germany is oppressive, for example - yet, if you hold certain looney views on the holocaust (ie. that it didn't happen), and are stupid enough to express those views in that country, it can get you arrested and possibly put in jail for your views.

      I can completely understand a country with a history such as theirs having a law like that, but it's still fundamentally wrong in my opinion. The state should never be in a position where they are the sole dictators of the truth, no matter how widely that truth is accepted.

      There is also another argument, which says that it is dangerous to push the looneys underground, where they slowly gain strength in secrecy. Much better to allow open debate on the issue and show them to be wrong publically, or at the very least let the public see how unreasonable their position is. In short: give those with hateful or unreasonable views freedom of expression, and watch them shoot themselves in the foot.

      There's a particularly racist and Nazi-like group of people in my country (that's a purely descriptive term - I believe they wear swastikas and have white supremisist views - and I'm not comparing anybody in this discussion to a Nazi, so I don't believe this should invoke Godwin's law :) ... they call themselves the "National Front". A few years ago there was a big student rally in my home city against racism. These guys decided to have a counter rally at the same time, and claimed to be bringing hundreds of people who supported their views. Nobody would send them to jail for it - they were welcome to show up and voice their views to the crowd.

      Well, the anti-racism rally consisted of 3000 students. The National Front showed up with twelve people. Yeah, that's 12. All they managed to demonstrate was their complete and utter lack of credibility. I much

      --

      --Gareth
    22. Re:Godwinning this Topic by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There are plenty of white women who are "nappy-headed hos".

    23. Re:Godwinning this Topic by houghi · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Please stay where you are, you will be brought to Guantanamo very shortly.

      --
      Don't fight for your country, if your country does not fight for you.
    24. Re:Godwinning this Topic by Reziac · · Score: 1

      "The young women on the basketball team Mr. Imus insulted are over 18 and can speak for themselves. It's disconcerting to see third parties become involved and presume to speak collectively for minority groups. It is precisely this collectivist mindset that is at the heart of racism."

      From http://www.house.gov/paul/tst/tst2007/tst041607.ht m

      --
      ~REZ~ #43301. Who'd fake being me anyway?
    25. Re:Godwinning this Topic by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is a bad thing. Freedom is based upon the ability to express your ideas without the threat of Government backlash. Some ideas can be called "bad", certainly, but they should not be preemptively squashed because of the possibility that they might turn into action.

      In this country, you have the right to say just about anything you like, including "nappy headed hoes." Nobody, however, has any obligation to listen to you or provide you with a venue to do so. Don Imus can stand on any street corner in the US and repeat that phrase over and over and he'll never wind up in jail over it.

      Societal disapproval is not the same as illegal. One thing I'm sick of hearing is that "free speech" means the freedom to say things without direct incarceration from the government, but all other consequences are ok; it's not.

      A very strong Grey area is where people who hold or express politically incorrect opinions, thoughts or ideas face dismissal from their jobs or made subject to extra-judicial violence. This is especially true of communist countries that have pretended to be democratic and claim to have freedom of speech etc where exactly this happened, thus preventing any dissent. It's unfortunately become true of many countries in Europe; people employed in the public service are told if they even think of voting for (arbitarily defined) far-right parties, they will lose their job. It's no longer the pretext of a secret ballot anymore, that's how close the EU is to becoming a socialist police state.

      I'm forced to post this as an AC because of the state of things in Britain. We have a prominent anti-immigration party that has been treated especially bad by the establishment, in ways I find abhorrent. Yes, there is the issue of "why do you want to help a racist party" etc. etc. but I've seen members of the nationalist right actually go to people's homes and listen to the concerns of ordinary people. They associate particularly well with the elderly who believe Britain has changed for the worse. I was sick to my guts when I saw far-left "anti-racist" groups act as if they're above the law. I've seen both verbal and physical abuse directed at elderly working-class whites from housing estates who are concerned about immigration and multiculturalism. Even a ballet dancer suffered horrendous abuse because of her political beliefs in the UK; note that these "anti-fascist" groups are also backed by supporters of the ruling Labor party who doesn't want the working classes opposing immigration. I'm now convinced who's the good guys and bad guys in this story: http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/entertainment/6241763.s tm

      Most people are often utterly repelled an extreme rightist group that wears combat boots and bomber jackets and holds marches peddling conspiracy theories and saying how much they hate niggers and communists. This is why most governments aren't concerned about them making any real political progress. A good portion of their members are probably also involved in the intelligence service to deliberately make such activities utterly repulsive to the general public.

      However, when you have respectable people wearing suits and talking about the social consequences of mass immigration and multiculturalism, and potential incompatabilities of Islam and the West, that's when the government gets scared. Most western governments have made themselves economically dependent on mass immigration against any real consent of their citizens and can't afford any political criticism on the issue. These are the people the government badly wants to shut up. Prosecuting someone wearing a suit and tie and talking to old ladies about immigration, crime and multiculturalism for hate crimes is much harder and politically damaging than prosecuting a Nutzi skinhead who goes around abusing non-whites.

    26. Re:Godwinning this Topic by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No one in Gitmo is there for speech, you ignorant sack of pig shit. I know whatever ideological web site you base your reality on told you otherwise, but, well, a tactical nuclear weapon couldn't blast away the fog in your mind.

      It's intellectual zeros like you that will eventually destroy civilization. People like you are brain cancers in the collective consciousness.

    27. Re:Godwinning this Topic by heinousjay · · Score: 1

      Freedom of speech doesn't mean freedom to be heard. Sorry. Maybe you want some other plain English added in there to make sure your voice is the loudest?

      --
      Slashdot - where whining about luck is the new way to make the world you want.
    28. Re:Godwinning this Topic by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      True... true... and I see more useful to ban racism than to ban some stupid swear words.

  14. Hate speech banned eh? how much do you bet... by Rosco+P.+Coltrane · · Score: 5, Insightful

    hate will grow as a result. This is a common human trait : when something is forbidden, people are attracted by it. Just ask any teenager smoking a cigarette in hiding.

    But here's the proof, imho : in the US, where you can pretty much say any old darn thing short of direct calls to violence, neo-nazi, KKKs and other white supremacist groups exist, express themselves (much to the dismay of the local populace around them) and... they look like a small group of retards. On the other hand, in Europe, where you can't say something even remotely critical of the jews, and where naziism has become taboo to the point where it's not even possible to discuss the official head count of the holocaust without landing in the pokey, antisemitism, racism and extreme-right groups are growing at an alarming rate. Why? because these people stay hidden, embedded in the general population, by force of law, instead of coming out and showing themselves as the numbskulls they are like in the US.

    So in short, banning hate speech will do nothing but promote hate. Well done EEC, some insight...

    --
    "A door is what a dog is perpetually on the wrong side of" - Ogden Nash
    1. Re:Hate speech banned eh? how much do you bet... by darkshadow · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Exactly, I want the idiots to expose themselves so I know who to avoid.

      --
      -Darkshadow (There was a thing called Heaven; but all the same they used to drink enormous quantities of alcohol.)
    2. Re:Hate speech banned eh? how much do you bet... by jcr · · Score: 1, Troll

      On the other hand, in Europe, where you can't say something even remotely critical of the jews,

      Sure you can, as long as you're cheering for head-choppers and burning a car while you do it.

      -jcr

      --
      The only title of honor that a tyrant can grant is "Enemy of the State."
    3. Re:Hate speech banned eh? how much do you bet... by owlnation · · Score: 1

      hate will grow as a result. This is a common human trait : when something is forbidden, people are attracted by it. Just ask any teenager smoking a cigarette in hiding.
      That's exactly what is happening. Germany is one of the countries where hate speech is prohibited. Neo-Nazism in Germany is growing stronger every day - but it's hidden from Government view by being restricted. Thus Government thinks it isn't as serious a problem as it really is.
    4. Re:Hate speech banned eh? how much do you bet... by jcr · · Score: 1

      That's precisely why the ACLU sends Jewish lawyers to defend the nazis who want to march through Jewish neighborhoods.

      -jcr

      --
      The only title of honor that a tyrant can grant is "Enemy of the State."
    5. Re:Hate speech banned eh? how much do you bet... by fsmunoz · · Score: 1

      Actually, you can see it the other way around: whenever you need to know something about the habits of humans in the past a list of prohibitions are a good place to start: they are generally enacted when what they are supposed to prevent is growing within a population.

      In the case of Europe it's not difficult to see why: in most countries there is a growing antagonism towards immigration - especially extra-european immigration, and this laws are a result of that. From wht I've heard the final law covers just about everything considered "racist", I think the main objective is to prevent the anti-immigration - which are generally racist at some level - to campaign. I have serious doubts that they will be able to stop this trend by decree though.

    6. Re:Hate speech banned eh? how much do you bet... by anti-pop-frustration · · Score: 2, Insightful

      In the case of Europe it's not difficult to see why: in most countries there is a growing antagonism towards immigration - especially extra-european immigration, and this laws are a result of that.
      No, hate laws in Europe are the results of a fascist government exterminating six million people and ruining a continent.

      Believing or not that banning hate speech is the right solution to stop fascism attaining state power is one thing, but please remember what Europe has gone through and why these laws were created in the first place.

      At some point europeans had to say "never again", and that's why most countries in europe have some form of "hate speech" law.
    7. Re:Hate speech banned eh? how much do you bet... by cabraverde · · Score: 2, Insightful

      This is the first time I've wished that moderation went above +5. Spot on. We need to show that hateful thoughts and rhetoric, where wrong, can be defeated by exposure and open discussion. We can't legislate our way to the truth! Why do so many people think that we can?

      So Fred Phelps thinks that God hates fags? Fuck him. Let him say what he wants. Let more enlightened Christians point out his doctrinal shortcomings, and let the general public ridicule him.

      So David Irving wants to sue against claims that he's a Holocaust denier? Fuck him. Let the courts decide on the facts, not the motive. Truth wins. When we begin criminalising unpopular speech, however wrong, we begin to rally support for these obnoxious little fucktards even from people (like me) who oppose pretty much everything they say. And more importantly, we deny them a fundamental freedom that we assume for ourselves.

      What's next? Publishing a paper with a flawed methodology is a criminal offence? Should Climate Change deniers (or proponents) be outlawed? Is this really the kind of society we want to live in?

      Generally I'm proud to be European. Not today.

    8. Re:Hate speech banned eh? how much do you bet... by einhverfr · · Score: 1

      Not only is that what is happening but what happened in the 1920's following the failed Nazi takeover when the organization was banned. Over 2 years of being banned, their numbers base grew faster than it had at any point in the past.

      I don't think it is about what is forbidden though. Basically banning hate (or any other) speech prevents the public debate about certain forms of ideas. Just as a vaccine may make you a little sick but trigger your immune system to prevent a more dangerous illness, so too does public hate speech allow for people to react against it, helping to prevent others from being harmed by it and thus preventing a larger problem. It is the marketplace of ideas as it functions best, but if we turn it into a black market of ideas, it is far more dangerous.

      Those who do not learn from history....

      Also, we have more freedom of speech in this country than in any other that I have seen. Canada comes close, but most European countries do not. Consider the footnote 1 from the Majority Opinion in Brandenburg v. Ohio:

      "Death to the niggers"

      "We intend to do our part"
      ...
      "Send the Jews back to Israel"

      These things were considered protected speech after being spoken at a KKK rally here in the US. I challenge you to find any other country where these statements are constitutionally protected to the same degree.

      Similarly, the UK, Indonesia, and some other countries still have heresy laws on the books. How 14th century....

      --

      LedgerSMB: Open source Accounting/ERP
    9. Re:Hate speech banned eh? how much do you bet... by AncientPC · · Score: 1

      The Phelps Family are a prime example of using free speech to polarize the community against them.

    10. Re:Hate speech banned eh? how much do you bet... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But here's the proof, imho : While you might find the following to be a proof, it is only based upon your opinion and not facts, so in that regard it is not a proof.

      in the US, where you can pretty much say any old darn thing short of direct calls to violence, neo-nazi, KKKs and other white supremacist groups exist, express themselves (much to the dismay of the local populace around them) and... they look like a small group of retards. I would counter that and say that is true in europe as well, you can say stuff like that (and still look like a idiot there as well).
      But don't kid yourself about the amount of free speech there is in USA, take a look at this recent event. There are far better examples, but I hope you get the point.

      On the other hand, in Europe, where you can't say something even remotely critical of the jews, and where naziism has become taboo to the point where it's not even possible to discuss the official head count of the holocaust without landing in the pokey, antisemitism, racism and extreme-right groups are growing at an alarming rate. This clearly show that you are not from europe, as it is a huge area split in several countries with different laws (more so if you accept Russia and Turkey as part of europe). And treating it as one country hides the truth, while some of your statements might be true in some countries, it is not true for the whole of europe. And hence you just make statements to suit your "proof".

      If you remember the brouhaha about the comics (from Denmark, in europe) which subject matter was muslims you have another indicator of the free speech you say doesn't exist. Since those were published by a newspaper that have done the exact same about jews and other religions (among other publishers since before WW2), as it isn't considered an offense there. Denmark do have laws about defamatory speech and pictures, but a far cry from what you try to show to be the case for europe as an unit.

      You might also want to studie history, it will show you why hate speech and other taboo are treated differently in USA and europe. To make it easy for yourself, just look at these four, jews, nazis, slaves and africans.
    11. Re:Hate speech banned eh? how much do you bet... by Lehk228 · · Score: 1

      but it's not working. antisemitism and racism has flourished in europe. the french riots, growth of germany's NDP, etc.

      by banning distasteful ideologies you ensure that conversion only goes one way. when neo-nazi beliefs are outlawed nobody openly debates their racists beliefs, they hold the ideas close and must remain paranoid of outsiders due to the danger of going to prison.

      with genuine free speech it is easier to prevent growth of racist groups since confrontations occur more frequently and as long as the anti-racists are on the side of reason they should win more conversion than the racists do.

      american hate groups know this and exploit it by promoting paranoia among members because the more their members are open about their beliefs the more likely it is that membership will decline as people find their beliefs indefensable.

      --
      Snowden and Manning are heroes.
    12. Re:Hate speech banned eh? how much do you bet... by ichigo+2.0 · · Score: 1

      ThinkOfThePhelps?

    13. Re:Hate speech banned eh? how much do you bet... by einhverfr · · Score: 1


      No, hate laws in Europe are the results of a fascist government exterminating six million people and ruining a continent.


      That is what they say, but it is not true.

      Germany has *never* had robust freedom of speech. One of the issues that helped lead to WWI was the fact that the German government could not believe that Serbia could endorse this funny notion of independence of the press. And in the Wiemar republic, Nazi literature was routinely censored. The Nazis censored things, and the republic after the Nazis has censored hate speech, austensibly for the reason you mention, but probably more likely because there is no history of anything else.

      --

      LedgerSMB: Open source Accounting/ERP
    14. Re:Hate speech banned eh? how much do you bet... by JesseMcDonald · · Score: 1

      No, hate laws in Europe are the results of a fascist government exterminating six million people and ruining a continent.

      Excessive preoccupation with pathological behavior is, itself, pathological. (Arthur C. Clark, 3001, slightly paraphrased)

      Europe in general seems to be obsessed with the world wars (not without reason, of course) and as a result they are gradually becoming that which they most detest. Perhaps one of the worst things about a war is that it tends to lead people to adopt the worst characteristics of their enemies without realizing it.

      --
      "The state is that great fiction by which everyone tries to live at the expense of everyone else." - Bastiat
    15. Re:Hate speech banned eh? how much do you bet... by Reziac · · Score: 1
      Coincidentally, last week's article by Ron Paul makes exactly those points:

      ...the nation remains incredibly sensitive about matters of race, despite the outward progress of the last 40 years. A nation that once prided itself on a sense of rugged individualism has become uncomfortably obsessed with racial group identities.

      ...It's disconcerting to see third parties become involved and presume to speak collectively for minority groups. It is precisely this collectivist mindset that is at the heart of racism.

      ...government as an institution is particularly ill suited to combating bigotry in our society. Bigotry at its essence is a sin of the heart, and we can't change people's hearts by passing more laws and regulations.

      ...Racism is simply an ugly form of collectivism, the mindset that views humans strictly as members of groups rather than individuals. Racists believe that all individuals who share superficial physical characteristics are alike: as collectivists, racists think only in terms of groups. By encouraging Americans to adopt a group mentality, the advocates of so-called "diversity" actually perpetuate racism. Their obsession with racial group identity is inherently racist.

      The true antidote to racism is liberty. Liberty means having a limited, constitutional government devoted to the protection of individual rights rather than group claims. Liberty means free-market capitalism, which rewards individual achievement and competence, not skin color, gender, or ethnicity.

      More importantly, in a free society every citizen gains a sense of himself as an individual, rather than developing a group or victim mentality. This leads to a sense of individual responsibility and personal pride, making skin color irrelevant. Rather than looking to government to correct our sins, we should understand that racism will endure until we stop thinking in terms of groups and begin thinking in terms of individual liberty.

      --
      ~REZ~ #43301. Who'd fake being me anyway?
    16. Re:Hate speech banned eh? how much do you bet... by fsmunoz · · Score: 1

      This isn't a troll. Perhaps to blunt, but *it is true*. Just take a bloody look at the riots in France FFS! Since the ones procaliming that Jews should be slaughtered are the "poor, socially forgotten" Muslim communities of Northern Africa origin that at the same time burn half of Paris there is no "hate speech" law, because lifting a finger against them would be "racist" and "against multiculturalism". The complete devirilization of Europe continues at a steady rate, and this new laws, even if someone has "good intentions" with them, are another weapon to render any critic of the current state of affairs jail-bait.

    17. Re:Hate speech banned eh? how much do you bet... by sita · · Score: 1

      But here's the proof, imho : in the US, where you can pretty much say any old darn thing short of direct calls to violence, neo-nazi, KKKs and other white supremacist groups exist, express themselves (much to the dismay of the local populace around them) and... they look like a small group of retards. On the other hand, in Europe, where you can't say something even remotely critical of the jews, and where naziism has become taboo to the point where it's not even possible to discuss the official head count of the holocaust without landing in the pokey, antisemitism, racism and extreme-right groups are growing at an alarming rate. Why? because these people stay hidden, embedded in the general population, by force of law, instead of coming out and showing themselves as the numbskulls they are like in the US.

      This is non-sense. In most European countries you can express antisemitic views without fearing retribution from the law, and you can openly deny the Holocaust (except for in a few countries) without ending up in jail. There is a definite difference, in the eyes of the law (of most European countries), to deny the Holocaust, and advocating another one.

      European antisemitism must be explained some other way.

  15. Can't really call it "godwinning" by sehlat · · Score: 0, Troll

    Laws like this make it clear that Europe has learned NOTHING from the lessons of the Nazis or Stalin.

    1. Re:Can't really call it "godwinning" by exp(pi*sqrt(163)) · · Score: 0, Troll

      Europeans learned not to go invading random countries for political gain back home. I think that Europe has done a much better job of learning from its imperialist history than the US.

      --
      Doesn't it make you feel good to know that our freedoms are protected by politicans, lawyers and journalists.
    2. Re:Can't really call it "godwinning" by owlnation · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Laws like this make it clear that Europe has learned NOTHING from the lessons of the Nazis or Stalin.
      Most of the countries pushing for this are, in fact, the countries that were indeed run by Nazis or Stalin - interestingly the UK and many of the Scandinavian countries are completely opposed to it.

      Sound familiar?
    3. Re:Can't really call it "godwinning" by that+this+is+not+und · · Score: 1

      All that means to me is that those countries were prone to Hitler/Stalin ideas in the past, and they're prone to them again.

    4. Re:Can't really call it "godwinning" by Chmcginn · · Score: 1
      You are aware that those Europeans started being imperialistic before the US even existed, right?

      If the US is still acting like this in 2400, you might have a point.

      --
      Have you been touched by his noodly appendage?
    5. Re:Can't really call it "godwinning" by exp(pi*sqrt(163)) · · Score: 1

      Yes, but the US has a nice clear European example to work from so let's hope it can learn this lesson in less than 400 years. After all, the US has done a pretty decent job of getting up to speed in many other aspects of its culture.

      --
      Doesn't it make you feel good to know that our freedoms are protected by politicans, lawyers and journalists.
    6. Re:Can't really call it "godwinning" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What that means is that the countries that were run by Nazis or Stalin do not want to accept the fact that they are just as fucking guilty for what happened as Hitler or Stalin.

      "Oh, it wasnt our fault, Hitler was a good speaker! I didnt know what I was doing when opened the gas vents, its all Hitlers fault! Its all his speeches, it wasnt me! I bear no responsibility for my actions, it was all Hitler I tell you! His speeches were so powerful I couldnt help myself!"

  16. Anything that removes the liberties of thought... by fudgefactor7 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    ...is something to which I must express my disdain. People shouldn't be afraid what they say will be illegal. Think what you like, speak how you feel, but do not play innocent: your words can call you to be held accountable--but that doesn't mean you have no right to speak them. Should anyone attpemt to silence you, your writings, your thoughts, your person--this is even more of a reason to speak louder. I would rather there were a thousand Hitler-wannabe's speaking openly, than one doing so clandestinely. The evil we see can be defeated; the evil we don't see can defeat us.

  17. Prohibition doesn't work. by JesseL · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Prohibition doesn't work for:
    Alcohol
    Drugs
    Guns
    Bad speech/thoughts

    All attempts to enforce prohibition result in oppressive government, reduced civil liberties for all, and greater dissemination of the originally prohibited contraband.

    --
    "Prefiero morir de pie que vivir siempre arrodillado!"
    1. Re:Prohibition doesn't work. by fiannaFailMan · · Score: 1

      Prohibition doesn't work for: Alcohol Drugs Guns Bad speech/thoughts All attempts to enforce prohibition result in oppressive government, reduced civil liberties for all, and greater dissemination of the originally prohibited contraband.
      What say we add to your list:
      • Theft
      • Murder
      • Rape
      All attempts to outlaw these things have failed to erradicate them. Shall we just give up and legalise them in the interests of freedom?
      --
      Drill baby drill - on Mars
    2. Re:Prohibition doesn't work. by JesseL · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Theft, rape, and murder are crimes that affect people beyond the criminal. The laws against these crimes don't involve any kind of prior restraint on the populace, intended to prevent the crimes from happening. You don't support the criminalization of hands, penises, or the infinite multitude of objects that could serve as murder weapons, do you?

      If someone actually does you harm, by all means call them a criminal.

      If the actions of someone hurt your feelings, gross you out, strike you as immoral, or irrationally frighten you: get over it, ignore them, and mind your own business.

      --
      "Prefiero morir de pie que vivir siempre arrodillado!"
    3. Re:Prohibition doesn't work. by fiannaFailMan · · Score: 1

      If the actions of someone hurt your feelings, gross you out, strike you as immoral, or irrationally frighten you: get over it, ignore them, and mind your own business.
      You say that, but, I don't think that 'hate speech' refers to somehting that 'hurts your feelings, grosses you out, strikes you as immoral, or irrationally frightens you." They're probably thinking of things that are likely to lead to violence against vulnerable groups. Someone farther up the page says that this is an example of Europe not learning the lessons of the Nazis. It is quite the opposite, the Europeans are very familiar with the power of words for good or ill and are probably just trying to make sure that they aren't used for ill.
      --
      Drill baby drill - on Mars
    4. Re:Prohibition doesn't work. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > If someone actually does you harm, by all means call them a criminal.

      So you agree that hate speech should be criminalized since it harms people emotionally.

      Note, if you say emotions don't count, then you're in favour of decriminalizing rape since that's the only *real* difference between consensual and non-consensual sex and why something like non-consensual kissing isn't criminalized.

      --
      All generalities are false, including this one.

    5. Re:Prohibition doesn't work. by BgJonson79 · · Score: 1

      I'm emotionally harmed by censorship.

      Now what?

      --

      There are four boxes used in defense of liberty: soap, ballot, jury, ammo. Use in that order.

    6. Re:Prohibition doesn't work. by JesseL · · Score: 1

      The problem is clearly NOT speech. The problem is "violence against vulnerable groups". Prosecute the people who initiate violence. Ignore the spiteful little morons that enjoy spouting of their hateful diatribes.

      Prosecuting someone like Fred Phelps would only make him a martyr.

      --
      "Prefiero morir de pie que vivir siempre arrodillado!"
    7. Re:Prohibition doesn't work. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Murder, rape, and theft are actions that harm other people while drugs, alcohol, guns and bad thoughts are not harmful in and of themselves. It is only when they are misused that they become a problem, and that misuse is most likely already covered by other laws. Possessing alcohol doesn't make you a drunk driver and driving recklessly and/or causing accidents is illegal no matter your BAC. Hating people because of their race/religion/whatever doesn't make you a murderer and murder is illegal regardless of your motivation.

    8. Re:Prohibition doesn't work. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Someone farther up the page says that this is an example of Europe not learning the lessons of the Nazis. It is quite the opposite, the Europeans are very familiar with the power of words for good or ill and are probably just trying to make sure that they aren't used for ill.

      You don't combat ignorance by trying to brush it under the rug. Expose it to light and let everyone see how bad it is. Trying to hush the Nazis wouldn't have changed anything.

    9. Re:Prohibition doesn't work. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It is quite the opposite, the Europeans are very familiar with the power of words for good or ill and are probably just trying to make sure that they aren't used for ill.

      And if in the process they also prohibit the use of words for good, well, that's a small price to pay.

    10. Re:Prohibition doesn't work. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "... I don't think ..."
      "They're probably..."
      "...are probably just trying to make sure..."

      Ya know, I think that when considering laws that restrict the free expression of thoughts and ideas you should probably not dismiss it with baseless assumptions about the good intentions of all those who will hold power throughout the entire existence of said laws. But I'm just some guy who likes reading history books, so I could be wrong...

    11. Re:Prohibition doesn't work. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "non-consensual kissing isn't criminalized."

      You most certainly can be prosecuted for that. Depending on the circumstances of course. A joking unsolicited kiss, doubtful. A forced kiss that someone was trying to push you away...you most certainly could be prosecuted for that.

    12. Re:Prohibition doesn't work. by JesseL · · Score: 1

      In reply to AC ^:

      What a moronic argument. By your logic the only difference between being mugged and giving some cash to a homeless guy is emotional.
      Theft is being deprived of you property without your consent. Rape is the sexual use of your body without your consent. Murder is the extinguishing of your life without your consent.

      Emotional trauma is determined by your own reaction to things, it is by definition done with your consent. It can be controlled by no one else. I suppose if you deny the existence of free will you could argue otherwise, but I tend to ignore people that claim they don't have free will.

      --
      "Prefiero morir de pie que vivir siempre arrodillado!"
    13. Re:Prohibition doesn't work. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > Theft is being deprived of you property without your consent.
      > Rape is the sexual use of your body without your consent.

      So if someone is playing Celine Dion full blast in a passing car, that would also be theft under your definition since it's auditory use of your ears without your consent.

      We do all sorts of things to each other without permission (tapping someone on the shoulder to say hello, pushing people out of the way of speeding bus, playing tricks on people, using a water gun, tickling someone unexpectedly). None of these are criminal unless they cause damage (either physical or emotional). In the case of Celine Dion music, it certainly would, but that's another story.

      While emotional trauma is determined by your own reaction to things, the law assumes that any rational person *would* be traumatized by rape and if you weren't then either you're in denial (in which case, the law steps in to help on your behalf) or you don't fully understand what happened to you (e.g. children, comatose patients). I personally don't see how it could be otherwise. If you were emotionally and physically fully able to fight (remember, it's nonconsensual) and fought and were raped anyway, how could you not be traumatized?

    14. Re:Prohibition doesn't work. by Headcase88 · · Score: 1

      "So if someone is playing Celine Dion full blast in a passing car, that would also be theft under your definition since it's auditory use of your ears without your consent."

      Actually that would fall under rape of your ears without your consent. Seriously though, I think most people can agree on a pretty distinct line between something that is an inconvenience or minor annoyance, and something that does serious physical or emotional harm. At least in most cases...

      --
      "When the atomic bomb goes off there's devastation...but when the atomic bong goes off there's celebraaaaation!"
    15. Re:Prohibition doesn't work. by argStyopa · · Score: 1

      "If the actions of someone hurt your feelings, gross you out, strike you as immoral, or irrationally frighten you: get over it, ignore them, and mind your own business."

      Or better still, you're free to call THEM whatever you like. However, they are equally entitled to ignore what you say.

      --
      -Styopa
    16. Re:Prohibition doesn't work. by Lehk228 · · Score: 1

      the NAZI party was banned in Germany, and that didn't stop them from taking power.

      --
      Snowden and Manning are heroes.
    17. Re:Prohibition doesn't work. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      hands, penises, or the infinite multitude of objects that could serve as murder weapons

      Am I the only one who, after reading this post, wondered how to kill someone with a penis?
    18. Re:Prohibition doesn't work. by slughead · · Score: 1

      You don't support the criminalization of hands, penises, or the infinite multitude of objects that could serve as murder weapons, do you?

      I thought only superman could murder someone with this penis.[1]

      References
      1. Malrats
      Brodie: It's impossible, Lois could never have Superman's baby. Do you think her fallopian tubes could handle the sperm? I guarantee you he blows a load like a shotgun right through her back. What about her womb? Do you think it's strong enough to carry her child?

    19. Re:Prohibition doesn't work. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Youre making some weird-ass assumption that rape is illegal because of the emotional trauma it can cause. Thats fucking absurd. The law assumes nothing about whether a reasonable person would be traumatized or not, because what is and isnt rape has nothing at all to do with how traumatized the victom was. She could be smiling and smoking a cigarette - if the sex was non-consensual, it was rape.

      If the crime of rape was based on some supposed measure of trauma, we'd soon be back in the days of "It wasnt rape, she really wanted it - look, shes not even traumatized".

      Pull your head out of your ass.

    20. Re:Prohibition doesn't work. by LupusCanis · · Score: 1

      http://www.nationmaster.com/graph/cri_mur_wit_fir_ percap-crime-murders-firearms-per-capita

      0.0279271 per 1,000 people for the USA - very little gun control
      0.00534117 per 1,000 people - gun ownership is compulsory and everyone has extensive firearms training through national service.
      0.00502972 per 1,000 people for Canada - some degree of gun control
      0.00102579 per 1,000 people for the UK - the nearest thing to total gun prohibition you get in any developed country.

      These three nations are very comparable, and I think that the trend tells us something, don't you? Namely that gun control and prohibition DOES work. However, an acceptable alternative is national service and extensive education on the subject. I don't think either will appeal to the Libertarian crowd.

      Alcohol ... well ... in a western country, yes, it's unviable to do so, but it works fine in Arabic countries where it's not really in the culture.

      And as for prohibiting bad speech ... it depends what the bad speech is. America is about the only country which defends pretty much all speech, many other developed countries have laws against hate speech. I don't see these countries descending into an Orwellian dystopia just yet. Do you? So, you're overreacting here. This is a worry because it's subjective, but it's far from what you make it out to be, it's just a well-meaning law that's not really precise enough.

      I'm guessing that you're an American libertarian, correct? ... well, in future, before making these blanket statements, please look at examples from outside the borders of the US. It shows that many of the ideas you find so abhorrent can, do and are working. I'm expecting not to get any markings up for this, because this has arrived late and will piss off all of the /. libertarians that hang around here, but, really ... don't carry ideas to extremes with no thought for how the world actually works.

    21. Re:Prohibition doesn't work. by r_newman · · Score: 1


      Funny how some random pronouncement with no supporting evidence to back most of its claims can be modded Insightful. Other than the US prohibition of alcohol, can you cite some examples please?

      Thanks.

      --
      Bzzzzzt..."AAAAaaaaarrrgh!!!" Thud.
    22. Re:Prohibition doesn't work. by moeinvt · · Score: 1

      "Namely that gun control and prohibition DOES work."

      It depends how you define something as "working". When you're focusing ONLY on crimes committed by people using firearms, sure, banning guns "works". When you focus on the overall amount of VIOLENT crime, gun control has the opposite effect. These statistics that gun control advocates always cite are misleading for multiple reasons.

      "Gun deaths" include suicides, accidents, cases of self defense, "gang warfare" and police shootings.

      Furthermore, looking only at "gun crime" completely ignores the well documented deterrent effect of lawful firearms ownership! How many stabbings, bludgeonings, rapes and home invasions are you willing to tolerate in order to prevent one firearms-related death?

      I completely disagree with your description of USA-UK-Canada as "similar". Why not compare the VIOLENT CRIME rates in Washington D.C. and the States of MA and NJ(near total gun prohibition) with the States of VT and NH (very little gun prohibition)?

      It will probably terrify the quivering anti-gun cowards in Europe and certain areas of the U.S. but where I live, ANY law abiding adult citizen can carry a concealed weapon with no special "permit". Guess what? Our crime rate is among the lowest in the nation. A mugging is a risky business when you look around the streets and realize that anyone might be carrying a firearm, and a home invasion (when the owner is around) is tantamount to suicide!

      Thank you very much for making a point that I always try to get across when I talk to people who are vigorous defenders of the First Amendment but are willing to sacrifice the Second: The people that want to ban firearms are the SAME PEOPLE who want to ban Free Speech as well!

    23. Re:Prohibition doesn't work. by JesseL · · Score: 1

      How about the colossal failure of the "war on drugs', and the crime rates in places like Washington D.C. that have near 100% bans on gun ownership?

      --
      "Prefiero morir de pie que vivir siempre arrodillado!"
    24. Re:Prohibition doesn't work. by Anspen · · Score: 1

      No it wasn't. The National-Socialistische Arbeiters Partei was quite legel. It even got the initial part of its power (about a quarter of the seats in parliament) through semi-democratic means (meaning the voting itself was relatively free but there was lots of intimidation).

    25. Re:Prohibition doesn't work. by LupusCanis · · Score: 1

      It depends how you define something as "working". When you're focusing ONLY on crimes committed by people using firearms, sure, banning guns "works". When you focus on the overall amount of VIOLENT crime, gun control has the opposite effect. These statistics that gun control advocates always cite are misleading for multiple reasons.

      Yes, because pro-gun people NEVER cite misleading stats, ever, do they? Like the "Oh, X banned guns and their gun crime rose after they did that" or "X has gun control and has lower gun crime rates than Y, but what they don't say is that in 1900 when neither had gun control, X still had lower gun crime rates!".

      And actually, rates of murders overall follow the same pattern. (http://www.nationmaster.com/graph/cri_mur_percap- crime-murders-per-capita). The exception is Switzerland but as everyone is given a gun by the government it's safe to assume that murder rate and murder with firearms rate are more or less the same there.

      United States: 0.042802 per 1,000 people
      Canada: 0.0149063 per 1,000 people
      United Kingdom: 0.0140633 per 1,000 people
      Switzerland: 0.00921351 per 1,000 people

      "Gun deaths" include suicides, accidents, cases of self defense, "gang warfare" and police shootings.

      "Murders with firearms" however, which we are talking about, would not definitely not count suicide and almost certainly wouldn't count accidents or self-defence either. I believe that those would both fall under manslaughter. Gang warfare and police shootings, yes, but I don't see why this alters the point at all. Certainly all of the other countries I've listed would have gang warfare and police shootings from time to time. Britain certainly does.

      Furthermore, looking only at "gun crime" completely ignores the well documented deterrent effect of lawful firearms ownership! How many stabbings, bludgeonings, rapes and home invasions are you willing to tolerate in order to prevent one firearms-related death?

      The murder rate follows the same pattern, as I have established.

      Burglaries - (http://www.nationmaster.com/graph/cri_bur_percap- crime-burglaries-per-capita) - seems to disprove my point? Wrong. Switzerland has the highest guns per capita in the world, everyone does national service and they're allowed to keep their guns at home after they do it, and most people do. Despite this, it has a higher rate of burglary than the USA, where gun ownership is (odd as it sounds) less. This would imply that how many people have guns has shit all to do with burglary rates and that this "deterent effect" only works when that gun is pointed at you at the time.

      Now, rape. (http://www.nationmaster.com/graph/cri_rap_percap- crime-rapes-per-capita). Canada has by far the highest rate, the USA is second, UK is third, Switzerland is last. No correlation, clearly. Robberies (http://www.nationmaster.com/graph/cri_rob_percap- crime-robberies-per-capita), UK highest, USA second highest, Canada and Switzerland far behind third and fourth respectively. Total crimes (no seperate stats for violent crimes, I'm afraid - http://www.nationmaster.com/graph/cri_tot_cri_perc ap-crime-total-crimes-per-capita) - UK, very slightly behind is the USA, Canada behind the USA by the same amount the USA is behind the UK, Switzerland fourth. Assault (http://www.nationmaster.com/graph/cri_ass_percap- crime-assaults-per-capita) - USA first, UK and Canada slightly behind, no info on Switzerland. Car theft (http://www.nationmaster.com/graph/cri_car_the_per cap-crime-car-thefts-per-capita) - UK, Canada, USA, Switzerland.

      So, what we've learned here is that gun control effects the murder with firearms rates and the murder rates, but has little impact on other crime either way. We've also learned that if you dislike crime,

    26. Re:Prohibition doesn't work. by callmetheraven · · Score: 1

      Mallrats didn't come up with this. Larry Niven did, in the short story "Man of Steel, Woman of Kleenex" in the compilation "All the Myriad Ways."

      --
      You can have my SIG when you pry it from my cold, dead hands.
  18. 2 wrongs don't make a right by notbob · · Score: 0

    Hasn't the EU ever heard the saying "2 wrongs don't make a right".

    While some people hate hate speech, that doesn't make it wrong for people to be able to express their opinions.

    Censorship is wrong, in any way shape and form.
    I may disagree with what you have to say but I'll defend to the death your right to say it.

    I'd rather have an internet full of neo-nazi's and hate groups then people trying to tell me what to say & think.

    Censorship is worse then racism, I'd rather be killed physically then controlled mentally.

  19. I think you can pretty clearly define hate speech by hellfire · · Score: 4, Insightful

    First, let me say I'm an American. Second, let me say that I think the constitution is a great thing, but it's by no means perfect, which why it's important that the constitution can change and can be re-interpreted. Third, I think you can clearly define "hate speech" in the current culture and there's no reason we shouldn't make an effort to stop it.

    To me hate speech is a severe form of slander and libel which is pushed upon one entire ethnic group or race. I think laws for hate speech are possible as long as you put strict requirements on it. Should I be able to walk down the street and call you a N*****? Legally, yes I should be able to. Should I be able to create a book detailing with no real scientific proof, that african americans are an inferior race of stupid people who should be shot an hanged on site for merely existing? Absolutely not. To me it's an extention of the same slander and libel laws. I could walk down the street and call you an asshole if you cut me off, but if I cook up some lies and speak about them publically or write an article on the web about you just to damage your reputation and make it harder for you to keep or find a job, then that should be illegal.

    No society is absolute. Americans hold up the constitution as the ultimate black and white definition of what should and should not happen, but as time marches on, people evolve and grow ever more savvy about how to game the system.

    And to those who think that the hate speech would evolve into squashing all free speech are offering up a red herring. Libel and slander as they are now are laws that limit your freedom to speak your mind, because in those cases you are hurting someone else. Same with yelling fire in a crowded theater. Freedom of political and social speech can been preserved just fine. Free speech is not a simple black or white philosophy and we forget exceptions and how we frame them when look at the freedom of speech.

    The EU countries already have bans on hate speech, as does Canada and probably others. Different countries deal with different problems differently, and the US, while it has a strong protection of freedom of speech, also has problems with evil reactionary groups who are allowed to exist and spread what I consider the most evil of lies under the banner of free speech. I don't see the EU collapsing now because they crack down on hatemongers and I don't see it happening any time soon either.

    --

    "All great wisdom is contained in .signature files"

  20. Hate speech by Arthur+B. · · Score: 3, Funny

    You hateful hating haters, I hate you with hatred!

    Rights disappear whenever people stop using them. So I suggest we let go on the hate speech in this specific thread and have a hateful conversation (you fucking nerdy retards)

    --
    \u262D = \u5350
    1. Re:Hate speech by Commander+Doofus · · Score: 2, Insightful
      So I suggest we let go on the hate speech in this specific thread and have a hateful conversation

      Hey Slashdotters, which is better, Linux or BSD? How's about emacs vs. vi? PS3 vs. Wii? Gnome vs. KDE? Best distro out there? Gun control: good or bad? What's hands down the very best language out there?

      There, that should do it.

      --
      Want to improve your life? This guy will show you how!
    2. Re:Hate speech by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hey Slashdotters, which is better, Linux or BSD? How's about emacs vs. vi? PS3 vs. Wii? Gnome vs. KDE? Best distro out there? Gun control: good or bad? What's hands down the very best language out there?

      There, that should do it.


      Hey! None of those things managed to piss me off. Now I feel left out. You insensitive clod!

      1> Spread hate speech
      2> ?
      3> Profit!

    3. Re:Hate speech by that+this+is+not+und · · Score: 1

      At this point, unfortunately, many Linux users don't even know what vi or emacs are.

    4. Re:Hate speech by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I am retard, you insc^Wincens^Winsenset^Wdumbhed!

    5. Re:Hate speech by scottrocket · · Score: 1

      Why that's hate speech! Can't you & all the other hate speakers simply agree with me on all things? The world would surely be a sunnier place ;>

    6. Re:Hate speech by shon · · Score: 1
    7. Re:Hate speech by Reziac · · Score: 1

      Yeah, let's kill all the slashdotters, they're nothing but a bunch of losers, fit only to be exterminated! Everyone pitch in and kill a slashdotter, right now! Let's purify geekdom for all time!!

      [waiting]

      [tapping foot]

      Damn, we're all still here. I guess "hate speech" isn't all that effective after all.

      --
      ~REZ~ #43301. Who'd fake being me anyway?
  21. Re:I think you can pretty clearly define hate spee by kabdib · · Score: 4, Insightful

    "Should I be able to create a book -- ?"

    Yes. Absolutely. End of story.

    --
    Any sufficiently advanced technology is insufficiently documented.
  22. Re:I think you can pretty clearly define hate spee by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Should I be able to create a book detailing with no real scientific proof, that african americans are an inferior race of stupid people who should be shot an hanged on site for merely existing?" People express harsh opinions all the time. You can't be a little bit pregnant and you can't have a right to free speech "except for" yada yada.

  23. Why this is a problem ... by Syncerus · · Score: 3, Insightful

    The core issue here is that we ultimately end up with a government sanctioned list of approved ideas. Any idea not on the approved list becomes anathema. In any sane society, the government has no business deciding on the merit of individual ideas. It exists to exercise the existing ideas and will of the electorate.

    Remember, freedom to choose is the freedom to make bad decisions; there is no controversy in making good decisions.

    --
    "Man is nothing without the works of man" -- Helvetius
    1. Re:Why this is a problem ... by lennier · · Score: 1

      "there is no controversy in making good decisions."

      Actually, there often is.

      --
      You are not a brain: http://books.google.com/books?id=2oV61CeDx-YC
  24. Re:Anything that removes the liberties of thought. by fiannaFailMan · · Score: 1

    I would rather there were a thousand Hitler-wannabe's speaking openly, than one doing so clandestinely.
    A million dead jews might disagree, and I think that's where the Europeans are coming from. Let's not forget that free speech unchecked led the continent to ruin in the 1930s/40s. Never understimate the power of the spoken word. One man in front of a microphone can be a very powerful thing for good or ill.
    --
    Drill baby drill - on Mars
  25. Re:I think you can pretty clearly define hate spee by JesseL · · Score: 4, Informative

    Libel and slander, like yelling 'fire' in a crowded theater, are not crimes of speech. They are crimes because of the actual harm they cause (such as monetarily verifiable damage to a professional reputation or physical injuries caused by a panicked mob).

    We already have laws for the things you are talking about, involving things like inciting violence.

    How often have you heard about a case where someone caused actual harm to anyone, that went unprosecuted, that would have been a violation of your vision of a hate speech law?

    --
    "Prefiero morir de pie que vivir siempre arrodillado!"
  26. damn by AlgorithMan · · Score: 1

    damn, how can I talk about microsoft then?

    --
    The MAFIAA is a bunch of mindless jerks who will be the first up against the wall when the revolution comes
  27. They shouldn't. They should promote hate speech. by Etherwalk · · Score: 1

    There is little argument nearly so good against bigotry as the exposure of that bigotry in its naked form. You want to see something that will sicken, and make you realize how truly small-minded these people are? Visit the forums of white supremacists, anti-semites, or anyone that such a law would legitimately be used against.

    Show people the worst malformed logic and ranting and hatred of that world, so they know better to check themselves of its beginnings.

  28. I told you not to be so stupid, you moron by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Should I be able to create a book detailing with no real scientific proof, that african americans are an inferior race of stupid people who should be shot an hanged on site for merely existing? Absolutely not."

    So if I write it down in my computer, it's okay, but if I print it on my printer, and call it a book, I've slandered "a group"?

    That's so retarded I've got to think you're the product of a bad private education (or none at all). Right now, all of your teachers are slitting their wrists rather than be shamed by what you're saying.

    There's no such thing as hate speech. You can't define it in any kind of meaningful way. It comes down to "if it makes somebody feel bad, it's hate speech".

    You're worse than a KKK guy. You want to suppress free speech, and wrap it in the guise of being reasonable. You're all in favor of free speech, as long as it doesn't offend anyone. Pansy. Freedom is dangerous. It should scare the crap out of you. It should offend you. It's exciting. If you want to be non-offended in your safe little cocoon, might as well get out the razor, take some vicodan and slit your wrists.

  29. Re: Teh Topic by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I ****ing hate pot noodles. I find their very existance to be repulsive. Am I now an evil bastard because there's the possibility that I might one day shoot one of these bastard snacks?

  30. Re:I think you can pretty clearly define hate spee by gillbates · · Score: 5, Insightful

    So you can define hate speech.

    And we could probably agree on what is acceptable and not.

    But, the effect of an a priori prohibition speech based on its content damages society as a whole.

    • Those who hold errant and hateful views are not known - as they are afraid to express their views.
    • Those who hold errant and hateful views are never held accountable for their views. The topic discussion of discussion is prohibited. Instead, their hatred turns into action, and then the evil manifests itself in ways far worse than name-calling.
    • Those who hold errant and hateful views in secret never have their views challenged or corrected - that is, prior to their arrival in court. Even a rational person can grow up racist if their views on racism are never challenged. Societies which encourage open and unlimited discourse provide a mechanism for reform of would-be offenders without ever having to resort to legal proceedings.
    • Those unafraid to express their opinions can appeal to government for change, rather than having to resort to violent revolution.
    • The prohibition of certain topics of discussion prevents the study and greater knowledge of the subject, and withholds legitimate research. Furthermore, it prevents legitimate social progress through changing of public opinion.

    The battle over free speech isn't merely about public statements. It is also a battle over how best to address the problem of troubled individuals, who, while not criminal (yet), exhibit pathological tendencies. Without freedom of speech, we would have to wonder if everyone was out to get us. With freedom of speech, I have a reasonable assurance that I'm on good terms with others because they are free to let me know if they hate me or love me, or are merely indifferent. Hence, our collective sense of security and civil stability is very much tied to our freedom of speech.

    --
    The society for a thought-free internet welcomes you.
  31. Re:I think you can pretty clearly define hate spee by Elyas · · Score: 1

    I wonder how many people that got inflamed by this post read the name of the poster's website....

  32. Re:I think you can pretty clearly define hate spee by rabbit994 · · Score: 1

    Those who would give up Essential Liberty to purchase a little Temporary Safety, deserve neither Liberty nor Safety. -Possibly Franklin

    The boisterous sea of liberty is never without a wave. - Thomas Jefferson

    You don't see EU collapsing because they crack down on hate mongers but you do see them putting up cameras and proposing DNA databases. Little steps at a time. Hitler didn't come to power either in one day, he took gradual progress steps till it was too late.

    If you want to write a book about how Asians are devil race and problem with America and use some crappy facts to back it up, go for it. Same 1st Amendment that gives you the right to write such a book gives everyone else the right to write a book calling you a crackpot.

    What are you going to do when that "evil revolutionary group" has now been declared to be ACLU or NRA which you might be a member. (At least NRA will be armed)

  33. How long? by nurb432 · · Score: 1

    Ancient history.

    --
    ---- Booth was a patriot ----
  34. Treat Me Nice by Some+New+Person · · Score: 1

    Hello. I am new. I hope everyone treats me well. I am pretty sensitive.

  35. Heinlein Quote by sconeu · · Score: 1
    Heinlein says it again:"

    For the first time in my life, I was reading things which had not been approved by the Prophet's censors, and the impact on my mind was devastating. Sometimes I would glance over my shoulder to see who was watching me, frightened in spite of myself. I began to sense faintly that secrecy is the keystone of all tyranny. Not force, but secrecy...censorship. When any government, or any church for that matter, undertakes to say to it's subjects, This you may not read, this you must not see, this you are forbidden to know, the end result is tyranny and oppression, no matter how holy the motives. Mighty little force is needed to control a man whose mind has been hoodwinked, contrariwise, no amount of force can control a free man, a man whose mind is free. No, not the rack, not fission bombs, not anything---you can't conquer a free man; the most you can do is kill him.
    == John Lyle, "If This Goes On..."
    --
    General Relativity: Space-time tells matter where to go; Matter tells space-time what shape to be.
    1. Re:Heinlein Quote by sconeu · · Score: 1

      Damn. Meant to post AC -- don't want karma for this.

      --
      General Relativity: Space-time tells matter where to go; Matter tells space-time what shape to be.
  36. Re:I think you can pretty clearly define hate spee by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Thats the rub. Who gets to decide what is legitimate criticism and what is slander?

    If I publish a book that says Blacks have lower average IQ and back it up with scientific studies, am I afoul of your proposed law? Is it automatically assumed that all people are 100% equal and that any stated deviation, by its nature, is 'hate'?

    What about the holocaust? What if I believe it did not happen, or did happen but the numbers were exaggerated and want to publish my ideas with some interpretations of evidence and history to back up my claim? Many people are in jail right now for doing just that.

    These kinds of laws are severe assaults on objectivity and freedom of conscience as well as freedom of intellectual pursuit. Many people are more interested in keeping people from being offended and protecting ideologies from being questioned because it may hurt feelings or question widely accepted dogma.

  37. Re:I think you can pretty clearly define hate spee by exp(pi*sqrt(163)) · · Score: 1
    > ...you can't have a right to free speech "except for" yada yada.

    Yes you can.

    --
    Doesn't it make you feel good to know that our freedoms are protected by politicans, lawyers and journalists.
  38. Re:I think you can pretty clearly define hate spee by fiannaFailMan · · Score: 4, Insightful

    How often have you heard about a case where someone caused actual harm to anyone, that went unprosecuted, that would have been a violation of your vision of a hate speech law?
    I'm thinking of some short Austrian guy with a funny moustache back in the 1930s...
    --
    Drill baby drill - on Mars
  39. In the words of Harrison Ford... by SARSpatient · · Score: 1

    Not black and white. Right and Wrong.

    You are right that the Constitution is a living document, open to interpretation by the Supreme Court. However, stilfling free speech no matter how reprehensible, goes against the core tenet upon which the United States was founded. Once you hand over to the Government the power to decide who can say what, democracy will have failed. It becomes a slippery slope, and all it would take is another 9/11 for the Government to expand the definition of hate speech to unforseen things. Pre-9/11 would you ever have thought wire-tapping, secret prisons, and torture would be openly condoned by our Government? The Bill of Rights are not subject to withdrawl, they are Rights, not priviledges. As people like to say, freedom isn't free. And one of the prices you pay for freedom is giving the most vile and evil citizens their voice too. They also say the price for freedom is eternal vigilence, and that too is apropos. Just because you allow hate groups to voice their thoughts, does not mean you don't keep close tabs on them.

    1. Re:In the words of Harrison Ford... by fyngyrz · · Score: 1
      The Bill of Rights are not subject to withdrawl, they are Rights, not priviledges.

      Sadly, the bill of rights, as well as large sections elsewhere in the constitution, have been withdrawn in terms of having the force of law. There was no authority given to do so, but nonetheless, it is done and over with. The only amendment that remains untrampled is #3.

      --
      I've fallen off your lawn, and I can't get up.
  40. Euope vs. US Hate Comparisons unfair by alexhmit01 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    There is a HUGE cultural gulf between the US and Europe with regards to minorities. The United States, from the days of the colonies onward, has generally tolerated heretics and offshoot groups outside of local areas. While a town might have had an official religion, or even a county, it rarely expanded beyond a small local area. In addition, from the founding of the republic, the concept of all people here being citizens (except for Indians and black slaves) helped form that culture. In Europe, Jews were not considered citizens until relatively recently, and while having to contribute taxes to the crown were generally left alone complete with their own courts for civil and criminal matters, and communities. Similar rules applied to other groups of "others."

    With Napoleon's conquests, the idea of people as citizens took hold, but it was culturally foreign, and integration never happened. Combine this with relatively small areas with different languages and religions, and you have homogenous countries that have been reared to hate the other because one was often at war with them.

    Indeed, the initial efforts of the Nazi's were not the extermination of the Jews (although that was the end goal, they took stages), the first effort was to separate the assimilated Jews out of German culture, restoring their status as "others" to be distrusted by the people. Before they rounded my ancestors up into camps, they prohibited inter-marriage, and forced them to be separated from the culture. This was an important first step, because in Germany, the Jews were highly assimilated into the local culture, indeed the Reform movement was born in Germany setting the goal to assimilate, which is why so much of Reform cantorials and other German Jewish customs are borrowed from Lutheran protestant Curches through the assimilation there. In order to rile the people of Germany up against them, they needed to draw a line between Germans and Jews, which naturally made Jews the enemies and ripe for being attacked.

    Europe's problems of racism and xenophobia stem from a culture of being at was with other groups and having them nearby. In contrast, in the United States, the former Slave and Jim Crow states, which have had a much shorter history of integration, suffer from more severe attitudes towards different races. It's not that racism and persecution doesn't exist in former Union States (it does, and may often be more severe), but the portion of the populace that would support race based laws is more minor.

    I don't think that one can simply point to the US's First Amendment and Europe's post-War speech regulations and attempt to show that the latter causes growth of neo-nazism and the former stops it. I think that we have yet to see Europe get 3 generations from killing people for being "other" and Americans outside of the deep south haven't fought over the matter in 150 years and even in the deep south the civil rights movement was accomplished with relatively minor violence. Sure their were showdowns over integration of schools, but no pogroms. Even the worst abuses of people by the KKK pale in comparison to the European's behaviors, including wars over churches, kidnapping Jewish children if someone claimed the child was baptized, prohibitions of land ownership, etc.

    There is a massive cultural gap between the US and Europe in these regards, the Europe's cultural elites are so removed from it they don't understand it. While the gulf is smaller in the US, our elites understand it enough to make fun of those that hate others, which is probably better than ignoring it... call someone an idiot or wrong, they fight back, just mock them, and they get embarrassed...

  41. Good by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Let's start with the bible, the most hateful book ever written!

    Every EU citizen should write to their elected whore in support of this attack on Christian bullshit.

    1. Re:Good by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Excerpt from this page:

      there exists a minority of faithful fundamentalists who take the Bible literally and act out or condone the atrocities in the Bible. This must be a very small minority - I'm living in predominantly catholic country (90% of population) and didn't found a single person like this.

      What about Quran? All what is written in this book HAVE TO be taken literally because it's a word of Allah.
      http://www.thereligionofpeace.com/Articles/Quran_H ate.htm
      http://www.islamonline.com/cgi-bin/news_service/fa twah_story.asp?service_id=449

      /Joss
  42. Re:I think you can pretty clearly define hate spee by JesseL · · Score: 1

    There were quite a few nazis tried for various war crimes and crimes against humanity. If Hitler hadn't punched his own ticket straight to hell, you can bet that the Nuremberg Trials would have done it for him.

    --
    "Prefiero morir de pie que vivir siempre arrodillado!"
  43. Re:I think you can pretty clearly define hate spee by fiannaFailMan · · Score: 1

    There were quite a few nazis tried for various war crimes and crimes against humanity. If Hitler hadn't punched his own ticket straight to hell, you can bet that the Nuremberg Trials would have done it for him.
    True, but the human race lost a hell of a lot of people by the time that happened.
    --
    Drill baby drill - on Mars
  44. Re:I think you can pretty clearly define hate spee by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Why exactly are you afraid of someone publishing a book making claims about another group of people? Under what moral basis do you believe this is dangerous to society?

    What kind of people make up 'evil reactionaries'? You say you can make clear exceptions, yet you cannot define exactly what you mean.

    If I believe in a country that has one languages, bans foreign immigration, and preserves the rights of the native citizens of that country, am I an evil reactionary?

    For the record, I am 100% against libel and slander laws. I think that people should judge statements on their merits and by who said them. Yelling 'Fire' in a crowded theater is not a free speech issue at all, its an issue about intentionally and willfully causing social disorder and putting public safety at risk.

  45. Re:Anything that removes the liberties of thought. by Who235 · · Score: 1

    Let's not forget that free speech unchecked led the continent to ruin in the 1930s/40s.


    Come on, man. That is probably the lamest thing I've heard all day. Just because someone used the power of speech and propaganda for the purposes of evil certainly doesn't mean speech was to blame.

    That line of reasoning will get people into way more trouble than whatever these laws are supposed to prevent.
  46. Re:Anything that removes the liberties of thought. by owlnation · · Score: 2, Informative

    Let's not forget that free speech unchecked led the continent to ruin in the 1930s/40s.
    Actually - and we should NEVER forget, it was 5.7 million Jews, and about 13.5 million Europeans in Total. The holocaust was truly awful, but it is still only a part of the true evil that Germany protracted in the 1930's and 1940's. (you can add in another 10 million if you want to include the American, and Pacific related deaths which Germany is either directly or indirectly responsible for)

    Having spent some time living in Germany, and more than a little touched by the horrific things the Nazis did myself, let me point out that freedom of speech in the 1930 and 1940's did NOT do that.

    It was simply a streak of evil that ran through the Axis, and one that is still not fully resolved today. That streak was exploited by the DDR for example - freedom of speech was not something East Germans knew about, but murder, torture and discrimination were still common right up to 1989.

    Today Nazism is rampant in the former Eastern German states (nearly 1.8 million votes at the last election) and the current policy on banning free speech in Germany disguises what a truly significant and growing problem it really is.

  47. Not a simple matter by Plutonite · · Score: 1

    I would love to jump on the bandwagon here, and I do think this is a silly move, but it is not always easy to pass judgments like this about free speech issues. Slightly offtopic, but this comes up alot on slashdot:

    In places where the concerned population is largely homogeneous in their beliefs, interests..etc, the public voicing of sentiment that is aggressive towards the said populace/causes them considerable disturbance is not always easy to defend. This is because the "hate speech" is seen as an affront to the nation as a whole, and the government is supposed to be a collective representation of that nation. Defending the right to that kind of speech in public places/widely publicized media would mean that the government would have to protect the speaker against an overwhelming majority of its own populace, and in recent times that kind of defense becomes food for extremism of all kinds.

    The solution is not always to uphold free speech defiantly. That would be a great ultimate goal, but it doesn't happen overnight. Solution: education. The said public needs to understand and embrace the notion of free speech fully before a government can protect those rights.

    In this case of course, the internet does not apply, and the proposed law is stupid, taken from any angle. Also, that this is being proposed in Europe of all places is very, very sad. What happened to France, champion of liberty, and the eastern block which remembers the horror of totalitarianism to this day? Haven't they learned from their post-Nazi policies that have produced nothing but xenophobia and racism in their countries?

    1. Re:Not a simple matter by fyngyrz · · Score: 1
      Haven't they learned from their post-Nazi policies that have produced nothing but xenophobia and racism in their countries?

      No. And they aren't going to, either. Neither have we, as is amply demonstrated by the current highly eroded state of the bill of rights, as well as other parts of the constitution. Any other questions?

      --
      I've fallen off your lawn, and I can't get up.
  48. Try starting with this man's output: by cyborg_zx · · Score: 1

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Louis_Theroux's_Weird _Weekends

    The man's style is great - just let them say all kinds of crazy, no need to be aggressive back, they'll do all the work.

  49. Rape == offensive speech?!?!?! You're an idiot! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If you really think rape is the same as getting your feelings hurt by what someone says, you really are an idiot.

    I'd tell you to go play in high-speed traffic, but that solid block of stone you call your head would be dangerous to the automobiles. Why do I get the feeling your mother gave you a toaster and an extension cord for tub toys?

  50. Real hate speech...Toward Europeans. by crhylove · · Score: 0, Troll

    I REALLY FUCKING HATE when people try to ban ANY speech. Freedom of speech is THE cornerstone to democracy. That being said, let's hope all the

    crackers,
    jews,
    niggers,
    spics,
    fags,
    dikes,
    micks,
    guaps,
    and camel jockeys that live in the EU can see the horrible fallacy in banning any kind of speech as nothing short of authoritarianism, and a return to Nazi days.

    Maybe all of you miss old Adolf after all? Maybe us Americans should've let him run the place a bit longer so you wouldn't try and pull this retarded crap.

    Idiots.

    rhY

    --
    I hold very few opinions. I hold information based on observation and fact. If you wish to disagree, please use facts.
    1. Re:Real hate speech...Toward Europeans. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >> Freedom of speech is THE cornerstone to democracy

      I believe that it's not only the cornerstone of democracy, but the cornerstone of freedom itself.

      But let's not forget that there is nothing new in the EU limiting freedoms. It's already illegal in many of the EU member states (and perhaps the EU in general) to deny the holocaust. This goes beyond just limiting speech, but it make illegal thought, as well.

    2. Re:Real hate speech...Toward Europeans. by Glowing+Fish · · Score: 1

      Since this is Slashdot, shouldn't you use some slurs for certain technical subcultures, like Mac users?
      Oh, looking again, you did mention "fags"

      --
      Hopefully I didn't put any [] around my words.
    3. Re:Real hate speech...Toward Europeans. by linuxdoctor · · Score: 1

      I suspect that freedom of speech was somewhat freer during the NS-Zeit in Germany than it is currently anywhere under 'political' correctness. Anyway, so-called 'hate-speech' laws is not really an attempt to stop the hate but an attempt to control political discussion about those subjects that the alleged haters care about. These tend to be focused around immigration, migrant workers and refugees. If you can control and manage what people talk about on a particular subject, you can also control the outcome. This is what 'political' correctness is really all about.

    4. Re:Real hate speech...Toward Europeans. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you lazy American bastards would have 'let him run the place a bit longer', the Soviet Red Army would have completed the task of destroying Nazi Germany all on their own. Pity you have no since of history when you go mouthing off about how America is some sort of hero and the sole savior of Europe.

    5. Re:Real hate speech...Toward Europeans. by crhylove · · Score: 1

      LOL, yeah, true Stalin probably would've won the war on his own by sheer volume of Mongolian cannon fodder. All these great replies and I'm score 1: Troll. LOL America was definitely the savior of England, at least, and for that I don't think the rest of the world really thanks us, nor should they.

      rhY

      --
      I hold very few opinions. I hold information based on observation and fact. If you wish to disagree, please use facts.
    6. Re:Real hate speech...Toward Europeans. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why is this modded troll? No one seen Lenny? Honestly, this is the way to deal with racism. I'm dead serious: if you're simply not offended by the slurs then they can't use them against you. That's the only power those words have.

    7. Re:Real hate speech...Toward Europeans. by yoprst · · Score: 1

      Oh, man! You've just doubled my vocabulary...

    8. Re:Real hate speech...Toward Europeans. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "America was definitely the savior of England, at least"

      Remind me again how America saved England/Britain?

      AFAIR, America stood well back when Britain was fighting in it's 'darkest hour'. In 1940 America generally assumed Britain would loose (as, indeed, did many people in Britain). American big business was working closely with the Nazis, it was very much in America's interest to see the British Empire trading zone dismantled, and the US ambassador was reporting back that Britain was about to go under.

      The US provided no free help. It sold weapons (obsolete destroyers) when it was in it's interest to do so. Churchill calculated that if Britain could survive the first onslaught it could hold Germany to a draw and eventually blockade it into stalemate, but that other big land powers would be needed to beat it. This is exactly what happened with Napoleon. In both cases Russia was the land power which did it. America simply waited until it could see who was going to win, and joined in on that side. Italy did the same, a little earlier, and picked the wrong one.

      Imagine a situation without America. We might not have had a D-Day, or would have had a smaller UK/ANZAC one. Either way, the Germans would have fallen back in front of the Russian steamroller - we would just have had an Iron Curtain across Europe further west.

      America is essentially a coward nation - it wants to make money, and does not like risk. It will not go to war with an opponent of similar power. Look at all the wars it has started in the last 50 years. Somalia and Grenada are not exactly powerful. Why should it have risked itself to 'save England'?

    9. Re:Real hate speech...Toward Europeans. by Rakarra · · Score: 1

      He didn't mention hippies. He probably should have.

  51. All inclusive by iminplaya · · Score: 1

    True freedom of speech INCLUDES the freedom to offend. Otherwise, you must accept that it is NOT free. That's a fact, Jack!

    --
    What?
    1. Re:All inclusive by KwKSilver · · Score: 1

      Well said, best post on this topic. If I had mod points ....

      --
      If you want your life to be different, live it differently.
  52. Re:it's "speech," dammit! by lordholm · · Score: 3, Funny

    Sorry, but nazis are banned, it does not matter whether you are a real nazi or a grammar / spelling nazi, the law is blind you know. I have just called Europol to report your transgressions, have a nice day!!!

    --
    "Civis Europaeus sum!"
  53. And other 'sense' speech... by myowntrueself · · Score: 1

    How long before the definition of "hate" is expanded to speech politicians don't like?

    I'm sure that its just a matter of time before speech/writing involving other sorts of emotion are similarly banned...

    The UK is already effectively banning speech critical of the government...

    They have a thing called an "Antisocial behavior order" or "ASBO" with which they can slap a restraining order on someone, restraining them from pretty well anything the judge feels like, eg raising your right hand above your waist. Violate the terms of the ASBO and you go straight to jail until you agree to comply.

    Naturally, since (as Tony Blair would say) criticising the government is antisocial behavior ("You can't get much more antisocial than attacking the government") any form of dissent could be subject to an ASBO.

    I am sure that hate is just one of the emotions which the government (and EU) will save us from.

    --
    In the free world the media isn't government run; the government is media run.
  54. Re:I think you can pretty clearly define hate spee by extra+the+woos · · Score: 1

    "Should I be able to create a book detailing with no real scientific proof, that african americans are an inferior race of stupid people"

    Yes. And the rest of us will make fun of you for being an idiot. You will be mocked, your friends will leave you, your family will alienate you, and your ideas will be shot down as coming from a complete retard. You will be fired from your job for being a hateful bastard. Kids will point at you. You will die alone and scorned. Your ideas WILL GO NOWHERE. ....But if it was illegal...

    "Psst, this book is illegal. The government doesn't want you to read this." What does that make you wanna do? It makes you want to read it.

    If you wanna get powerful off of hateful ideas, it's probably a lot better for you to if they are illegal. It basically automatically gives you credibility and attracts followers.

    --
    replacing it with NEW Folger's Crystals! (lets see if they notice the difference)
  55. Re:I think you can pretty clearly define hate spee by JesseL · · Score: 1

    Obviously we should try to prevent people from murdering others (preferably we should encourage people to avoid letting themselves be murdered), but saying that we could prevent murder by restricting people's right to free speech is just ignorant.

    You can't erase hatred, intolerance, and bigotry by forcing it into the shadows; you can only combat it with enlightenment.

    --
    "Prefiero morir de pie que vivir siempre arrodillado!"
  56. Re:it's "speech," dammit! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    In the US we have freedom of speech and we have the freedom to speak, but we do not have freedom of speach because there is no such thing! Freedom of speech is nice, but as you just found out we have mod-points here...

    -1 Troll
  57. Re:I think you can pretty clearly define hate spee by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    >And to those who think that the hate speech would evolve into squashing all free speech are offering up a red herring.

    So very untrue. You bring up Canada as an example. Well then...

    You should read up on how Canada's hate speech and obscenity (both of them, since the court cases based on either are very intertwined) laws came to be and the people they have affected. You would be very surprised as to the impetus for the such laws (Feminism) and that the law has effectively banned portions of the bible from public display. But it gets much better than that, Canada's courts so very well exemplify the slippery slope of hate speech laws:

    R. v. Keegstra, regarding a teacher in a public school teaching hate to students.
    Leads to R. v. Butler, regarding obscene item sales,
    Which becomes R. v. Krymowski, a case where a small group of neo-nazis protesting Gypsies are put on trial for it.

    Within only two decades we go from only prosecuting truly terrible crimes (Trying to teach students to hate) to prosecuting someone for selling bootlicking videos, to prosecuting protesters.

    But wait, it gets even crazier here:

    Scott Brockie, a printer, chose to refuse business from a pro-homosexual group as it would violate his religion to print their publication. He was subsequently prosecuted for this.

    Wait -- banning the bible, banning the right to refuse service, banning porn toys isn't enough insanity for you?

    Did you know that Canada's version of Al-Jazeera (which was banned for YEARS in this country, as by the request of the B'nai Brith due to "hate speech") requires censors sit on a hot button all day to delete anything offensive? Seriously. This was only done to prevent another protest to laws that effectively ban paying viewers from the viewing of foreign for-profit TV stations in Canada that won't register with the CRTC (and, therefore, be liable under hate speech and obscenity laws).

    Our hate speech laws ban more than just Ernst Zundel, you know.

    Boards of Canada summed it up pretty well:

    "Now that the show is over, and we have jointly exercised our constitutional rights, we would like to leave you with one very important thought: Some time in the future, you may have the opportunity to serve as a juror in a so-called obscenity case. It would be wise to remember that the same people who would stop you from viewing an adult film may be back next year to complain about a book, or even a TV programme. If you can be told what you can see or read, then it follows that you can be told what to say or think. Defend your constitutionally-protected rights. No one else will do it for you. Thank you."

    Freedom of speech is an essential liberty. Stop trading it for peace of mind!

    If the US had hate crime laws, the CBC would be illegal there by now. Sometimes I the US did have the same laws--it would create the equivalent of a Berlin Wall for media trade between us, since that would also require you to refuse to play more than 65% foreign content on your radio stations. (A bit off topic, but any limit on speech is just a nice way of saying "censorship").

    Where will Canada be in 20 more years with laws lik

  58. Does this mean that Slashdot is out? by Glowing+Fish · · Score: 1

    Where would Slashdot be without hate speech?

    --
    Hopefully I didn't put any [] around my words.
  59. Off topic? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Doesn't the moron moderator know part the reason we are having hate speech is because of this corrupt foreign policy?

  60. Is your hate politically correct hate? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Is your hate politically correct hate?

    Do you believe that racism is wrong unless you hate white people?

    Do you believe that sexism is wrong unless you hate men?

    Do you believe that sexual discrimination is wrong unless you hate heterosexuals?

    Do you believe that religious intolerance is wrong unless you hate Christians?

    Do you believe that freedom of speech involves censoring offensive non-Politically Correct speech?

    Do you believe that DoubleThink is hard and that DoubleThink is easy?

    Do you keep such an open mind that your brain fell out?

    Are you a hypocrite and a bigot? Do your friends praise you for it and call you morally superior? Do you think that your bigotry makes you a better person than others?

  61. Re:I think you can pretty clearly define hate spee by OakLEE · · Score: 1

    I think you can clearly define "hate speech" in the current culture and there's no reason we shouldn't make an effort to stop it.

    Classifying speech is inherently hard to do. The problem comes because brightline definitions in these cases are inherently overinclusive or underinclusive in speech they cover. Lets take you definition for example:

    To me hate speech is [1] a severe form of slander and libel [2] which is pushed upon one entire ethnic group or race. [emphasis added]

    Using your definition, "severe forms of libel or slander" would be allowed against homosexuals because they are not an "ethnic group or race." "Fine," you say, "let's extend the definition to include sexual orientation." Now you have just protected pedophiles from "severe forms of slander and libel" because they can claim their views on sexuality as a sexual orientation. How about little people? Can I call them midgets? How about the handicapped? Can I advocate for their extermination because they are a drain on the resources of society? I hope this illustrates the problem with drawing a bright line.

    Then we get to the question of whether banning "severe forms" of libel or slander is enough to stop hate speech. You suggested the following is hate speech because it is libelous:

    Should I be able to create a book detailing with no real scientific proof, that african americans are an inferior race of stupid people who should be shot an hanged on site for merely existing? Absolutely not.

    How about if someone were to write a books saying that African Americans were inferior (and shoudl be shot) because they were more likely then the general population to have sickle cell anemia, and because they score demonstrably lower on standardized tests and have lower graduation rates? There is nothing libelous or slanderous about that because assertion of inferiority is based on true facts. This would be completely acceptable under your definition (i.e., not hate speech), and, if anything, would have a greater effect then mere libelous hate speech because the assertion is based on verifiable facts.

    My point here, isn't to disparage homosexuals, African Americans, or little people. It's merely to illustrate why a brightline definition for hate speech is so hard to come up with. I'm just a second year law student and I eviscerated your definition. Imagine what a real lawyer or the ACLU could do. Heck, the Supreme Court has been trying to draw lines around the First Amendment for 60 years, and they haven't even been able to come close to defining and delineating types of speech. Speech is inherently hard to define or classify; that's why the best solution is not to define or regulate it and let the market place of ideas work its magic.
    --
    The sun beams down on a brand new day, No more welfare tax to pay, Unsightly slums gone up in flashing light...
  62. here's a thought by Class+Act+Dynamo · · Score: 4, Interesting

    If I may paraphrase Dennis Miller from his pre-conservative-ideologue days on this subject:

    Suppression of speech produces people like Hitler; free speech produces people like David Duke.

    Not allowing speech that is hateful just drives it underground where such ideology can fester. I would much prefer to let people blow off their steam in freely and in a controlled manner where everyone can see who they are. I have never understood this presumed right to not be offended. I know that hearing hearing a racial slur can be quite painful (having endured a couple in the last few years) but do these people really think they are going to stop racism by banning some expression of that racism. All it will do is lull the target race into thinking everything is okay when in reality the hate is still there, just hidden. This is a bad idea, it is.

    --
    My other computer is a Jacquard loom.
    1. Re:here's a thought by AlXtreme · · Score: 1

      Suppression of speech produces people like Hitler

      Nice sound-bite, but not true. Hitler rose to power during the time of the Weimar Republic, which was very liberal. Hitler was thrown in jail once after he tried to overthrow a state-government, but not because he was suppressed.


      It is interesting to read about the time in which Hitler did rise to power. The problems of the people were mostly social-economic however, which drove the people to Hitler during the great depression.


      If the EU wants to avoid another Hitler, it should focus on equality and making sure everyone can earn his/her daily bread.

      --
      This sig is intentionally left blank
  63. we need REAL tolerance by Original+Replica · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The GP said "condeming immoral behaviour" and you translated that as "hate homosexuals". (BTW my christian church does not consider homosexuality immoral) It is becoming more and more common that , stating your morals = hate. Unless of course those morals are the same as your morals. Then it's just helping to better society. Everyone likes to talk a good game about appreciating diversity and tolerance, but it's self deluding bullshit and this kind of law proves it. Tolerance is accepting someones right to have a different moral code or lifestyle than you. If it becomes criminal to publicly have a moral code that disagrees with a segment of society, then that law is the opposite of tolerance. Is the public defamtion of heroin addicts a hate crime? What about the legal and social punishment of those who practice beastiality? ...OH, we're only applying the new law or people we disagree with. How tolerant.

    This law will become the equivelent of the UnAmerican Activites Committee. Welcome to the Witch Hunt.

    --
    We are all just people.
    1. Re:we need REAL tolerance by myowntrueself · · Score: 3, Interesting

      BTW my christian church does not consider homosexuality immoral

      So what? Your church doesn't hold with Leviticus 20:13 then?

      Or maybe your church just throws out the entire old testament?

      If so then can I join? I always felt that the old testament was contrary to the christian spirit... (Kings 2:24 for example, the bit about the bears slaughtering children, the list just goes on and on).

      --
      In the free world the media isn't government run; the government is media run.
    2. Re:we need REAL tolerance by einhverfr · · Score: 3, Interesting

      So what? Your church doesn't hold with Leviticus 20:13 then?

      I am not a Christian, nor am I the poster of the GP.

      However.... Christian tradition and even the writings of Paul are horribly conflicted over the place of Leviticus in Christianity. On one hand, you have Paul condemning homosexuals by inventing words based on Leviticus 20:13 (and thus inherently citing Leviticus as moral authority). A certain portion of Christians side with Paul on this matter. On the other hand, you have Paul suggesting that the Law (presumably including Leviticus) is not the judge of things and a certain portion of Chistians side with Paul on this issue. Those of us who while not ignorant of Christian doctrine are not Christians ourselves look on with amusement.

      The problem is not only that those ideas are mutually exclusive, but also that Leviticus equally condemns wearing clothing made from two different kinds of material, plowing the corners of a field, trimming the corners of one's beard, and breeding mules. While one can cite Christian tradition to get out of eating kosher, the only way out of these other prohibitions is to side with the idea that the Law (including Leviticus) does not bind Christians. In doing so, you reject Leviticus 20:13.

      I suppsose that Christians reading this who believe in Leviticus will find that Cotton/Acrylic shirt feeling slightly uncomfortable now..... But most of these CHristians are beard-shavers anyway...

      --

      LedgerSMB: Open source Accounting/ERP
    3. Re:we need REAL tolerance by Original+Replica · · Score: 1

      No. We don't. It is actually written in our stated guiding priciples that we do not judge or devalue people for their sexual preference. So yes, please join us sometime. We are in New York City. http://www.fortwashingtonchurch.org/ Someone please mod the parent back up, that's not a troll, it's a question.

      --
      We are all just people.
    4. Re:we need REAL tolerance by myowntrueself · · Score: 1

      yes, please join us sometime. We are in New York City.

      Well I'm not in the USA, nor am I likely ever to go there, unless its to help out in the next revolution... But its good to know that there are christians who are prepared to stand up for their principles even if it means throwing the old testament right out of the window. I always felt there was something seedy and malignant about it.

      --
      In the free world the media isn't government run; the government is media run.
    5. Re:we need REAL tolerance by heinousjay · · Score: 1

      Well I'm not in the USA, nor am I likely ever to go there, unless its to help out in the next revolution

      Please don't. Your help isn't necessary or welcome. We do fine on our own here.

      --
      Slashdot - where whining about luck is the new way to make the world you want.
    6. Re:we need REAL tolerance by myowntrueself · · Score: 1

      Please don't. Your help isn't necessary or welcome. We do fine on our own here.

      Sure thing, bud. Just being neighborly. If you ever need a hand with that there revolution thing, just shout.

      --
      In the free world the media isn't government run; the government is media run.
    7. Re:we need REAL tolerance by Skunkhead · · Score: 1

      Just to clarify: "hate speech" here doesn't mean the same thing as the hate crime discussion in the US. TFA mentions anti-semitism, islamophobia etc. So if you think, by saying "Kill all jews", someone is stating their morals, then fine.
      Don't get me wrong, I'm as sceptical against any censorship as the next guy. But the issue here is saying "the holocaust didn't happen, but i think we should make it happen", and not "i think homosexuals are gay".

    8. Re:we need REAL tolerance by faloi · · Score: 1

      Reading the article linked off TFA about an additional protocol that people want ratified has a line about "racist and xenophobic material" means any written material, any image or any other representation of ideas or theories, which advocates, promotes or incites hatred, discrimination or violence, against any individual or group of individuals, based on race, colour, descent or national or ethnic origin, as well as religion if used as a pretext for any of these factors
       
      It's dangerous ground as "promoting or inciting" are tough to prove. Writing something in your blog about the deaths of North African teenagers being the cause of national riots could be construed as likely to incite or promote discrimination against North African's. It may be factually accurate, but that might not matter.

      --
      "It is a miracle that curiosity survives formal education." -Albert Einstein
    9. Re:we need REAL tolerance by mpe · · Score: 1

      However.... Christian tradition and even the writings of Paul are horribly conflicted over the place of Leviticus in Christianity. On one hand, you have Paul condemning homosexuals by inventing words based on Leviticus 20:13 (and thus inherently citing Leviticus as moral authority). A certain portion of Christians side with Paul on this matter. On the other hand, you have Paul suggesting that the Law (presumably including Leviticus) is not the judge of things and a certain portion of Chistians side with Paul on this issue. Those of us who while not ignorant of Christian doctrine are not Christians ourselves look on with amusement.

      We also have to assume that these documents were written by the same person and have not been altered.

      The problem is not only that those ideas are mutually exclusive, but also that Leviticus equally condemns wearing clothing made from two different kinds of material, plowing the corners of a field, trimming the corners of one's beard, and breeding mules.

      As well as plenty of other things. Most of which may have actually made sense to people living South West Asia in the Bronze Age...

      While one can cite Christian tradition to get out of eating kosher, the only way out of these other prohibitions is to side with the idea that the Law (including Leviticus) does not bind Christians. In doing so, you reject Leviticus 20:13.

      Indeed many parts of The Torah which enumarate rules.

    10. Re:we need REAL tolerance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But the issue here is saying "the holocaust didn't happen, but i think we should make it happen", and not "i think homosexuals are gay".

      Thing is that the "holocaust denial" lable tends to be applied very broadly. Including people who are skeptical of some of the claims made or that have noticed that there has been plenty of propaganda and even outright fraud uncovered surrounding various claims.

  64. QQ!! by mucsdnop · · Score: 1

    In the words of the great ones... QQ more EU n00bs!! (If you deny hate in a text format what do you think it will become?)

  65. Re:Anything that removes the liberties of thought. by plasmacutter · · Score: 1

    Wow.. what gaul you have speaking for me (a jew).

    I dont like what they say, but i'll be damned if im going to step on their right to speak, because once its gone for them it could be gone for me too.

    --
    VLC FOR MAC IS DYING! IF YOU DEVELOP, PLEASE SAVE IT!!
  66. ThoughtCrime and 1984 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    One would do well to actually read 1984 (as opposed to just scream its title every time the Right does something you don't like).

    1984 was an comment by Orwell on the Communists. Orwell, himself a socilaist, learned to hate and fear the Communists after the Spanish Civil War.

    Big Brother was an obvious stand-in for "Uncle Joe" Stalin.

    In 1984 you will see:
    * The Ministry of Truth, the media manipulation of news and history (ala the recent Reugter's Photoshopping of pictures from the Israel/Lebanon war; Dan Rather's falsification of documents)
    * NewSpeak, the changing of language to make certain thoughts impossible (ala the politically correct language redefinition we experienced in the 70s/80s e.g. "differently abled" for "handicapped", in Sweden "husmor" replaced by "hemmafru" or their English cognates "housewife" with "stay-at-home-mom")
    * DoubleThink, the simultaneous holding of two or more mutually exclusive ideas (e.g. "homosexuality is something you are born with" and "homosexuality is a personal and private decision"; or "racism is always wrong" and "affirmative action is the right thing to do")
    * ThoughtCrime, making the mere ability of thinking something a crime. You see this all the time in Hate Crime legislation (what murder wasn't already a crime ... with a life penalty?) and University speech codes (University "Free Speech Zones" are a wonderful example of NewSpeak, DoubleThink, and ThoughtCrime wrapped into one)
    * also the breakdown of the family and sexual relationships (which has less obvious parallels but "PolPot & the child turns their parents in" (like Winston's neighbor) would be an example)

    We really shouldn't be surprised by the EU and The Left's fascination with this kind of behaviour. Orwell was it nearly 50 years ago.

  67. Re:I think you can pretty clearly define hate spee by YakDaGringo · · Score: 1

    If you're arguing that the distinction between "hate speech" and "speech inciting violence" is too weak to merit legislative protection, I would offer an adaptation of the following argument, one I heard recently and found compelling.

    Hate crimes are terrorism. We single both of these out because there are two crimes being committed: the first is the violence committed against the person(s) and the second is the threat of violence to the group that person represents. That person is targeted- and that group is threatened- because the violence contains an additive, symbolic threat of violence against the rest of the group.

    I expect you will argue that I've entirely missed your point, since you're concerned with speech and I'm talking about crimes. The symbolism of the violent act requires the violent act by definition, and the threat of violence alone cannot carry that symbolism. However, violence rarely emerges from nothing, and by definition the "hate crime" emerges from a culture of hatred. The conditions for the possibility of the hate crime are created by the speech we're discussing; this is also the forum where such crimes are celebrated and the executors- sometimes literally- elevated. The speech is carefully crafted to encourage individual action against a group for grievances- most imagined- endured by another. Legally, it is very, very hard to tie the particular crime to a "culture of hate"; those responsible for creating the culture that begets directed violence- the organization ensuring the "threat" intended by violent hate crimes is clearly understood by the target group- are unlikely to face any penalties, ever. That doesn't seem quite right.

    This observation doesn't recommend any particular type of law that might thwart such speech, but it is a sound argument for discouraging it, somehow. At the very least, it recommends against regarding all speech as equally benign (the "only actions matter" argument).

  68. Re:it's "speech," dammit! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Thank goodness you're here. You've saved Christmas!

  69. Imus's rights were not violated by el_munkie · · Score: 1

    He could, and still can, say anything he wants. He was dropped because sponsors were dropping ads on his show in large numbers. His freedom of speech was not violated, his employers just made a prudent decision.

  70. Slipperly slope? This is a pit of misery. by fyngyrz · · Score: 2, Funny

    I'd just like to say that I HATE the EU for doing this.

    --
    I've fallen off your lawn, and I can't get up.
    1. Re:Slipperly slope? This is a pit of misery. by renegadesx · · Score: 0, Funny

      And I got modded flamebait? You pot of racist misery should be banned from the Internet, the govt says so

      --
      Make SELinux enforcing again!
  71. Obama? Hitlery by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Hitlery Rodham-Clinton?

  72. Re:I think you can pretty clearly define hate spee by einhverfr · · Score: 1

    Let me suggest some different actions:

    Should I be able to give a speech saying "Kill the niggers... we intend to do our part!" as long as I am not at the same time moving to make such promises a reality? Absolutely.

    Should I be able to write a book saying that Jews are out there to take over the world, have already done so with core institutions and are going to establish a dictatorship? Absolutely.

    Should I be able to write a book suggesting that Islam was founded by someone who invented the religion to satisfy the needs of his war-based empire? Absolutely

    However, when people start booing at me, when people start sending me hate mail, or suggesting that I am a bad person because I write or say such things, should I be able to hide behind the idea that I was "only excersizing my freedom of speech?" Absolutely not. Their speech should be as free as mine. And in the US, I guarantee that any of the above ideas would not win me too many friends.

    And just because you *can* write or say something doesn't mean there won't be consequences.

    BTW, most countries have a sort of wishy-washy definition of free speech (and this includes all of Europe and the Islamic world too, and even the US prior to Whitney, Yeates, and Brandenburg). In this idea freedom of speech is inherent provided that it is not a part of a "bad tendency" that is dangerous to society (to paraphrase Oliver Wendle Holmes). The problem is not just that this is a slippery slope but that it also denies the society the corrolary to the freedom of speech, which is the right of rebuttal.

    --

    LedgerSMB: Open source Accounting/ERP
  73. Contradiction! by Headcase88 · · Score: 1

    Yeah, but in 1984, the gov't arranged a "two minutes hate", while in real life, the governments are actually banning hate. Explain that one!

    Oh, right. The doublethink :/

    --
    "When the atomic bomb goes off there's devastation...but when the atomic bong goes off there's celebraaaaation!"
    1. Re:Contradiction! by Khaed · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Hate is always okay if you hate who the government wants you to. The two minute hate was hate for who Big Brother wanted them to hate, not hate for whichever group was whining and paying politicians at the time.

      (rant coming) That's what this is. And it's ridiculous -- I have friends, lots of them, that belong to various groups that are maligned by other groups for ridiculous reasons. Everything from sexual preference, to religion, to skin color (and in one special case, all three, the poor bastard, he's got like eight groups hating him). But I still think banning any sort of "hate" speech is stupid.

      It's a band aid. Most forms of hate speech come from ignorance. Fix that, you fix the people buying into the hate speech. At least, the ones that can be saved. The rest are fucking idiots. And banning hate speech won't fix it. It'll just push it under ground, and like marijuana in the United States, give it a "cool" status. Forbidding something naturally creates curiosity. Let the morons rant and rave and expose themselves for the fools they are so we know who to avoid.

      I'd rather know who the racist/sexist/religionist/homophobic assholes are, than not. It makes life a lot easier for me when someone says "well you know how 'those people' are" and nods at me knowingly. No, asshole, I don't, and you can take your baseless hate elsewhere.

    2. Re:Contradiction! by faolan_devyn_aodfin · · Score: 1

      You were actually about half way there to answering your own question. You see the government doesn't want to ban hate, they just want to make the appearance of doing so. What they are really doing is redirecting people's hatred to something else, like say global warming, teh terror1sts!1!, liberals (perhaps conservatives depending on the country), communists, fascists, moslems, and such.

      It's really a complicated question with no real clean cut answer. But you are on the right track even if it was sarcasm.

      --
      Pagan? Geek? Check out #paganism on Freenode IRC
    3. Re:Contradiction! by mpe · · Score: 1

      Let the morons rant and rave and expose themselves for the fools they are so we know who to avoid.

      That'll also help identify exactly who the ranting and raving fools actually are. It's quite possible for "hate speach" restrictions to be used to silence opposition and critique of rather distasteful points of view.

      I'd rather know who the racist/sexist/religionist/homophobic assholes are, than not.

      It also helps if they can still be identified as such, even if their bigotry is politically correct or they are a member of some "minority/historically opressed group".

  74. Anecdote by el_munkie · · Score: 4, Interesting

    The reason you don't ban hate speech, at least, the reason beyond the fact that it leads to the suppression of all speech, can be illustrated by something that happened in my town about a year back.

    I live in Austin, Texas. Texas is a conservative state, and Austin is a liberal city that also happens to be the capitol of our state. The means that groups from across the state congregate here to protest, rally, and so on. Well, about a year ago, the Ku Klux Klan of Texas decided to hold a rally in front of our city hall. For weeks beforehand, there was debate over whether the city was right to grant a permit for the rally to the KKK. They decided to in the end. And what happened?

    Maybe ten Klan members showed up. Maybe. They were greeted by something close to a thousand protesters as cops watched on in riot gear. There was no altercation, it was just made clear for the crowd, the media, and the people at home that the Klan was exactly how they perceived it: a group of ugly, not-so-bright rednecks that is very few in number.

    The lesson? Let these people expose themselves for who they are, the population's mean attitude towards such things has shifted to the point where even ultraconservatives find groups like the Klan repugnant, and they'll only diminish the popularity of their cause. If the rally had been suppressed, it would have only served to reinforce the perception that Klan members [and whites in general] are being persecuted, and groups like this operate by convincing economically disadvantaged people that they are being persecuted.

    The solution to hate speech is to not listen. An even better solution is to listen and laugh.

    1. Re:Anecdote by fyngyrz · · Score: 1
      For weeks beforehand, there was debate over whether the city was right to grant a permit for the rally to the KKK.

      Let me solve that for you. They weren't right. Because the KKK do not need a permit to assemble under any circumstances. Freedom of assembly is guaranteed at the federal level by the 1st amendment; the 14th amendment says that Texas (and every other state) has to obey the first amendment and all the other amendments as well.

      Of course, "right" has nothing to do with government these days. "Corrupt" and "coercive" are the words that are most apt.

      --
      I've fallen off your lawn, and I can't get up.
    2. Re:Anecdote by el_munkie · · Score: 1


      Let me solve that for you. They weren't right. Because the KKK do not need a permit to assemble under any circumstances. Freedom of assembly is guaranteed at the federal level by the 1st amendment; the 14th amendment says that Texas (and every other state) has to obey the first amendment and all the other amendments as well.


      They did since it was held on state property. An informal gathering on Capitol grounds would have been fine, but an event that requires diversion of traffic or the use of amplified sound requires a permit here, which I have no real problem with as long as anyone can get a permit.

    3. Re:Anecdote by fyngyrz · · Score: 1
      They did since it was held on state property

      Not in the sense of constitutionally, they didn't - there is no authority to curtail the freedom to assemble that derives from the constitution; it is explicitly forbidden to the fed, and to the states.

      I realize perfectly well that both the fed and the state have made unconstitutional laws that use coercion to illegitimately take this right from the citizens. But these are illegal laws. Here's the 1st amendment:

      Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government for a redress of grievances.

      The constitution, of course, applies to the feds, mainly. However, amendments 1 through 10 (the bill of rights) is applied 100% to the states by the 14th amendment. So that means that the above 100% applies to Texas; shall make no law. Perfectly clear. Now, this can be changed by a specific procedure that amends the constitution. That hasn't been done for assembly, with or without petitioning, and it hasn't been done for any of the rest of the 1st either, so there is literally no legitimate law that restricts any of these rights. It can't be legitimate, because the only authority available is the constitution, and when they don't have that, they don't have anything.

      --
      I've fallen off your lawn, and I can't get up.
    4. Re:Anecdote by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      For me, living in the EU, that constitution means nothing much.

      Here's how I see it: everybody has the right to hold a rally, doesn't matter if it's the KKK or any other extremist group. But a rally has consequences. If there will be a lot of people then you might need to detour traffic, make room and whatnot. If the city government expects violence (a sad thing, but the government has to be realistic) there must be riot troopers. In any case there probably should be a few policemen to observe even when it's expected to be peaceful.
      Basically, preparations have to be made.

      So no, I don't see a problem with the KKK being required to get a permit, as long as they are guaranteed not to be subverted. This has nothing to do with ideology but with practical considerations.

      Let me ask you this: WHY do you feel it is wrong that they have to get a permit, besides the fact that it's in the constitution? Because if that's the only reason you have then -no offense intended- that sounds like dogma to me.

      BTW, illegal law is an oxymoron. A law can be non-legitimate but, by definition, not illegal.

    5. Re:Anecdote by fyngyrz · · Score: 1
      Let me ask you this: WHY do you feel it is wrong that they have to get a permit, besides the fact that it's in the constitution? Because if that's the only reason you have then -no offense intended- that sounds like dogma to me.

      OK, several things. First, I have no particular objection to permits in principle; for the very reasons you mention, and a few others like them. However, the constitution is the only line of authority that exists for my government; in order for them to be operating legitimately, everything they do must comply with that document. So, if they want to say (for instance) that assembly requires a permit, but permits must be issued on request within so many hours or days, then they must amend (change) the constitution so that they have the authority to make such a law. There is a procedure for them to make such changes, they aren't by any means locked into the current state of affairs. Now, you observe that this is a small matter, and (in the case of the loonies in the KKK) it may well be, but in the case of a serious grievance needing to be presented to the government, it isn't a small matter, and the reason that the constitution guarantees freedom of assembly is specifically so that the government cannot undermine that situation. There's another problem. Let's say that it is entirely reasonable, whatever change they want to make. Regardless of what it is, lets just agree up front that it is 100% benign. Still, if we allow laws that do not follow the constitution in one area, where is the justification for us to say "no" in another area, such as restricting free speech, or removing the right to a jury trial? This is why they must make the changes according to the correct procedure before they can make such a law. That way, they will be in compliance. The procedure itself can be found here, under "Amendment."

      The bottom line is, the government must act within its legitimate authority. If it does not, then it is telling citizens what to do without any authority, and all that is left at that point is coercion, that is, force or the threat of force. The founders of our nation were well experienced with coercive government, and the constitution was their attempt to see to it that the rest of us would not have to experience such a thing. It would work out, too, if our government would stick to the constitution, but as George W Bush says, "it's just a goddamned piece of paper" and at this point in time, it plays only a shadow of the role that it was intended to. This is a crisis that most of the country is unaware of because they aren't even familiar with the constitution, much less have an understanding of how it is supposed to authorize governmental authority.

      --
      I've fallen off your lawn, and I can't get up.
    6. Re:Anecdote by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Alright, that makes sense. The way you said it it sounded (to me anyway) like you don't want to change it either simply because it is there.

      I guess I'm used to a different concept of constiution too; I believe here in the Netherlands the constitution has only been changed twice.

  75. Stupid idea by JustNiz · · Score: 4, Insightful

    If there's one thing that history has shown us is that banning something from the mainstream doesn't make it go away, in fact it makes it more cool and alternative.

    Anyway one mans hate speech is another's fight for freedom.

  76. HEY!!!! by axia777 · · Score: 1

    I thought Europe fought hard to prevent fascism in WWII against the Nazis. Now they are turning to fascism to fight hate? How in any way does this make any sense? It is just crazy!!!

    1. Re:HEY!!!! by wboelen · · Score: 1

      It's mostly a reaction against fascism. A lot of people feel like they made it happen by not acting against it. These days they somehow think they can stop it by prohibiting it. But let's face it: if a fascist movement gets as big as the NSDAP was, there's no stopping it. There surely must be better ways to battle this problem, if it even exists.

      Oh and, I think you guys going OMG!HITLER!FASCISM!STALIN!111!! are a bit overreacting. Which of course doesn't invalidate the situation at hand, it's just a bit of an extreme reaction.

  77. I'm all for free speech but... by esocid · · Score: 1

    I'm all for free speech, but when it incites violence against specific people, ethnic groups, or whatever it may be, that's when it crosses the line. I've posted this before, but about a year ago a there was an incident in Warsaw where a man was beaten and stabbed by some skinheads who got his info off of an anti-socialist website run by neo-nazis that posts photos, addresses, and phone numbers of "antifascist activists" which used to be loacated at www.redwatch.info and now has several domains probably due to some ddos attacks. Those pricks deserve alot worse. It would be nice to see such hate inciting sites banned, but I'm a little wary of possible excessive use of it.

    --
    Absolute power corrupts absolutely. indymedia
    1. Re:I'm all for free speech but... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Those pricks deserve alot worse"

      That hate speech lands you in jail, son.

      Oh, wait, I forgot, you were inciting violence against someone the European governments disapprove of. It's okay then.

    2. Re:I'm all for free speech but... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The thing is that in this instance these skinheads incited violence. Yes, they should be punished for that. When they posted his information and more or less said 'go beat this guy up' they did something that is illegal; they caused violence.

      The point is that they should have the right to post their poorly researched essays which 'prove' that foreigners are unworthy on their own site. It doesn't cause violence. It's their opinion. Certainly, it's a retarded opinion, but it's their opinion and it's their right to hold it and to express it.

    3. Re:I'm all for free speech but... by demon+driver · · Score: 1

      The point is that they should have the right to post their poorly researched essays which 'prove' that foreigners are unworthy on their own site. It doesn't cause violence. It's their opinion. It's not quite that simple. There is a straight correlation between the amount of publicized hate speech and actual violence against the targeted victims. Hate speech actually does cause violence. The more such speech gets publicized, the more those racist groups think that their ideas and actions were publicly accepted and the less individual racists restrain themselves in their real acts of violence. It's mainly a question of whether to attach more importance to free speech or to the health of the people belonging to victim groups psychically and physically targeted by daily racism. In the current state of mankind, you won't be able to fully get both.

      By the way, when neo-nazis publicize such stuff, they're very careful to avoid persecutable acts like explicit invitations to violence, although that's clearly what it implicitly is. As long as there's no rule against hate speech as such, there usually is no legal means to ban such invitations. Does it necessarily have to come to the injury, sometimes to death, before society sees itself determined to act?
  78. no no no.. he was talking about the fruit! by plasmacutter · · Score: 1

    you know.. georgia speaches?

    they make a really good cobbler

    --
    VLC FOR MAC IS DYING! IF YOU DEVELOP, PLEASE SAVE IT!!
  79. If you ban hate speech by night_flyer · · Score: 1

    those that thrive on it will go underground, out of the public eye, recruiting more members.

    they serve as an example... a bad example

    --


    Thanks to file sharing, I purchase more CDs
    Thanks to the RIAA, I buy them used...
    1. Re:If you ban hate speech by demon+driver · · Score: 1

      those that thrive on it will go underground, out of the public eye, recruiting more members. An old, but moot point. If they can freely and openly publicize hate speech, they will go on working both underground and openly, recruiting more members not just underground, but also more and more openly. And the more members they recruit, the more victims will suffer actual violence. Which is one reason governments are getting more and more attentive towards the problem.
  80. Out of Touch with Reality by johnshirley · · Score: 1

    Dear Members of EU Parliment, I have absolutely had it with Politically Correct bullshit. Fuck you and everybody who thinks like you. Hateful enough for ya'?

  81. In Brazil by had3l · · Score: 1

    I live in Brazil, and here, any form of hate speech is not only banned (Against Gays, Blacks, Indians, Jews, Muslims or any other minority group), but its a criminal act, meaning that you are going to face up to 5 years in jail with no right to bail.

    Recently, there has been a case of a man who was considered guilty for saying that "even an animal would make a better mascot than an indian", and some time ago an Argentinian soccer player was arrested for calling another player a "Black piece of sh*t" or something of the sort. (He didn't know the law)

    Not only can you not say those things in the media, but you can't say them in any circumstance, even walking down the street. If you say something racist, and someone near you is offended, they can sue you, and provided they have witnesses, you *WILL* very probably be facing some kind of punishment.

    Right now, the government checks message boards for hate speech, chat rooms, and it's probably not long before they start checking your e-mails. Google, who controls the social-networking site Orkut (The number 1 site in Brazil), has been forced to reveal real identities and the IP addresses for literally hundreds of people with similar charges, and while they were reluctant to hand them in at first, now they do it with relative ease, all the police/federal agents have to do is ask.

    To Americans, this law may seem like a huge violation of one's civil liberties, but here in Brazil, most people support the law, (Well, they could be sued for hate speech if they said they didn't) but anyway, so far it has been working as intended. (If that Imus thing happened in Brazil, he'd be in real trouble). Unlike in the US, hate speech here is relatively rare, specially after those new laws were passed.

    Before you say "how long until politicians start censuring whatever they don't like", the anti-hate laws are very clear, they only apply to hate speech, and any attempt to increase the scope of the law would be met with fierce resistance from civil liberties groups.

    However, one thing that *does* happen very often here is that politicians/etc. can sue newspapers for defamation and slander with relative ease, even if what the paper is reporting is 100% true. As a matter of fact, usually if anything "damaging" is printed on the newspaper, they will get sued, and unless it's some sort of huge scandal, it's not unheard of for the newspaper to lose.

  82. Re:I think you can pretty clearly define hate spee by Youx · · Score: 0

    If you consider a purely egoistic point of view, yeah, you're right.
    In reality, what we say is
    "La liberté des uns s'arrete ou commence celle des autres"
    (One's liberty stops where the other people's starts)

  83. Remember: the ones today are yesterday's winners. by Kadin2048 · · Score: 1

    This would be consistent with Europe's history, and it seems they have not learned a thing from the history of their past 200 years.

    I agree with you up until right there.

    I think they have learned from the last 200 years -- but remember, the people currently in power are, indirectly at least, the winners of the past armed conflicts, in most cases. So on some deep level, they may not be that afraid of producing conflict, because mentally they'll always position themselves on the winning side.

    I'm not sure that's the whole of the explanation (actually I'm sure it's not) but it's something to keep in mind whenever you see a government or group of people within a government that's gone through a lot of violent conflict, provoke more violent conflict -- since they see themselves as already having survived a lot of it, they commit a sort of reverse-gambler's-fallacy and assume they'll definitely win the next round.

    What keeps people at the table, doing the democratic thing, is the fear that if push came to shove, they might lose.

    --
    "Ladies and gentlemen, my killbot features Lotus Notes and a machine gun. It is the finest available."
  84. What you're saying by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What you're saying is other than nice beaches, Brazil is terrible for real freedom. Newspapers are sued for telling the truth, and just hurting someone's feelings is enough to get you thrown in jail.

    And you seem happy about it. Terrific.

    1. Re:What you're saying by had3l · · Score: 1

      I never said I'm happy about it (I'm not), I am just exposing the truth as it is.

      People here don't feel like they aren't free, on the contrary, they think those laws protect the freedoms and rights of the minorities. It's just a matter of perspective, they probably have a slightly different definition of freedom, and draw the line a little further.

      Not that the U.S isn't doing just the same with the Patriot Act and etc...

    2. Re:What you're saying by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Throwing people in prison for speech is insanity. Period. Any country. Any planet. Anywhere. Insane.

    3. Re:What you're saying by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Throwing people in prison for speech is insanity. Period. Any country. Any planet. Anywhere. Insane. No, it's not. I am one of those that support such laws because without them there wouldn't be so much mixing and Brazil wouldn't be Brazil. Without hate speech limitations Brazil would be just a bunch of Europeans wannabes, and Africans wannabes, etc, just like the US.

      Those rules exist for a reason, and they prevent politicians from spreading hate in order to divide the population and then to control them through fear, just like Hitler did, and just like politicians do in the US.
  85. What about Thought Crimes? by MBraynard · · Score: 1
    Or as they are more commonly referred to, hate crimes. In the US, there are additional penalties that can be levied by certain jurisdictions on the basis that a crime was motivated by a forbidden thought. IE - a black kills another black because he wants to get into a gang get a lesser penalty than a black who kills a white because he just hates whites.

    What is the slashherd's consensus on this?

  86. Who gets to define "hate"? by Quila · · Score: 1

    I say I do. Anyone who tries to suppress the ideas of another is guilty of hate speech, as it is hate towards freedom.

  87. I have no problem with that by Rix · · Score: 1

    I fully support outlawing bigoted religions. Those who won't join us in the present are free to wither into the past.

  88. I LOL'ed by Rix · · Score: 5, Insightful

    the US has remained relatively stable from a civil perspective. It seems that whenever there are problems in Europe, rather than discussing the issue, they take up arms and slaughter each other. The US has been at war with all of it's neighbours in that period, and with many countries with which it shares no borders. Further, it's been in two civil wars, the second of which is still on the minds of the losing section.

    How many years has the US *not* been at war? 10-20, in it's entire history, maybe?
    1. Re:I LOL'ed by Das+Auge · · Score: 1

      You're stretching the term "neighbours" a bit far. Unless you mean Canada and Mexico.

      You're also confusing being at war with others and being at war with your fellow man.

      In any case, none of that changes one of the main points that the GP made: unlike a very large part of the world, the US government has remained solvent since its inception and rarely has an American taken arms up against another American.

    2. Re:I LOL'ed by FIT_Entry1 · · Score: 0

      Further, it's been in two civil wars,

      This should be interesting... I count one, what's the other?
    3. Re:I LOL'ed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "You're also confusing being at war with others and being at war with your fellow man."

      First, I can't believe you would say something that horrible.

      But I'll just ignore that statement for now and just focus on the the rest of what you said. The original arguement was that in the last 200 years Europe has had a tendancy to go to war with itself and be unstable while the US has remained more or less stable.

      The big (and incredibly obvious) problem with that is that the US is a country while Europe is a continent. When the US has problems they are just as quick if not quicker to go to war as Europe. The difference is that the US has lots of non-US places to attack, while Europe is mostly neighboured by more Europe. See the difference?

      A more apt comparison would be to compare the stability of the US over the last 200 years to a single European country. How many civil wars have the English had in the last 200 years? (It's none, in case your google-sense is not working.)

    4. Re:I LOL'ed by throup · · Score: 2, Funny

      You're also confusing being at war with others and being at war with your fellow man.


      So we have finally reached the age of intergalactic war, have we? Or has the US declared a war on snails?
    5. Re:I LOL'ed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The big (and incredibly obvious) problem with that is that the US is a country while Europe is a continent.

      Uh, 'Europe' is just another term for the EU, and it is also a term for a continent.

      The EU is a union of states.

      The US is not a country. The US is a federation of states. Thats why we do not have a 'national' government, we have a 'federal' government.

      To gain admittance to the US, a state/territory/country has to meet certain criteria as to govt structure and protections of rights. To gain admittance to the EU, a state/country has to meet certain criteria with regards to govt structure and protections of rights.

      When a state becomes part of the US, it concedes parts of its sovereignty (but not nearly all) to the Federal govt. When a state becomes part of the EU, it concedes certain parts of its sovereignty (but not nearly all) to the EU.

      It is completely and totally inaccurate to compare the US with any one EU state; if you want to make a comparison with Britain, then make it with one US state, just as Britain is one EU state.

      The 'English' are an ethnic group within Britain. 'England' is niether a country nor a state but a district within Britain. The last British civil war was in 1921, the Anglo-Irish war (which some would argue is still happening). A little bit more recent than 200 years.

      How many civil wars has Maine had in the last 200 years? How many civil wars has Louisiana had in the last 200 years?

    6. Re:I LOL'ed by Marcus+Green · · Score: 1

      "The US is not a country"

      Wow, I will now have to entirely revise my view of the USA and world politics.

    7. Re:I LOL'ed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Uh, 'Europe' is just another term for the EU, and it is also a term for a continent.

      The EU is a union of states.

      The US is not a country. The US is a federation of states. Thats why we do not have a 'national' government, we have a 'federal' government.

      So if that's the way we're supposed to play. How many wars have the EU been involved in since it's inception? (1992 unless you count the EEC then it's 1957)
      And no, the Falklands war does not count since it was not a war declared by the EU but ratether like if Texas on it's own declared a war on Mexico over some territorial dispute.

      But comparing the EU and the US is in itself a comparision on faulty premises. The US federal government has a lot more say in most matters than the EU federal government.

    8. Re:I LOL'ed by osee · · Score: 1

      Try to take into account the fact that the EU doesn't cover all of Europe.
      Also that it's a relatively new institution. Founded in 1957 I think.

      Comparing US with let's say France is more valid than comparing it with "Europe" or the EU as a whole.
      There is one nation in the US. The American People. Which is a very diverse group but share one national identity.

      In Europe there are dozens of nations. With different languages and very varied cultures. There is also a good amount of nationalism around.
      And so much history, past conflicts and blame to go round...

      Europe has so many more conflicting interests in it than the US, that direct comparison is totally useless.

    9. Re:I LOL'ed by Das+Auge · · Score: 1

      "The US is not a country."

      Sadly, I believe that you're serious.

    10. Re:I LOL'ed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      " 'England' is niether (sic) a country nor a state but a district within Britain."

      Um. England is actually a kingdom. It has districts - they are called 'shires' or 'counties'.

      "The last British civil war was in 1921, the Anglo-Irish war.."

      No, not a war. A rebellion, perhaps? And remember that America was in on it as well, supporting the Irish.

      The real problem here is that America is a cowardly nation which will only pick a fight with states which are much smaller than it - so you don't get much external warfare until it gets very big.

      Incidentally, do you count the wars with the native Indians as civil war or genocide?

  89. The Gore-ical? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yes, Al Gore and Dems are out to put an end to that.
    They love them Hate Speech laws.

  90. This is proof that liberals are fascists too by Overly+Critical+Guy · · Score: 1

    For all the ranting that Slashdotters do toward the right, this is just proof that both the left and the right seek to institute fascism, banning anything they don't like and telling you how to think and live. It's a spectrum coming to a point at the top of a bloody triangle.

    --
    "Sufferin' succotash."
  91. Whine Whine Whine by cowwoc2001 · · Score: 1

    There is a world of a difference between expressing views that might be hurt someone's feelings (i.e. making fun of someone's religion) and expressing views that incite violence. For example, I shouldn't be able to publish a website that calls for the genocide of black people in the name of white supremacy. There are countless clear-cut cases of freedom of speech abuse that *should* be outlawed. Yes, I share your concern that certain people with agendas will try to twist the law to suit their needs but what else is new? People already do this with existing laws and that doesn't mean we should not have those laws to begin with. It is up to judges to apply the laws within reason and you can be sure they will be reluctant to let people abuse it. Hate speech has been outlawed in Canada for years and you don't see your doom and gloom predictions taking form there. Judges are very lenient in the application of the law (frankly I think they should be tougher).

  92. Not quite... by Roger+W+Moore · · Score: 1

    Theft, rape, and murder are crimes that affect people beyond the criminal. The laws against these crimes don't involve any kind of prior restraint on the populace, intended to prevent the crimes from happening.

    What about the conspiracy laws then?

    1. Re:Not quite... by JesseL · · Score: 1

      Honestly, I think conspiracy laws are often bullshit too.

      But under some circumstances they make sense. Just like if a murder is foiled, the would be murderer can be charged with attempted murder; conspiracy charges may be warranted if the alleged conspirators are, beyond a doubt, committed to perpetrating a crime.

      --
      "Prefiero morir de pie que vivir siempre arrodillado!"
  93. Re:I think you can pretty clearly define hate spee by Crystalmonkey · · Score: 1

    Actually, you may want to check out speech act theory then. It proposes that some expressions can be used to affect the world around us, causing harm on a similar level. (Think of a bet, for example. It doesn't exist outside of speech, but has very real effects. Or marriage vows as part of a ceremony. In the case of hate speech, it's a long discussion but consider the idea that people would/will often say things to the effect of "So and So is ignorant, ignore them..." Eventually, it can get to the point where that person is ignored, silenced, etc... It's complicated, but the basics are in the wiki.)

    I don't know if I necessarily agree, but it's interesting in any event.

  94. Yet more EU idiocy by I'm+Don+Giovanni · · Score: 1

    and you guys consider these fools as saviors against Microsoft?

    --
    -- "I never gave these stories much credence." - HAL 9000
  95. Re:I think you can pretty clearly define hate spee by Man+On+Pink+Corner · · Score: 1

    In reality, what we say is
    "La liberté des uns s'arrete ou commence celle des autres"


    In America, what we say is
    "Sticks and stones may break my bones, but words will never hurt me."

    I think our way works pretty well.

  96. It's not about hate speech at all by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The EU could not care less about hate speech laws. What the elites do care about is any opposition to their grand plan for a Federal Europe, and later Eurasia.

    Citizens of countries across the EU are finding that they don't like this social engineering experiment. Their national sovereignty is being eroded. Their hometowns have changed more in the last 30 years through mass immigration than ever before. They now have to follow laws created by unelected officials in Brussels. In short, far from the original trade agreement many nations *thought* they were entering into, the EU is now busy destroying nations for their supranational dream.

    Accordingly popularity of parties that pledge to take countries out of the EU, cut immigration and put their own first is soaring. The EU elites don't like it so are doing everything they can to trip these parties and their supporters up through completely undemocratic means. Any criticism to mass immigration and non integrating cultures (do we need the s?) is branded as xenophobic and racist. The anti EU parties are rubbished at every turn, described as extreme far right, choked by the media and generally denied at every turn. The witch-hunt is on and people are being fired from their jobs, shunned and hounded merely for voicing support for these parties.

    Not surprisingly out of fear the mass majority stay silent until voting day, and it's this that the EU leaders can't legitimately stop. The free speech laws are there, and *only* there to silence dissent. One wrong word by these parties or their supporters and they'll be dragged through the courts to damage them. The EU plan is an anti-democratic anti-free-speech cancer spreading through what we thought Europe was, and it will eventually kill it.

    1. Re:It's not about hate speech at all by Marcus+Green · · Score: 1

      Indeed both people who voted for the UKIP have the political establishment very concerned.

    2. Re:It's not about hate speech at all by meringuoid · · Score: 1
      Accordingly popularity of parties that pledge to take countries out of the EU, cut immigration and put their own first is soaring.

      Which is why the extreme right-winger Jean Marie Le Pen looks set to be the next president of France, having gained an unprecedentedly high share of the vote. Oh, wait. No, actually he came flat last.

      --
      Real Daleks don't climb stairs - they level the building.
  97. Re:Anything that removes the liberties of thought. by Moridineas · · Score: 1

    I think you meant "gall"

    given that the topic of conversation is Nazis and germans though, you might just have made a REALLY funny pun with the word gaul :-P

  98. you DO realise.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    ...that there's a US "hate speech" bill in congress right now, and it has a good chance of passing? H.R. 1592 is the number. Out of committee already. Has gotten zip to nothing US press. It's so blatantly sucky, casual flaming on the intartubes can (and most likely will) be construed as "intimidation" and fall under the tenets of the bill. Like most of their bogus sneak attacks onrights, it has feel good sounding crap in the title, then you look at the details and think about it for a second, it's broad, vague, scary, gives them even more excuses to crack down on the internet and make criminals out of people just for viewpoints. It's designed on purpose to make a new broad wide ranging class of criminals. there's no other reason for it near as I can see.

    The government is completely out of control, there isn't a single born with right they haven't screwed with extensively now.

    1. Re:you DO realise.... by makomk · · Score: 1

      As far as I can tell, despite what some Christian activists claim, H.R. 1592 does not regulate speech in any form. (It only prohibits actually physically assulting someone because of their race, religion, etc.)

    2. Re:you DO realise.... by ncc74656 · · Score: 1

      H.R. 1592 does not regulate speech in any form. (It only prohibits actually physically assulting someone because of their race, religion, etc.)

      There are already laws against assault that apply to everybody in every circumstance. If this bill were a Slashdot post, it'd deserve to be modded -1, Redundant.

      --
      20 January 2017: the End of an Error.
  99. Lot of nice reply from you all American by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So... How is going you FCC ban on bad words ? And.... How is the imposition of sticker "this is only a theory" is going in some state ? Game being forbbiden to sell to a minor ? Discussing explosive and human killing chemical on a forum ? Discussing protection circumvention device ?

    How about your FREE SPEECH ZONE at elections/republican rally ?

    And this from the country which not even 30/40 years ago did not give the SAME CIVIL RIGHT TO black people. There is something about cleaning one own's stale before critizing how dirty is the neighbour's...

  100. Re:Anything that removes the liberties of thought. by Reziac · · Score: 1

    To misquote the 1800s newspaperman (whose name escapes me) who first said it...

    "Some of them have but one redeeming feature, and that is a colossal Gaul."

    Egads!!

    --
    ~REZ~ #43301. Who'd fake being me anyway?
  101. If hate speech is: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If there was a law deeming "incitement to class hatred" to be hate speech in earlier times, the ideological supporters of these laws would be in prison

  102. history and the theory by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I've thought about the "mixing of the seed" deal for years, and near as I can grok it, I think I have the most probable reason. It is far out, but bear with me.

    If you look at any of the old cultures who have any sort of good enough records, they all have one or two things in common. a big flood, and also "visitors", angels, demons, djinns, nephilim, you name it, a huge list. In all these old records-parsing for meaning once you wade through the badly mangled colloquialism and seventeen languages in a row translations-all seem to indicate-other folks, the aliens. Them dudes.

    That's what they were, visitors. A zillion galaxies, a zillion times a zillion worlds-odds of there NOT being aliens are astronomical is the word that fits.

    OK, we can see now that making chimeric beings is possible, our scientists are right now at that threshold. Gene splicing and DNA re arranging and whatnot-it's happening more and more.

    Now, imagine these advanced cultures came here, had full advanced science (beyond what we have now). they probably liked to dork around, same as we do, see what sort of wild creatures they had, snatch a few for experiments, and so on-all the things we do today and call science, or tourism, take your pick.

    And they experimented-and fucked up. They screwed some things up. We advanced monkey people have some bad mojo that *doesn't make sense* from an evolutionary standpoint-for example, we don't make vitamin c-yet most mammals DO and it is an important health and survival issue. Why didn't we croak off as a species? It's a serious genetic defect, and there are THOUSANDS more. I think that's an example where the aliens screwed up.

    And our ancestors remembered, and issued a general warning "don't mix your seed". Heck, we are already seeing some serious FUBARs with genetically altered crops. It could get *real bad*, some accident, some miscalculation, some major whoops!

    Anyway, examples like that and others lead the altered humans (that would be us today), to have oral records talking about it, the best they could do being fairly primitive back then. Sure, you have to read between the lines a little, but once you do..well? That's what it really looks like.

    Think about it a little, it really does explain what has been going on, and why we have such similarities in the old records, growing across cultures. Look at "the flood". Dang if just dozens of old cultures ALL made a big deal about some huge ass flood, not a normal flood, a planet changing one. Why, unless it happened?

    I'd say pay attention to it, read between the lines a little.

        They did the best they could with what they had to send warnings into the future. Look at US now, still trying to figure out a decent long term storage media (hundreds or thousands of years) Our normal paper rots, film goes bad, digital bits wander, burn holes on plastic disks flake off, etc. We still don't have anything better than carved in stone for truly long term storage.

        They had oral stories handed down, a little papyrus writing, clay tablets, etc. I think they did pretty well actually all things considered..

    So anyway, maybe "mixing the seed"-heavy genetic alterations, might not be such a swift idea in the long run. We've been *warned*. Guys smarter than us tried it, and failed at it.

  103. Re:Anything that removes the liberties of thought. by fractoid · · Score: 1

    given that the topic of conversation is Nazis and germans though, you might just have made a REALLY funny pun with the word gaul :-P Quick, Getafix! Whip up a cauldron of magic free-speech potion!
    --
    Rampant carbon sequestration destroyed the Dinosaurs' tropical paradise. I'm here to help repair the damage.
  104. So, what about this book?? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If I understood it correctly, according to this law "hate speech" shall be forbidden in EU.
    If there is a book in which is written that you shall hate people of other faith then clearly this book shall be forbidden by this law.
    I'm right? So, could someone in EU take care of this book?:

    http://www.thereligionofpeace.com/Articles/Quran_H ate.htm
    http://www.islamonline.com/cgi-bin/news_service/fa twah_story.asp?service_id=449

    /Joss

  105. Re:Anything that removes the liberties of thought. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So called Hate Speech is only a threat if the majority of people already agree with it.

  106. Looks like anarchist circlejerk day on /. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    anti-gun control... by far the highest percentage of shootings in the first world
    anit speech restriction... where being gay or atheist is still taboo and often results in severe discrimination
    free market... where the average upperclass income is increasing and the lowerclass income is not
    tax-hating... where the military has all the money it can ask for, and the poor arrested for sleeping on the widewalks
    "political correctnes"... come on, this is so 1990s rush limbaugh

    dear anti gun control, anti speech restriction, constitution drivel-spouting, free market promoting, tax hating, ""political correctness"" or ""fascist"" using, uppermiddleclass white american kid and or angry conservative person .. do you really know how well things would work if anyone could do anything at any time?

  107. I'm going to start a website by Chrisq · · Score: 1

    Saying how much I hate people who want to restrict free speech. Oh wait, why is that police care stopping outside?

  108. The whole thing might be unconstitutional by Chrisq · · Score: 1

    From the European declarayion of human rights: http://conventions.coe.int/Treaty/en/Treaties/Html /005.htm Article 10 - Freedom of expression1 1. Everyone has the right to freedom of expression. This right shall include freedom to hold opinions and to receive and impart information and ideas without interference by public authority and regardless of frontiers. This article shall not prevent States from requiring the licensing of broadcasting, television or cinema enterprises. 2. The exercise of these freedoms, since it carries with it duties and responsibilities, may be subject to such formalities, conditions, restrictions or penalties as are prescribed by law and are necessary in a democratic society, in the interests of national security, territorial integrity or public safety, for the prevention of disorder or crime, for the protection of health or morals, for the protection of the reputation or rights of others, for preventing the disclosure of information received in confidence, or for maintaining the authority and impartiality of the judiciary. As far as I see it hate speech would be legal unless it was likely to incite crime or infringe the rights of others.

  109. Re:I think you can pretty clearly define hate spee by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'm thinking of some short Austrian guy with a funny moustache back in the 1930s..

    This is hate speech. Youre implying that the German people are a bunch of stupid idiots who were so gullable as to be manipulated by one guy at a microphone.

    The reality is that Hitlers speeches would have been ignored...except obviously a sizable chunk of the people already agreed with him.

    Every single fucking German who took part is guilty. None of this "Well he was such a pursuasive speaker, I didnt know what I was doing." Bullshit. You cant start a fire unless theres good tinder.

  110. Sticks and stones by demon+driver · · Score: 1

    In reality, what we say is
    "La liberté des uns s'arrete ou commence celle des autres"

    In America, what we say is
    "Sticks and stones may break my bones, but words will never hurt me." I don't know about America, but considering some European regions, like many parts of Germany with its increasing neo-nazi plague (alongside a newly strengthening nationalist-patriotic mainstream), you can be quite sure that the more neo-nazi propaganda is being published through open channels, the more bones of victims to neo-nazi hate will be broken. Which won't just be coincidence, but cause and effect.

    It's indeed a very difficult matter of deciding where liberties of one have to stop in order not to jeopardize rights and liberties of others. European governments seem to get the idea that they have some kind of obligation especially towards those groups typically endangered by racist hate. The big question is, where does "hate speech" begin and where does it end, especially when it goes about religion. Religion should always be ok to get critized and even ridiculed.

    The sticks and stones saying may serve well for an individual trying to immunize himself against verbal attacks, but it is not necessarily suited for being a principle for governments trying to set up equitable legal frameworks for whole populations.
    1. Re:Sticks and stones by Man+On+Pink+Corner · · Score: 1

      I don't know about America, but considering some European regions, like many parts of Germany with its increasing neo-nazi plague (alongside a newly strengthening nationalist-patriotic mainstream), you can be quite sure that the more neo-nazi propaganda is being published through open channels, the more bones of victims to neo-nazi hate will be broken. Which won't just be coincidence, but cause and effect.

      So what you're saying is that people are programmable devices.

      Wow. Say what you will about the tenets of National Socialism, at least it's not that depressing an ethos.

    2. Re:Sticks and stones by demon+driver · · Score: 1

      So what you're saying is that people are programmable devices. You're improperly confusing 'programming' with 'influencing'. Moreover, what I'm also simply saying is, neo-nazis exist, and the more society lets them cultivate the impression that their life- and health-threatening ideological grounds are valid and acceptable, the more freely and openly they do go break bones of members of their victim groups. Call it what you will, it's a question of caring about effectively guarding these groups from such violence or not.

      Wow. Say what you will about the tenets of National Socialism, at least it's not that depressing an ethos. It is quite interesting to see how militant advocacy of an extremistic notion of free speech can even arrive at such blatant trivialization, if not apology of National Socialism. Which somehow fits, though, to a pattern of thought that radically and extremistically holds individual freedoms of even the crappiest words above the psychic and physical health of people.
  111. Cough!! What? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I was with you all the way up to the last sentence.

    I think you meant to say "Powerful".

    As you point out, the only way to make American "Free" is to overthrow the government and start over. Sadly, this is by no means a realistic option since a country with 320 million barely educated people can't get past a few small problems. If the American government would become less of a police state (and frankly, I've been to police states, America has better shopping, but other than that, the difference is marginal) we would suffer chaos.

    When you consider that there are far too many guns in America (I don't dispute your right to one, I just believe there are too many in too many wrong hands), it becomes impossible to safely start a new leaf. Especially when you have 320 million people of which the people most willing to use guns and force will insist on being guaranteed certain freedoms under the new constitution.

    Countries like Finland, Norway, Switzerland, Sweden, well, any non American, EU, or English country in the West is in fact typically far more free. In fact, Eastern block countries could set standards on free in todays world.

    The two party system in America has caused so many problems, I couldn't pick a place to begin. The politicians are chosen by the politicians for the people. New parties almost never gain ground and reason and logic (yes, a political science majors biggest reason for choosing arts instead of Math) have been replaced with childhood bickering where laws are passed based on "Well, he's on the blue team, we can't like him."

    As for freedoms, the American President and the Whitehouse Attourney General have both spoken out... and acted against nearly every constitutional right they believed hurt their dictatorship... I mean leadership.

    The American Declaration of Independance declared freedoms. In fact, "We hold these truths to be self evident..." does not occur in the constitution. The politicians are using that to their advantange.

    See, the American people often confuse the Declaration of Independance and The Constitution of the United States of America. Well, the people that actually know they are two seperate papers.. and more importantly the ones who know that Jerry Springer and Oprah were not among the forefathers.

    The Declaration of Independance stated that we as Americans ar free, and no tyrrant such as King George II or President George II should be able to denounce our "god given rights to life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness". The constitution made no such claims. The Constitution is Law. The Declaration of Independance is a mission statement.

    The Ammendments of the Constitution are where freedoms were defined. So, when the declaration said "We hold these truths to be self evident", apparently they weren't evident enough. So they wrote them down.

    Amendment I - Religion, ummm... I'm an atheist who believes in fact, but to be sworn in at a trial, I'm forced to swear to god to tell the truth. I don't believe in god or the truth. So.. well there's a problem. Abridging freedom of speech or the press... don't get me started here. The American propaganda machine runs either directly or indirectly MSNBC, CNN, and more and more BBC in the US. I can't buy an American newspaper without reading how American rocks and the rest of the world sucks. What's worst is, I can be sitting in the country they're trashing at the time, visiting the place they claim the problem existed and find for an example visited an Anti-Nazi art display that made fun of nazis by glorifying them in a cartoon style that makes them look like idiots, the article would read "So and So supports Nazis and Nazi art!". I have far too many friends that are journalists at respectible news papers and out of the 20 or so I talk with, only 3 of them should be trusted to be handle shoe laces.

    Peaceful assembly... hehe well, to a certain extent it's allowed. For example, if a million people march on the white house lawn with rocks stars, it's allowed since a

    1. Re:Cough!! What? by heinousjay · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      You did go on and on, and made some pretty bold assertions, but you never once backed any of your opinions with anything. Perhaps a longwinded troll?

      --
      Slashdot - where whining about luck is the new way to make the world you want.
  112. "EU Moving" is a bit of an exaggeration... by pfft · · Score: 1

    In this case, five members of the European Parliament has called for such law. Since the parliament has 785 members, they are still a bit off from majority. And note that the European Parliament can't make laws in any case (it's mostly an advisory body, though it does have the power to veto proposed laws in certain cases).

  113. European Union Parliament has no legislation power by Iloinen+Lohikrme · · Score: 1

    This is no news. European Union Parliament can't legislate laws or directives by itself. European Union Commission only has power to bring new directives to parliament, and parliament has two options: either accept the directive or send it back to commission. It should be noted that European Union Commission is not formed by parliament but it's formed by member countries, meaning that parliament doesn't have quite much direct power on the workings of commission. As we here hear that few parliament members are making drafts, it doesn't mean in real world anything, they have no power to put that draft into a directive. No news.

  114. Did your mom ever have any kids that lived? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    People like you are the reason condoms are a good idea. Your parents should have double wrapped it because the risk of someone like you being born was far to dangerous to risk on just one.

    "This is little more than a thinly veiled ..."
    Every conspiracy freak insists on starting off with this one. Why the hell is that? I mean do you really think that by starting this way, you can take a truly stupid statement and make it sound logical?

    IIRC The Netherlands writes their laws in pencil or disappearing ink. Before you make a remark like this, try and get the facts sorted out, otherwise you're just a FUDder. I mean seriously, why is it that all you fruitcakes always choose either Belgium or the Netherlands when trying to pick a place with F-ed up laws in Europe... why no Monoco or Gibralter or someplace cool like that? It's always the Flems and Dutch that take it in the rear on this.

    The best part of being an atheist is that in the science community, we pretty much rule things these days. If it's a war between us and them, all we have to do is threaten to take their MTV away and they'll submit.

    What's most troubling is that your disturbed, contorted, twisted mind can actually make these conclusions and write like this. Do us all a favor and stop breathing our air, apparently it's just not making it to your brain anyway, so I see it as being wasted resources.

  115. Hey EU get this by Peter+Nikolic · · Score: 1

    kiss my white hairy ass

    --
    Karma :Terrible I seriously like this cus at least i aint affraid of barking Caution i BITE (your a
  116. Really? by el_munkie · · Score: 1

    I agree with you completely/ However, in reality those rights have been usurped. The 10th amendment is long gone. In the context of the laws applicable and their current interpretation, everything I described was by the books, but I in no way said it was right.

    1. Re:Really? by fyngyrz · · Score: 1

      Understood.

      --
      I've fallen off your lawn, and I can't get up.
  117. We don't change our Constitution much either by el_munkie · · Score: 1

    And most of the things we bitch about most were enumerated in the first ten amendments. Freedom of speech was the first among those, so we Americans are kind of bitchy about it, but for a good reason. As an American, I see the first amendment as the foremost of amendments. The second has its utility in guaranteeing the ability to revolt, but the first has the ability to avert that through peaceful and rational means.

    1. Re:We don't change our Constitution much either by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I completely agree that freedom of speech is the most important thing in democracy (or rather, a free society) but I don't get your second point. I've heard this many times but how do you think you can stand up against the US government and army with the second amendement? This might have been realistic once but I really don't think it's possible anymore. Not that I am completely for gun control but to me it is a matter of freedom, not a matter of revolting against the government.

    2. Re:We don't change our Constitution much either by fyngyrz · · Score: 1

      The general thinking - which may not be correct - is that the armed forces will not be generally willing to fire on US citizens in revolt. Should such a revolt occur, certainly the reasons would be well known; one assumes that a few soldiers, marines, etc would be minded to join the cause, whatever it was characterized as being at that point.

      Another somewhat pointed observation is that US forces are all over Iraq at this point, and they are taking a hell of a beating from a populace armed only with makeshift explosives, handguns and rifles. It would be worse here, probably a lot worse.

      So the presumption that the army can overcome by force of arms may be optimistic.

      --
      I've fallen off your lawn, and I can't get up.
  118. Define "hate" by AmiMoJo · · Score: 1

    Let's say I point out that Mohammed, the Muslim prophet, was a paedophile (he married an 8 year old). Is that hate speech? Most people hate paedophiles, and so it seems somewhat logical to assume that they would hate followers of paedophiles.

    What is some idiot reads my site, and then goes and attacks a Muslim because of it. Whose fault is it? I pointed out a fact, one that I find distasteful and problematic, but none the less a historical fact.

    Presumably, history books trying to explain the motivations of the Nazis, which could be read by someone who might agree with them and even act on them, should be banned too.

    --
    const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
    SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
    1. Re:Define "hate" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Let's say I point out that Mohammed, the Muslim prophet, was a paedophile (he married an 8 year old).
      Do you have any evidence that the marriage was consumated and that Mohammed knew that girl like Lot knew his Wife. I mean evidence beyond just a bunch of jackasses assumptions?
      No?
      Please then don't post that trite old line again as it's libel and slander. (Both restricted in most countries)

  119. That simply is not the case by Rix · · Score: 1

    Americans have taken up arms against each other twice in their short history on a large scale, and many more times on smaller scales. Americans enslaved, in some cases, the majority of their population and extracted forced labour. Americans have waged wars of conquest against Mexico and Cuba, and attempted to do so against Canada. Americans have been at war, in some form or another, for most of their history. Americans even declare war on abstract concepts, like drugs, poverty, or terrorism.

    If you're American, read some history from beyond your borders.

  120. I hate "hate" speech... by Half+a+dent · · Score: 1

    ...does that mean I'll be banned?

  121. Re:Anything that removes the liberties of thought. by Lars+T. · · Score: 1

    Let's not forget that free speech unchecked led the continent to ruin in the 1930s/40s.
    It was simply a streak of evil that ran through the Axis, and one that is still not fully resolved today. That streak was exploited by the DDR for example - freedom of speech was not something East Germans knew about, but murder, torture and discrimination were still common right up to 1989.
    You know, free speech is quite big in the USA, still murder, torture (at least in Gitmo etc.) and discrimination are also quite common. Come to think of it, free speech is also going away.
    --

    Lars T.

    To the guy who modded me down from perfect to terrible Karma - Apple haters still suck

  122. Re:Remember: the ones today are yesterday's winner by dajak · · Score: 1

    Actually the only peoples that see themselves as winners in the western world are the British, the Russians, and the Americans. The others have either suffered major defeats and occupations in the last two centuries, or are so weak compared to a greater neighbour that they never had an interest in provoking wars (Switzerland for instance).

    The main difference between the North American continent and Europe is that North America is unipolar (hence no balance of power to maintain, and a natural leadership of the US that the others must simply accept) while Europe is multipolar, and an attack by a major power on a weaker state tends to draw in other major powers.

    As a weaker state this mechanism can be used to preserve independence and autonomy: here in the Netherlands the policy of using one bigger neighbour as assurance against domination by the other one and vice versa was called "double anchor policy" in previous centuries. The doctrine involves 1) making sure you neighbours are not eachothers allies, and 2) giving them sufficient reason (for instance with trade policy) to strongly prefer an independent Netherlands over one occupied by the other major neighbour. The doctrine has basically been abandoned (in favour of the cold war "keep the Americans in, Russians out, and Germans under the feet" doctrine) in the twentieth century, since the doctrine naturally involves being someone else's battlefield from time to time and this is getting increasingly costly. The price to pay is loss of autonomy. A new "double anchor policy" has been in vogue that involves competition of "Europe" and "the Atlantic" (US and UK).

  123. Thank you! by crhylove · · Score: 1

    People who are afraid of ANY word or series of words are by definition complete idiots.

    I'm part every race (American), so I could give two shits what anybody calls me... LOL

    rhY

    --
    I hold very few opinions. I hold information based on observation and fact. If you wish to disagree, please use facts.
  124. Governments vs the *Publisher* by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Don't you understand that the governments will go after the person responsible for publishing the illegal material on the Internet? If that person lives in the geographic area the government in question controls - what's to stop it from prosecuting?

  125. Re:Define "hate" / Ban Jimmy Carter! by moeinvt · · Score: 1

    "Define Hate"

    You've concisely highlighted the fundamental problem with idiotic laws that ban Free Speech. Once it is banned, the people that can define "hate" can RE-define it and ban speech that had previously been "legal". Major slippery slope!

    ". . .history books trying to explain the motivations of the Nazis . . ."

    Yes. There is a disturbing example of this. An author named David Irving (who's British) was arrested in Canada, extradited to Austria and and thrown in a PRISON for writing books and making statements questioning the holocaust. The SCARY thing is that under the current laws, TRUE statements, when formulated in specific ways can constitute "hate speech". IANAL, and have no clue about European law and the rights of the accused, but Irving was prohibited from calling witnesses who could verify the factual basis of certain things he wrote/said because "The truth is no defense".

    FTA: "The preamble to the declaration mentions anti-Semitism . . ."

    Former President Jimmy Carter recently wrote a book drawing a parallel between the Israeli treatment of Palestinians in the occupied territories and the Apartheid system in South Africa. He has faced widespread criticism about it and his book has been labeled as "anti-Semitism" multiple times. Does this law mean that Google, etc. need to filter out web pages(like amazon?) that might possibly show excerpts from the book? Sounds more like China to me.

  126. Duh ! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "for many years the advantages have generally outweighed the worries"

    Well, it generally does.
    The effects of gradual strangulation are rarely sudden ... Duh!
    In Germany, for many years the advantages of having Hitler as leader outweighed the worries ..

  127. Evil and perspective by gillbates · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    I would argue just the opposite - that without reference to the supernatural, the commonly accepted definition of what constitutes good and evil is bent toward a definition favorable to whomever is in power. The interesting thing about appeal to the supernatural is that it serves as a natural buffer against undue influence.

    But the reason I say I have a unique perspective of evil because I am Christian is because I have received an extensive education in such, at least compared to an unbeliever. This is not to say that an atheist can't understand evil, but that an understanding of evil is the prelude to theism. If God doesn't exist, his will couldn't exist, which means that nothing that exists could be contrary to His non-existent will. Hence, as an atheist you would probably be in the minority if you believe in the existence of evil, or at least you are using a different definition.

    I'm not going to get into the whole good-vs-evil bit here, but I would add that it does shed light on why things happen. You mention a bunch of relatively short periods of history for which evil left a black mark on religion. However, I'm able to see this as an indication that even good people can be led astray, and consider it a warning rather than an indictment of religion. I say this because I have seen the overwhelming good that has come from religion (specifically Christianity). Being a Christian, I am involved in charity work and good deeds which go largely unnoticed by the media and the historians. And really, if you look at the history of the last millenium, even when Christians have gone astray, the cumulative total of deaths attributed to them is less than that of legalized abortion.

    --
    The society for a thought-free internet welcomes you.
  128. Re:I think you can pretty clearly define hate spee by akozakie · · Score: 1

    Free speech is a good thing, sure. But the point is: there are cases where current European laws fail. Poland has this problem with a fascist organization called (I think) Redwatch. They have a webpage listing "enemies of the race". Photos, addresses, warnings if they can be dangerous in a fight, etc. How can you get on that list? Simple - promote tolerance, be active, be a member of a homosexual organization, etc. Lately an entire group of pupils of a school landed on the list for cleaning an old jewish cemetary.

    People from this list were already attacked, landed in hospitals with knife wounds. The page must disappear - but how would you go about removing it, when no law obligates the providers to do so? They removed it once, it reappeared on another server.

    This is exactly the sort of problems this law is supposed to fix. However, the exact wording of any law limiting the freedom of speech is extremely important and side effects can be extremely bad. We'll see...

  129. Thoughtcrime and Speechcrime by Churla · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I am already pretty against the "hate crime" laws in the US for the very reason mentioned above. The crime should be what is punished for, not the thought and intent behind it.

    Given crime == 5 years in jail
    Given crime + hateful thoughts == 8 years in jail.
    Then following through...
    hateful thoughts == 3 years in jail

    The fact that you have quantified a pattern of thought as being punishable by 3 more years in jail is far FAR too Orwellian for my tastes. It's the legal equivalent of venial sins, not bad enough to be a sin on it's own, but definitely bad enough to increase your penance for a mortal sin.

    Something which is free , by definition, is something which has no restrictions placed on it. Freedom of speech means freedom to say things which aren't popular opinions. The EU is futher taking away free speech with this. (It was already not really free with the current laws in place)

    Here's a question, since the Quran tells Muslims to kill the disbelievers wherever they find them (Q. 2:191), to murder them and treat them harshly (Q. 9:123), slay them (Q. 9:5), fight with them, (Q. 8: 65 ) even if they are Christians and Jews, humiliate them and impose on them a penalty tax (Q. 9: 29). (quick and dirty google for that.. http://www.sullivan-county.com/x/sina.htm ) Does this mean the Quran is a "hate text"? Would reading those passages be "Hate Speech"?

    Whereas I don't agree with those things, I respect the right of someone else to think and believe them. Now, if they act on those beliefs then they are transgressing against the rights of others to things such as life and liberty. At that point it's punishment time. But not punishment for believing it, punishment for the act expressing it.

    --
    I'm a fiscal conservative, it's a pity we don't have a political party anymore
  130. Exemplary racist rant by demon+driver · · Score: 1

    An exemplary racist rant, whining about the oh so poor nationalists' failure for democratic success, building a pathetic conspiracy theory by blaming laws supporting exactly those people who would right away fall victim to deportation or worse once there'd actually happen to be such success. Quite amusing that it's always supporters of the most aggressive and inhuman political movements acting up as if they were the poor, pitiable victims of some (purely delusional) malevolent intent.

  131. Hate speech - theory and practice by Dobeln · · Score: 1

    The estimated average time before hate speech laws are used to punish those with non-conformist opinion is roughly five minutes. Three recent examples:

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/%C3%85ke_Green

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vlaams_Belang

    http://www.abc.net.au/pm/content/2005/s1398319.htm

    It is inevitable, that once the legal space exists to ban people who express non-conformist views, the powers that be will use them. After all, throughout history, repression of people who hold "faulty" opinions has been the norm, not the exception.

    "Hate speech law" was first introduced in Europe as a means of fighting direct incitement to violence against various minority groups. This is, not surprisingly, the way hate speech law is currently being sold in the United States (usually as an extra penalty in cases of 'ordinary' crimes).

    Over the years, however, the laws were gradually expanded to cover more and more ground, and now in many cases cover (forceful) expressions of mere disapproval of, say, homosexuality, or religion (usually Islam), even when these expressions are completely lacking in incitement to violence. The latest trend is to legislate against those who deny certain historical events, such as the Holocaust or the armenian genocide. Some countries (in the recent EU debates on the subject) now advocate criminalizing those who hold a revisionist position on Stalinist crimes. It will be interesting to see what other historical events that will be added to the "illegal to question" list as time goes on.

    I should add that "conformist" here refers to conformism with elite opinion - hate speech law is usually applied aggressively when there is a significant, unorganized popular dissent from elite consensus. This is especially relevant on topics such as immigration, Islam and homosexuality, where elite and popular views are often greatly at odds. By acting aggressively and punishing those who speak out against elite consensus, the status quo can be maintained with less effort compared to a free speech scenario.

    It should also be said that there is indeed no reciprocial reason to grant those who speak against democracy and freedom of speech the rights of free speech. In none of the cases linked to above, however, the defendants had advocated violence or the abolishion of democracy. On the contrary, it was the advocates of "tolerance" who moved to squash the democratic rights of their opponents.

    It is exactly because of the large risk of abuse relating to speech restrictions (see above) that my personal opinion on the matter is that restricting debate and speech should be an emergency measure only. Usually, though, politicians advocating speech restriction don't bother with theory, reciprocity, etc. They prefer slogans - "we need to stop hate", "hate isn't a right", and so it goes...

  132. Can we say "any darn thing" in the USA? by walterbyrd · · Score: 1

    What if I wanted to paint a huge swastika on my Garage door? Or use the big "N" word? Aren't authorities limiting "cyber-bullying" ?

  133. Huh? by goodben · · Score: 1

    Americans have taken up arms against each other twice in their short history on a large scale, and many more times on smaller scales. Americans enslaved, in some cases, the majority of their population and extracted forced labour. Americans have waged wars of conquest against Mexico and Cuba, and attempted to do so against Canada. Americans have been at war, in some form or another, for most of their history. Americans even declare war on abstract concepts, like drugs, poverty, or terrorism. So I gather you're either trying to spark people into doing a bit of research by posting trollish comments or you're trying to get someone to argue so you can offer a clever rebuttal. Offering tidbits of history that aren't popularly accepted may get people to bite on your hook for an arguement, but it isn't actually that useful if you're trying to educate people.

    But I'm curious, so I'll bite although I don't expect to actually learn anything useful. So what was the US's other civil war? The Revolution? I have to assume you're talking about the Loyalists that helped the British and eventually fled to Canada. The only other thing I can think of that you could possibly mean are what used to be called the Indian Wars which were a sporadic series of battles covering about a hundred years with different parties on the one side, which I have to point out wasn't considered a civil war by either side.

    And there was no war of conquest against Canada. I doubt that you could even convince very many Canadians that there was. Again I have to assume that you mean the War of 1812, which was provoked by the British Navy kidnapping US sailors and enslaving them. Annexing Canada was talked about at the time and York (now Toronto, more or less) was burned, but that was the extent of it. Talking about annexing the land of an actively beligerent power in not a war of conquest.

    Sure, "buying" a third of Mexico (most of which was unsettled by Mexicans, by the way) at gunpoint was not very neighborly, but if it were Britain or France, the US would have installed a thinly disguised puppet government (something France tried to do, incidently; the French puppet's defeat in Mexico is celebrated every year in May) or taken over the whole place outright.

    And Cuba? There were people in the US and its government who wanted to keep Cuba, but the US honored its promise to the Cuban people of independence. If you wanted to complain about that incident, the least you could have done is taken the part of the people with the real grievance against the US: the Filipinos who switched from fighting the Spanish to fighting the Americans. The whole episode of the Spanish-American War being fought to sell newspapers is distasteful, but any European power (even freaking Belgium in the Congo) would have behaved much poorer by modern standards in that circumstance based on what happened in Africa and Asia around that time.

    Yes, the US had about a hundred years of overt imperialism and some claim that the economic imperialism practiced since then is just as bad. Bad, in some cases; as bad, not even close. France held onto its imperialism until the 60s, quitting only because it didn't have the strength to go on. The US has let go of its imperialism much more gracefully, deciding to let the Phillipines go before World War II (although implimentation happened after).

    I won't dispute that there are defects in the US national character and its present government, but harping about the choice of metaphor in a PR campaign?

    And more on topic France outlawing "hate speach" (which is a stupid class of laws whose end game is shown in Farenheit 451--any non-thought crime connected to them is already on the books) while they have government oppression of regional languages and minorities (most of the rest of the EU has stopped that particular kind of shenanigans) is hypocritical.
    1. Re:Huh? by Rix · · Score: 1

      So I gather you're either trying to spark people into doing a bit of research by posting trollish comments or you're trying to get someone to argue so you can offer a clever rebuttal. Offering tidbits of history that aren't popularly accepted may get people to bite on your hook for an arguement, but it isn't actually that useful if you're trying to educate people.

      I'm doing exactly what I've said I am. I'm trying to push Americans to do a little reading outside of their safe, government approved, sources. Everything I mentioned is quite accepted everywhere except the US.

      The Revolution? I have to assume you're talking about the Loyalists that helped the British and eventually fled to Canada.

      Yes, "The Revolution". Contrary to what you where taught, the first American civil war had nothing to do with ideology (neither did the second, but that's another story). Democratic reforms where progressing naturally throughout the Western world with the idea of responsible government. Representation in government had been allocated for quite some time to what were considered the important parts of society: the nobles, the clergy, and the commoners. Post war America did not look significantly different from this, in many states only landowners could vote well into the 19th century.

      This first American civil war was a financial dispute between rich colonists and the British nobility. Nothing more.

      Historically, it was a valuable experiment, though. It's shown us that gradual change is much, much more effective than revolution. Canada, the UK and Australia now have much more stable and democratic governments than the US. It's a stretch to call the US a democracy at all, with two ruling parties who are largely the same, both in policy and bloodline.

      And there was no war of conquest against Canada. I doubt that you could even convince very many Canadians that there was. Again I have to assume that you mean the War of 1812, which was provoked by the British Navy kidnapping US sailors and enslaving them. Annexing Canada was talked about at the time and York (now Toronto, more or less) was burned, but that was the extent of it. Talking about annexing the land of an actively beligerent power in not a war of conquest.

      Had the Americans sailed to Britain and dealt with their grievances at the source, you'd have a point. They didn't. Canada was an innocent third party in the conscription issue, and thus invading Canada was a wholly indefensible war of aggression. Annexation didn't go beyond talk because the US was soundly defeated in the war; Washington was sacked and the white house was burned to the ground. (It was actually a green house before this.)

      Sure, "buying" a third of Mexico (most of which was unsettled by Mexicans, by the way) at gunpoint was not very neighborly, but if it were Britain or France, the US would have installed a thinly disguised puppet government (something France tried to do, incidently; the French puppet's defeat in Mexico is celebrated every year in May) or taken over the whole place outright.

      Would they? All British and French colonies are now vibrant, independent democracies. How independent is the southwest US? That's ignoring the history the US has with puppet governments throughout the world.

      And Cuba? There were people in the US and its government who wanted to keep Cuba, but the US honored its promise to the Cuban people of independence. If you wanted to complain about that incident, the least you could have done is taken the part of the people with the real grievance against the US: the Filipinos who switched from fighting the Spanish to fighting the Americans. The whole episode of the Spanish-American War being fought to sell newspapers is distasteful, but any European power (even freaking Belgium in the Congo) would have behaved much poorer by modern standards in that circumstance based on what happened in Africa and Asia around that time.

      Where, exactly, do

    2. Re:Huh? by goodben · · Score: 1

      So I gather you're either trying to spark people into doing a bit of research by posting trollish comments or you're trying to get someone to argue so you can offer a clever rebuttal. Offering tidbits of history that aren't popularly accepted may get people to bite on your hook for an arguement, but it isn't actually that useful if you're trying to educate people.

      I'm doing exactly what I've said I am. I'm trying to push Americans to do a little reading outside of their safe, government approved, sources. Everything I mentioned is quite accepted everywhere except the US.

      Pft. While the primary and secondary education I received in California (where the curriculum was chosen more or less by the California Teacher's Association, a non-government body) was doubtlessly slanted, I'm fairly well read. The independent things I've read since then have only backed that information up. You're reading conspiracy into something you have no first-hand experience with. I'm obviously not going to convince you otherwise, because conspiracy theorists never want to give up their favorite conspiracy.

      The Revolution? I have to assume you're talking about the Loyalists that helped the British and eventually fled to Canada.

      Yes, "The Revolution". Contrary to what you where taught, the first American civil war had nothing to do with ideology (neither did the second, but that's another story). Democratic reforms where progressing naturally throughout the Western world with the idea of responsible government. Representation in government had been allocated for quite some time to what were considered the important parts of society: the nobles, the clergy, and the commoners. Post war America did not look significantly different from this, in many states only landowners could vote well into the 19th century.

      You know? Using non-standard terminology may make you feel warm and fuzzy ideologically, but there's a reason we have standards: to aid communication. I'm also curious as to how you know what I was taught, because you've obviously never been to the US.

      So the fact that the British suspended colonial legislatures had nothing to do with it or suspended other rights that colonials enjoyed? The colonial point of view was that their rights as Englishmen were being taken away and they had no recourse because none of their peers could stand for Parliament. It's true that their grandchildren probably would have received representation in Parliament like the Irish did (eventually), but even in hindsight, who would have wanted to put up with what the Irish had to before they were granted emancipation (note that this is the British legal term for giving Catholics full citizenship rights)? Also it certainly wouldn't have helped those people. It's true that in most states only land-owners could vote, but that was true everywhere. On the other hand, the US was the first country to allow women to vote.

      This first American civil war was a financial dispute between rich colonists and the British nobility. Nothing more.

      It's true that Washington, Jefferson, and the like were rich, but the colonial army was made up of the poor colonists by and large. I think if you did some actual research I think you'll find that the majority of Loyalists were rich folk who wanted the protection of the British Army more than representation. You're also overstating the land-owning requirements because almost everyone who wasn't a slave owned land due to homesteading laws. This means that everyone had an interest in taxation and the like. The reason it's not a civil war is because the colonists won and the "country" split, duh. If the colonists had lost it might have been able to be called a civil war by some stretch, but I doubt anyone would have. There's also this common practice in the English language of calling certain types of civil wars revolutions (i.e. the French Revolution, the Russian Revolution, and even the non-violent Glor

    3. Re:Huh? by Rix · · Score: 1

      Pft. While the primary and secondary education I received in California (where the curriculum was chosen more or less by the California Teacher's Association, a non-government body) was doubtlessly slanted, I'm fairly well read. The independent things I've read since then have only backed that information up. You're reading conspiracy into something you have no first-hand experience with. I'm obviously not going to convince you otherwise, because conspiracy theorists never want to give up their favorite conspiracy.

      What conspiracy? You seem to be reading in something that isn't there.

      You know? Using non-standard terminology may make you feel warm and fuzzy ideologically, but there's a reason we have standards: to aid communication. I'm also curious as to how you know what I was taught, because you've obviously never been to the US.

      I have been to the US many times, in fact in my last apartment, I could see the US on a clear day. I know the general gist of American views on history from talking to Americans and reading your history books. They're biased and slanted, as all nations are, but Americans especially when compared to other Western nations. Except France, but that's another story.

      The terminology I'm using is standard, it's just not *your* standard.

      It's interesting to note that both Canada and Australia were influenced by the US system because they both have more of a formal constitution than the UK does. While they don't have a single constitution with amendments, they do have Constitution Acts rather than the half-Acts of Parliament/half-tradition system of the UK.

      You're simply incorrect about this. Canada has always had it's Constitution as a single Act. I'm pretty sure the other colonies did, too. The UK doesn't because it wasn't created out of the blue a few hundred years ago. There isn't really any American influence there. (Though there certainly is elsewhere, but again, that's another story.)

      As for comparing the Canadian system to the US system, if you're happy with the Canadian system and you're Canadian, you're pretty much from either Ontario or the Marintine Provinces, because the system is very unfair to the Western Provinces and the Quebecois think they need more guarantees of rights.

      I live in Vancouver, British Columbia. The regional grumblings in Canada are much more complicated than you seem to think, and there are very few Canadians who oppose our constitution as a whole. The major western grievances with regard to the constitution are with language laws, as there are essentially no French speakers west of Ontario. The Quebec situation is more complicated. A large segment of the Quebec population wants nothing to do with the rest of Canada, and will use any legal means to cause trouble. Another segment feels much the same way, but wants to get as much money out of the situation as possible before leaving. It's much more nuanced than that, but it's not really on topic.

      Specifically, the Canadian Senate is one of the most poorly designed legislative bodies in the world. While it doesn't have the power of the House of Commons, it still has power and it represents neither the provinces fairly or the people fairly.

      The Senate is not what you think it is, and isn't in any way comparable to the American Senate. It is not a legislative body. It exists as a chamber of "sober second thought", and functions to review legislation for unintended consequences and loopholes. It consists mainly of retired intellectuals, mostly lawyers and politicians because they are most suited to this task. Technically speaking, it does hold some power, but by tradition it does not exercise it. Turning it into an elected body would defeat its purpose, and we'd be better off just scrapping it. While you have a point that it is not as representative as it should be, that does not in any way impact it's purpose. It isn't intended to represent regions.

      Yeah, the U

    4. Re:Huh? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think the War on Foo theme speaks legions ...


      That is very funny!
  134. Farenheit 451, anyone? by goodben · · Score: 1

    Hate speach was the justification for banning all books in Ray Bradbury's classic.

  135. Re:Thanks for proving that guy's point by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Any criticism to mass immigration and non integrating cultures is branded as xenophobic and racist."

    And you proved it for him, thanks.

    Its the same in the U.S. - anyone who complains that their neighborhoods have deteriorated beyond recognition, crime has risen, and quality of life has plummeted due to unchecked illegal immigration, is branded "racist" and "xenophobic", regardless if the facts support their complaints.

    Most of the time, the people calling others these names are silly little youngsters, who have never worked 40 years for a home and a good life, only to see it destroyed by the doomed social experiments of wealthy government Utopians who don't have to live there.

  136. Congratulations Europe by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I am happy to see that Europe is making this important step in order to assure peace. Americans will never understand that because their culture is based on fear and hate, so hate speech restrictions is almost the same as americanity restrictions.

    In Brazil racism is outlawed and hate speech as well (any kind of discrimination), this is great because in the long run a really united and heavily mixed society emerged. Look at the US, they are segregated until today. Most don't actively "hate" some other group, but they don't perceive the other groups as being just as humans as they are, they think they are "different".

    Americans are all for "recognition of differences", but this is just an euphemism for "segregation". Blacks changed from fighting segregation to stimulating segregation as long as it doesn't entail economic segregation. Nowadays in the US they have not only white racists, but also black racists, and other made up races such as "hispanic" racists, etc.

    Hate speech is important for politicians interested in dividing the population into groups, and then controlling them through fear. The same way Hitler did in Germany, politicians (black or white or hispanic) do in the US. The only difference is that they don't send millions to concentrations camps, but the rethoric is there.

    Some politicias complained about Brazilian laws forbidding racism, because they can't do the same here. But despite of all complaints the result is undeniably good because we don't have a racist culture and we don't segregate people.

    I have blood from 4 continents in my family, and this is not the exception, this is the rule.

  137. Re:I think you can pretty clearly define hate spee by JesseL · · Score: 1

    I certainly wouldn't argue that all speech is equally benign.

    I would point out that censorship and other curtailments of liberty are found far more often in the company of large scale acts of violence (like genocide) than freedom of speech is.

    --
    "Prefiero morir de pie que vivir siempre arrodillado!"
  138. one more by DrSkwid · · Score: 1

    Despite what TV tells you, this is not a meritocracy.

    --
    There are places where the networks are not touching,and there are places where they are-Boeing's Lori Gunter
  139. Implementation is restricted by Handbrewer · · Score: 1
    The implementation of the EU proposals or "laws" are still susceptible to the individual countries constitutions. In Denmark, theres very much free speech, but you have freedom under responsibility. We have active Nazi parties in Denmark, they try to get voted into our Parliament every time (failing, of course), nobody likes them, but they are free to hold their own beliefs. As long as they do NOT advocate violence in any way. You're free to deny the Holocaust if you want, but 99.9% of the population would probably just view you as the idiot that you are. We had a group of pedophiles here in Denmark, who organized themselves - and since they did not actually advocate child abuse per se - we couldn't shut them down (and they werent actually doing anything illegal either, like expected (swapping child porn or whatever)).

    Cases like this, would be convenient to remove by law, but come to think of it, such laws would cause more harm than good, as it would soon be extended to all kinds of minorities who you might not like, but at least aren't doing anything illegal and just want to exercise their right of free assembly. Like a group discussing the legalization or Marijuana ? Euthanasia etc? Opinions you might not like, and which may be illegal under the current laws (ie: selling and possesion, or performing euthanasia). But thats the point of such groups no? To try to influence the current political system to accept their views. I dont mind Holocaust denials, because they're such a small blip on the radar, like people who still think the world is flat: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flat_Earth_Society . They are annoying, but mostly harmless. As such - there is no need for a hate speech law, and it has been discussed alot in Denmark in the last couple of years and rejected. Although there are laws against racism, they are similar to the laws against slander. Heres the current law:

    Kapitel 27: Freds- og ærekrænkelser 266 b. Den, der offentligt eller med forsæt til udbredelse i en videre kreds fremsætter udtalelse eller anden meddelelse, ved hvilken en gruppe af personer trues, forhånes eller nedværdiges på grund af sin race, hudfarve, nationale eller etniske oprindelse, tro eller seksuelle orientering, straffes med bøde eller fængsel indtil 2 år. Stk. 2. Ved straffens udmåling skal det betragtes som en særligt skærpende omstændighed, at forholdet har karakter af propagandavirksomhed.
    In English: Those, who publically or with intension to publicize in a wider audience, makes statements or other messages by which a group of persons are threatened, humiliated due to their race, color, national or ethnic origin, beliefs or sexual orientation, are punished by fine or prison up to 2 years. Rougly translated - but anyways this is our current "hate speech" law in Denmark as of 2007, and while it restricts free speech, it only restricts parts where you humiliate or directly threaten a group of people. From our constitution:

    Any person shall be at liberty to publish his ideas in print, in writing, and in speech, subject to his being held responsible in a court of law. Censorship and other preventive measures shall never again be introduced.
    I believe the EU laws are incompatible with our constitution, as censorship is not allowed. The part about responsibility to the court of law is the loophole where the racism paragraph is introduced (and slander). I dont think youre allowed to make threats to anyone in pretty much any country, especially not as a part of a propaganda system. Other than that, censorship is strictly prohibited.. Last I checked, America very much censor pretty much everything. So wheres YOUR free speech?
  140. Re:I think you can pretty clearly define hate spee by YakDaGringo · · Score: 1

    Interesting point, though I wouldn't say that censorship engenders violence; in the same way, you point out that hate speech doesn't necessarily result in violence. Both create the conditions for the possibility of violent acts: censorship enables a violent state, hate speech incites a mob. That was more pithy, but were I to attempt to be more accurate in the cases we're discussing: hate speech incites individuals, whose symbolic violence is appropriated and exploited by a mob.

    More to the point, I don't think genocide is what we're primarily concerned with. I have no statistics- so I forward this tentatively- but I wouldn't describe the Southern US as laden in "large scale acts of violence" during the early 20th century. To my knowledge, there was nothing that could properly be termed genocide. What *did* exist was a culture that used violence against individuals to imply a threat against a group. Organizations also staged demonstrations to ensure that such threats were clearly understood and broadened beyond that incident.

    I expect we find the same thing objectionable, but I seem less confident in my solutions. In its effect, hate speech censors the group it targets. Both censorship and hate speech, ironically, appropriate power from the vulnerable, exploiting the society in a pretty cynical way. Censorship takes the responsibility to protect the citizenry- and uses it to weaken it- while hate speech takes the society's openness- and uses it to silence others.

    I don't know what is to be done.

  141. Re:I think you can pretty clearly define hate spee by JesseL · · Score: 1

    Considering that most people murdered in the 20th century were murdered by governments, I can say without hesitation that I would rather incite some mobs than empower a (potentially) violent state. There is also the fact that it is far easier for individuals to defend themselves from other violent individuals than from their own government.

    --
    "Prefiero morir de pie que vivir siempre arrodillado!"
  142. "Proof" is different by demon+driver · · Score: 1

    "Any criticism to mass immigration and non integrating cultures is branded as xenophobic and racist."

    And you proved it for him, thanks. Your requirements for something to constitute proof are clearly deficient. It's a fine excuse for racists to support their racist claims by lamenting they'd always be "branded racist" - of course they'll be, since they bloody are. (Right, and then there's the problem that if one concrete alleged act of "criticism" was "branded racist", that'd actually be far from proof that "any criticism" was "branded"...)

    Its the same in the U.S. - anyone who complains that their neighborhoods have deteriorated beyond recognition, crime has risen, and quality of life has plummeted due to unchecked illegal immigration, is branded "racist" and "xenophobic", regardless if the facts support their complaints. You might have simply overlooked, then, that critics of racism might not deny whatever "facts" there may be, but rather and correctly find that blaming the problem on immigration (if not immigrants) instead of how is dealt with it is indeed and unquestionably racist.

    Most of the time, the people calling others these names are silly little youngsters, who have never worked 40 years for a home and a good life, only to see it destroyed by the doomed social experiments of wealthy government Utopians who don't have to live there. It is always interesting to see how well racism and social envy go along, and how complete social envy can even disturb a mind so thoroughly that it's unable to distinguish between an argument and the person uttering it or even his or her background. And it's similarly interesting that people still draw an utterly stupid and false notion of superiority out of the sole circumstance of their prolonged agreement to decades of their unquestioned submission to exploitation in a stupid job, making others rich. It's no coincidence though that it goes so well with an apologetic or even affirmative attitude towards racism and xenophobia.
  143. The Americans had prior examples, true... by Chmcginn · · Score: 1

    But the British should have seen the example of the Spanish and so on. Expecting people to learn lessons from their neighbor is a stretch, but asking the same of countries is just silly. We're so much more (insert culture's most revered virtue) than they were, it'll work this time!

    --
    Have you been touched by his noodly appendage?