Slashdot Mirror


NY Senators Want To Make Free Speech A Privilege

An anonymous reader writes "A group of four NY state senators have written a paper suggesting that free speech should be looked upon as a government granted privilege rather than a right. They're specifically concerned about cyberstalking and cyberbullying, and are introducing legislation to make both of those against the law. Among other troubling concepts, they argue that merely 'excluding' someone from a group is a form of cyberbullying."

624 comments

  1. I am offended by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

    by this attempt, and expect restitution for their callous behavior and pissing on the Bill of Rights.

    1. Re:I am offended by debiankicksass · · Score: 0

      What about the 1st Amendment? Good luck getting this to pass even with those who choose not to vote.

    2. Re:I am offended by bonch · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I knew they were Democrats when their political affiliation wasn't mentioned in the headline. Seriously, it's a strange trend you'll begin to notice if you follow the news--when Democrat politicians do something unpopular, political affiliation is often left unmentioned.

    3. Re:I am offended by HermMunster · · Score: 2

      It will never happen. Those guys do not understand the U.S. Constitution, if that is their true goal. It would probably be best that the citizens of those states that elected those individuals vote them or impeach them out.

      Can we move past these incompetent goofballs?

      --
      You can lead a man with reason but you can't make him think.
    4. Re:I am offended by Bodhammer · · Score: 2

      You mean like when they forget to mention that the guy who was planning to blow up the Washington Monument and Pentagon is (dare I say it!) a Muslim?

      --
      "I say we take off, nuke the site from orbit. It's the only way to be sure."
    5. Re:I am offended by cheekyjohnson · · Score: 1

      Yeah, but I can magically guess everyone's intent. Intent is the most important thing ever when it comes to speech. They didn't intend to offend you!

      Intending to offend someone through the use of words is absolutely horrible. That's why 99% of the people on the internet likely need to be taught a lesson.

      --
      Filthy, filthy copyrapists!
    6. Re:I am offended by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Or when Republican senators get caught doing something naughty they are labeled as Democrats "by mistake" on Fox News and CNN.

    7. Re:I am offended by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't think that word means what you think it means:
      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Impeachment

    8. Re:I am offended by NeutronCowboy · · Score: 2

      It's called confirmation bias.

      --
      Those who can, do. Those who can't, sue.
    9. Re:I am offended by TheBrutalTruth · · Score: 5, Insightful
      Horseshit. They are POLITICIANS, you troglodyte. Call 'em what you want - they all do the same bullshit.

      Now get off my lawn...

      --
      Enlightenment is a pipe dream. So where's the pipe?
    10. Re:I am offended by Maltheus · · Score: 2

      Or their actions are outright blamed on their opponents, as was the case with the Obama-as-Hitler protest signs. It didn't matter that they had LaRouchePac written right on them, they're still associated with the right-wing to this day.

    11. Re:I am offended by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Except for the logically dubious (but well entrenched as legal precedent) doctrine of incorporation under the 14th amendment, the Bill of Rights says little about what New York may do. It does say "Congressshall make no law ... abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press", but they're not Congress; I and many others would see incorporation overturned even, if need be, at the expense of permitting such abuses by the states.

      But, while the NY state constitution is rather more verbose, it comes out to essentially the same thing: "Every citizen may freely speak, write and publish his or her sentiments on all subjects, being responsible for the abuse of that right; and no law shall be passed to restrain or abridge the liberty of speech or of the press." You will find most state constitutions (check your own!) provide a bill of rights near or exceeding the federal one, and you should be even more angered by state legislators defying the state constitution -- there's no question of the dunious reasoning of Gitlow, they are defying the very document which charters the existence of the legislature itself!

      There was a day when there would be repercussions for this sort of thing -- how these four little tyrants' re-election campaigns fare may serve as a reasonable barometer for how far we've descended.

    12. Re:I am offended by erick99 · · Score: 1

      Somebody paid attention in social psychology (taught in other courses as well)! I hope a few of my students can do this in a few years. Indeed, it is called confirmation bias.

      --
      http://www.busyweather.com/
    13. Re:I am offended by spazdor · · Score: 1

      So let me get this straight: You're in favour of free speech, and that's why you want four men punished for writing a paper? Do I have that right?

      --
      DRM: Terminator crops for your mind!
    14. Re:I am offended by supersloshy · · Score: 2, Insightful

      When did this happen? I didn't hear about it until now. Link please, if any?

      --
      "Our country is not nearly so overrun with the bigoted as it is overrun with the broadminded." -Archbishop Fulton Sheen
    15. Re:I am offended by mosb1000 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Maybe free speech is a collective right, not an individual one.

    16. Re:I am offended by electron+sponge · · Score: 1

      So let me get this straight: You're in favour of free speech, and that's why you want four men punished for writing a paper? Do I have that right?

      Three men and a woman actually, all of whom are elected public officials, who are expected to uphold our state and federal constitutions. I don't favor impeaching them, but I do hope they see primary challenges and a stout resistance in their next general election. The problem here in New York is that there really isn't a viable opposition in most areas of the state. We've been gerrymandered all to hell since the days of Boss Tweed. Too many safe districts means too many unaccountable senators and legislators. That's a problem at the federal level, as well.

    17. Re:I am offended by swalve · · Score: 3, Informative

      That's because it doesn't matter.

    18. Re:I am offended by AlamedaStone · · Score: 2

      When did this happen? I didn't hear about it until now. Link please, if any?

      Fox news bias playlist by liberalviewer on the youtube. I know there are a few in there, and lots more.

      http://www.youtube.com/user/LiberalViewer#grid/user/A3BD2524FE99BD4D

      --
      "All these years believing you're the signified monkey, only to find out you're just a big hunk of nobody cares."
    19. Re:I am offended by spazdor · · Score: 1

      By all means, vote 'em out if that's what you want to do. That generally isn't what is meant when people "expect restitution", though.

      --
      DRM: Terminator crops for your mind!
    20. Re:I am offended by electron+sponge · · Score: 1

      By all means, vote 'em out if that's what you want to do. That generally isn't what is meant when people "expect restitution", though.

      Restitution, as defined conventionally, is a non sequitur. The AC in the original post was obviously playing the role of an aggrieved, bullied person in a sarcastic manner.

      If we want to play fast and loose with words, which I admittedly am not quite comfortable with, we could come to the conclusion that "restitution" would be their defeat at the polls. I wouldn't call it restitution, I would more likely call it common sense and vox populi.

    21. Re:I am offended by CharlyFoxtrot · · Score: 2

      When did this happen? I didn't hear about it until now. Link please, if any?

      Here you go. I'm not even an American and I've heard of several instances, through the Daily Show mostly.

      --
      If all else fails, immortality can always be assured by spectacular error.
    22. Re:I am offended by catprog · · Score: 1

      "Every citizen may freely speak, write and publish his or her sentiments on all subjects, being responsible for the abuse of that right; and no law shall be passed to restrain or abridge the liberty of speech or of the press."

      --
      My Transformation Website
      Kindle Books http://www.catprog.org/rev
      Interactive CYOA http://www.catprog.org/st
    23. Re:I am offended by Fjandr · · Score: 1

      Exactly. Every occurrence of the phrase "the right of the people" indicates a "collective" right.

    24. Re:I am offended by Bob9113 · · Score: 2

      Seriously, it's a strange trend you'll begin to notice if you follow the news--when Democrat politicians do something unpopular, political affiliation is often left unmentioned.

      That sounds like a pretty important thing to have some actual data on. If you have skills cutting code, and you sincerely believe that is happening, you should scrape some news sites, run the stats, and hang the documented bias flag around the neck of the culprits.

      Short of that, on the other hand, it sounds like you're making unfounded allegations to support one of the two evil political machines. If that is the case, wake up -- they both see you as a subject.

    25. Re:I am offended by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Rick Seidel is a prominent example. Rick Seidel was a prominent student at southern. On January 9 there was a facebook incident with this Asian student. The private high school basically kissed the Asian Students ass and were willing to exclude other students for him consequences of which an example of is the high school fire. Rick Seidel killed himself after an incident of cyber bullying on facebook January 13 so I believe they were connected. An adventist minister felt that it was his priestly duty to ostracize a profile on facebook just based on the name. The high school students will collude and then gang up on you and then they would put up all the risk and attack you for him. The old principal did nothing. The Asian guy isn't exactly MIT quality and needed a girl to stick up for him. The Asian guy though doesn't have published papers or a PHD like Seidel does.

      To My Teacher Dr. Rick Seidel
      The first day of General Biology (GB) second semester. We all crowded into the Hickman 114 amphitheatre, anxious not only because the hard work was starting all over again but also because we had a new teacher. As he stood in front of our class, the overstuffed classroom tried to predict how this GB would compare with last semester. But before we had time to decide, the lecture notes and syllabus had been passed out. That day we set a record—we covered the syllabus and an entire 40+ page chapter in our book in the fifty minute class period. Our new teacher meant business. When we arrived back at the classroom the next day, I was surprised to see that our class fit more comfortably into the room. My teacher didn’t give me long to think about it though; I forgot everything else as we dove into another chapter of our book.
      He loved teaching, my teacher.
      Amidst the no-nonsense lectures, our teacher found ways to make us smile. He found a way to use the words “fauna” and “flora” in respect to the mammalian body at least twice every class period. His lectures were also punctuated with fun facts about everyday aspects of life, like how some places here in TN take the dead Christmas trees and tie them to the docks to provide homes for the little fish in the rivers or lakes. And in between the unique words and fun facts, no one ever questioned how much our teacher understood about any of our material. This might be his first time teaching GB, but he was more than prepared. Because my teacher was so revered, his praise was coveted. When we had our first lab of the semester, I desperately wanted to do well. The tricky fetal pig dissection made me think back to the one frog I had dissected in my sophomore year of high school. Carefully, my two lab partners and I cut through the skin and muscle, exposing the organs beneath. As our teacher walked around the room, he paused at each lab bench and evaluated each group’s work. When it was my team’s turn, he smiled at us. “Good work,” he said. The long lab suddenly had become worth it; we had done well. Elated, my group cleaned up the lab.
      He held his students’ deepest respect, my teacher.
      Our teacher centered our class on proving and knowing God. He started every class period with a word of prayer, and as we went through the chapters, our teacher pointed out the complexity of the systems within mammals’ bodies. There was no contest between Creation and evolution in his class. And during many of our lectures, my teacher would tell us simple stories about the family he loved dearly. He loved to spend time with them out in nature. Our teacher was confident in God, and he considered himself blessed.
      He had a personal relationship with our Creator, my teacher.
      And it is with the heaviest heart that I start to comprehend that my teacher Dr. Rick Seidel passed away this weekend. His death has left all of his students shocked; he was just in class on Wednesday. We had a teacher sub for our class on Friday because they said he wasn’t feeling well, and so we reviewed for our upcoming test without him.

    26. Re:I am offended by DigiShaman · · Score: 0

      Or when flash mobs are almost always made up of blacks? PC at its finest.

      --
      Life is not for the lazy.
    27. Re:I am offended by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Don't forget the US patriot act that was passed by a Republican controlled congress and a Republican controlled Senate and was signed into law by a Republican president. Man you're a moron.

    28. Re:I am offended by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I knew they were Democrats when their political affiliation wasn't mentioned in the headline. Seriously, it's a strange trend you'll begin to notice if you follow the news--when Democrat politicians do something unpopular, political affiliation is often left unmentioned.

      And when Republicans do something really unpopular, the political affiliation next to their name is often (D).

    29. Re:I am offended by Totenglocke · · Score: 1

      So, just out of curiosity, are you a Democrat? =) Seriously though, I despise both Democrats and Republicans, but if you watch the news you can't deny the blatant bias in favor of Democrats. Yes, I know what you'll say "But there's the joke Fox News" - one station, big fucking deal. The majority of newspapers, magazines, news sites, and news channels are blatantly biased and don't even try to ignore it. That's why when I watch the news, I change channels a lot because they'll have something interesting for a bit, then they'll get into blatantly biased crap so I change to another station, watch that for a bit, rinse and repeat.

      --
      "The tree of liberty must be refreshed from time to time with the blood of patriots and tyrants." ~Thomas Jefferson
    30. Re:I am offended by Chewbacon · · Score: 1

      I gotta say I'm torn on this one day to day. Think openly about it: when the Bill of Rights was crafted, communication as we know it wasn't even dreamed of. I'm sure we have just as many assholes today as back then, but nevertheless a hateful tweet can go so much further than a locally printed paper on a hand-cranked press. I hate trivial government regulation (and regulating the he-said-she-said on facebook is pretty fucking trivial) and don't get me started on the systematic loss of rights going on, but you cannot deny there is a problem with loud mouth bloggers, cyberbullying, the press running kangaroo courts, etc. If the people want less government attention, then they should exercise, not censorship, but a little fucking decency.

      --
      Chewbacon
      The Bible is like Wikipedia: written by a bunch of people and verifiable by questionable sources.
    31. Re:I am offended by sycodon · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Great. Foreigners are getting their news about America from the Daily Show.

      But then, I learned everything about Great Britain from the Benny Hill Show.

      --
      When Fascism comes to America, it will call itself Anti-Fascism, and tell you to give up your guns.
    32. Re:I am offended by Grishnakh · · Score: 4, Insightful

      This is because Americans are so stupidly caught up in this two-party mentality, they think politics is like a stupid sports game, with two sides, one winner and one loser. So if you say anything against one "side", then you must automatically be rooting for the other "side". I see it all the time on these discussion forums. Say anything critical about Obama (who's been a great Republican president so far), and someone will call you a "teabagger" or Republican or similar. Say anything critical about the current Republican politicians and someone will call you a liberal or Democrat or similar. And even if you're posting under the same moniker, no one ever seems to notice when you're bashing both sides, and just can't seem to wrap their minds around the idea that someone might favor neither "side".

    33. Re:I am offended by Binestar · · Score: 1

      Maybe you should try getting more of your news from the Daily Show as well. It has been shown that Daily Show viewers are more informed than others. http://thinkprogress.org/default/2007/04/16/11946/daily-show-fox-knowledge/

      Oldish study, there was another done in 2008 http://digitaljournal.com/article/259144 (still oldish)

      Of course you would already know this if you watched the Daily Show. =)

      --
      Do you Gentoo!?
    34. Re:I am offended by superdave80 · · Score: 2

      So, I am allowed to say whatever is approved by everybody else ahead of time? Awesome.

    35. Re:I am offended by whipnet · · Score: 1

      I sure am glad I am not the only one who noticed that. *

    36. Re:I am offended by mr100percent · · Score: 2, Insightful

      If you're going to look at it that way, did they state the religious affiliation of the guy who crashed his plane into the IRS building, or the guy who shot up the Holocaust museum in DC, or the guy who shot Congresswoman Giffords, or the guy who threatened to blow up the Bed Bath and Beyond? They were all Christians and these were all recent incidents.

    37. Re:I am offended by Concerned+Onlooker · · Score: 0

      "if you watch the news you can't deny the blatant bias in favor of Democrats."

      What I've noticed in the past 10 years or so is the increasing tendency for Republicans to claim that the press is biased towards Democrats. The Republicans have gotten good at manipulating the use of language in daily discussion.

      --
      http://www.rootstrikers.org/
    38. Re:I am offended by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MeXQBHLIPcw&feature=artist

    39. Re:I am offended by lonecrow · · Score: 1

      I am not sure what you mean by this can you explain? (Not troll just truly curios)

    40. Re:I am offended by mosb1000 · · Score: 1

      The supreme court recently heard arguments that the second amendment only guarantees a collective right to bear arms. To me the obvious question is: what good is a collective right?

    41. Re:I am offended by lonecrow · · Score: 1

      Ok Right now I understand thanks.

      I agree this would be hard to imagine in terms of free speech.

      Much easier to understand in terms of say Ebola. Were only certain accredited collectives are allowed to posses and play with it. That would be an area that it makes sense for the government to control and license the right.

      In terms of gun control I can see the sense in licensing access much like we license drivers licenses. Both are potentially very harmful devices and "we" are all safer and better off if access is restricted based on specific and fair rules.

      Speech is a very singular thing and I can only understand it as an individual right.

    42. Re:I am offended by Runaway1956 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      That's all well and good, for you collectivists. (Obviously, you are one, or you wouldn't have thought of that argument.) Now - what about individualists? Minorities? Are minorities part of the collective? Who runs this collective, anyway? Does being a congressman put you in charge of the collective?

      Stuff it up your collective asses. Free speech means a man can speak his mind, and not give a small damn what liberals, conservatives, or even libertarians might think. Individual men and women enjoy this right, not "mankind" mouthing some doctrine that you happen to approve of.

      --
      "Windows is like the faint smell of piss in a subway: it's there, and there's nothing you can do about it." - Charlie Br
    43. Re:I am offended by roman_mir · · Score: 1

      yes, and the collective right to bear arms only means that you can legally own upper or hinder arms of a bear.

    44. Re:I am offended by epyT-R · · Score: 1

      In terms of government, anything that can be used to wield power is 'very harmful' and must be controlled by the state.

    45. Re:I am offended by epyT-R · · Score: 2

      and of course the democrats voted 'no', right? ..and obama vetoed it when it came up for renewal...oh wait no that didn't happen.

    46. Re:I am offended by aquila.solo · · Score: 1

      Weird. Ever since I learned about confirmation bias, I've been seeing it everywhere.

    47. Re:I am offended by elbonia · · Score: 0

      It could be worse and be like the moronic Europeans which have dozens of parties and have to form coalitions which change every year. It's no wonder the Euro is near financial ruin. No one can form any course of action there. A simple task such as bailing out Greece is beyond their mental capacity and ability to work together. Meanwhile the US passed multiple financial resolutions which are over 10x what Greece needs and it's Treasury Note just it a 70 year LOW.

    48. Re:I am offended by meadowsp · · Score: 1

      And it's all unicorns and rainbows in the US now! Well done!

    49. Re:I am offended by Totenglocke · · Score: 1

      So you don't want the news. As I stated before, I'm not a Republican. I'm just capable of noticing when someone blatantly has a habit of attacking on political party for every last imaginable thing while rarely saying anything negative about the other party.

      --
      "The tree of liberty must be refreshed from time to time with the blood of patriots and tyrants." ~Thomas Jefferson
    50. Re:I am offended by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You obviously don't understand the Constitution. Go read the 1st again.
      Now, notice that it says "Congress" shall not pass laws... that's Federal government, not State.

      The only reason why this protection has EVER been extended to include State law is due to the Supreme Court ruling in Gitlow vs. New York that the 14th Amendment's "Due Process" clause makes the Bill of Rights apply to State law as well as the Federal government.

      Can we move past these incompetent goofballs?

      No, because they can pass this STATE law, and then it will get challenged in court, and if they have a good enough argument then the Supreme Court may very well make another exception to how the 1st and 14th apply, just like they've done for other forms of speech.

    51. Re:I am offended by rtb61 · · Score: 1

      Well that likely has more to do with it being pretty well recognised that corporations buy off both sides of politics. So it's not really which party their from, it's whether a corporate flunky got through the primaries pre-election process. So you end you up with one corporate controlled corrupt politician pretending to run against another corporate controlled corrupt politician. People are starting to recognise political party is more to do with marketing branding than any reality of political behaviour and in order for the majority to win, they have to pay far more attention to the primaries, the candidates count for far more than the branded political.

      --
      Chaos - everything, everywhere, everywhen
    52. Re:I am offended by MaskedSlacker · · Score: 1

      May the people collectively say: Fuck you.

    53. Re:I am offended by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't see why everyone is so shocked. Treating the first amendment like a privilege instead of a right? You mean like how most states treat the second amendment? (Although granted, the second amendment has been getting improving treatment over the past 20 years).

    54. Re:I am offended by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Only a Daily Show fan would assume that means the Daily Show makes people more informed.

    55. Re:I am offended by fafaforza · · Score: 1

      I think it might just be the dumbing down of internet discussion. Same thing takes place when, for example, you try to discuss a European sport like F1 on a European site, like crash.net. Say something bad about one driver and you're automatically called a blind follower of whoever that driver had a crash with. And there are 22 drivers on the grid! But your affiliation is made for you in even a greater degree.

      It's also happened on sites like digg, and in discussion that have nothing to do with politics.

      Maybe the anonymous and impersonal nature brings out the rudeness in people.

    56. Re:I am offended by fafaforza · · Score: 1

      How is one party's politically driven public agenda related to what Totenglocks is saying that he sees with his own eyes?

      Yes, Republicans claim bias. Democrats claim the same. Just listen to any dem/liberal sources, and you'll see it, easily. Wow, gee whitakers. A party does things to win votes. Call 60 Minutes and Jon Stewart.

    57. Re:I am offended by CharlyFoxtrot · · Score: 1

      No, a comedy show isn't my only source of information regarding international news. Maybe you missed the part where I said I'm not an American. The Daily Show is pretty good at what they do though, which is expose and complain about the sort of right wing idiocy the AC brought up so I think it's a valid reference here.

      --
      If all else fails, immortality can always be assured by spectacular error.
    58. Re:I am offended by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hey, I'm just an AC, but what I like to know first is what relation is there between what Totenglocks is saying with what Bob9113 said, which was basically requesting (to bonch) for data on an apparent bias to not report the party affiliation when it's Democrats who did something bad/stupid/controversial/etc

      I would think Bob9113 is looking for more than just anecdotes, or pushing the burden back to the inquirer to go watch the news, with a subsequent sardonic remark of "so you don't watch the news" when somebody doesn't just nod in agreement in response

    59. Re:I am offended by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ok Right now I understand thanks.

      However, you apparently haven't mastered the art of punctuation.

    60. Re:I am offended by Ol+Olsoc · · Score: 1

      Huh? The stories I read noted that he was a Muslim. Or are you truthinessing us?

      --
      The shepherds did so well protecting the flock that the sheep no longer believed that wolves existed.
    61. Re:I am offended by DigiTechGuy · · Score: 1

      I am strongly libertarian in my beliefs. I don't believe in a party, I believe in the rights of the individual. I get the same kind of grief from both liberals and neocons whenever I criticise either side. +1 Insightful for you, if I had not used all my mod points the other day.

    62. Re:I am offended by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "I knew they were Democrats when their political affiliation wasn't mentioned in the headline."

      My thought exactly. When it's a Republican, the media stamps R everywhere.....when it's a Democrat? can't find it.

    63. Re:I am offended by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well played.

    64. Re:I am offended by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, they are not all the same.

      Look at those who advocate campus speech codes and restrictions on campaign speech.

      The Left likes the government restricting political speech.

      The Right makes essentially no similar attempts.

    65. Re:I am offended by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I knew they were Democrats when their political affiliation wasn't mentioned in the headline. Seriously, it's a strange trend you'll begin to notice if you follow the news--when Democrat politicians do something unpopular, political affiliation is often left unmentioned.

      You're absolutely right. Whenever a newspaper, tv station, etc, talk about the wrong doing of a politician, if they don't telling the political affiliation of the politician, you can be assured it's because that politician is a democrat.

    66. Re:I am offended by Kehvan · · Score: 1

      When did this happen? I didn't hear about it until now. Link please, if any?

      Fox news bias playlist by liberalviewer on the youtube. I know there are a few in there, and lots more.

      http://www.youtube.com/user/LiberalViewer#grid/user/A3BD2524FE99BD4D

      And what do that link prove? Nothing. It doesn't even link to a video... it just links to someones account. If you have an actual case of FoxNews or whomever calling a republican "democrat" in response to wrong doing, THEN EFFING PROVE IT.

    67. Re:I am offended by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      Maybe, but I'm pretty sure you'd see the same thing even if you're sitting around with a bunch of people in person, and say something against any particular politician. The only difference is they may be more likely to stay quiet in person, whereas on the internet they may be more likely to respond with a nasty comment, but they'll still be thinking "he doesn't like X, so he must be a big fan of the Y party".

      I don't know much about European society, but since there's more than 2 parties in most places there, surely you wouldn't have this problem, since if you complain about one politician, and there's 6 parties, others wouldn't know right away which of the other 5 parties you might like? Remember, this whole two-party idiocy has been ingrained into us Americans for over 150 years.

    68. Re:I am offended by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Did you miss what bonch wrote? It was two sentences. He wasn't talking about who did what, he was talking about who reported what. But while we're on the subject, democrats are definitely the group that is more apt to take away basic rights. Sure there are RINOs like Bloombooger, but the anti-free-speech, nannying bullshit is definitely loaded on the left end of the spectrum.

    69. Re:I am offended by Rostin · · Score: 2
      I read the IRS guy's manifesto on the day that it happened, and I looked it up again just now to be sure. The only time he mentions religion is to pillory the Catholic church and then "organized religion" more generally. That doesn't prove he wasn't a Christian of any stripe, but in the absence of any evidence that he was (which I'm having trouble finding), it does make it seem less likely.

      Loughner (the "guy who shot Congresswoman Giffords") was almost certainly not a Christian. A little googling reveals that as near anyone could tell (he was pretty crazy, after all), he was some kind of nihilist or atheist, although he may have remained a member (on paper) of his mother's synagogue.

      James von Brunn, ("the guy who shot up the Holocaust museum in DC"), seemingly wasn't a Christian either. A screed he wrote entitled Christianity and the Holocaust states,

      Toward that end -- no different than Hollywood script-writers today -- Saul [That's the apostle Paul, who wrote most of the New Testament, for the biblically illiterate] created a bogus a la Spielberg docu-drama stuffed with lies, miracles, guilt trips, betrayal, virgin birth, eternal damnation, salvation -- a scenario appealing to the superstitious, vulnerable, ignorant yearning sheep -- he named his hoax "Christianity."

      Based on what little I've read, he seems to be much more of a disciple of a form of perverted Nietzscheanism than a Christian.

      I hadn't heard of the plot to blow up the Bad, Bath, and Beyond. I can only find this news item from about two weeks ago that describes a 61 year old man going into a store with a fire cracker and threatening to blow the place up. Even though you clearly don't deserve it, I'll spot you this one and agree that he was a Christian. I have the luxury of being generous because I'm pretty sure it doesn't contribute much to your implied argument for some kind of media bias or conspiracy to protect Christianity.

    70. Re:I am offended by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Try reading for comprehension. bonch's observation was that not that Democrat politicians misbehave more, but that journalists gloss over and cover up for Democrats. Which is true.

    71. Re:I am offended by AlamedaStone · · Score: 2

      And what do that link prove? Nothing. It doesn't even link to a video... it just links to someones account. If you have an actual case of FoxNews or whomever calling a republican "democrat" in response to wrong doing, THEN EFFING PROVE IT.

      Actually it's a playlist (only a few hundred) of that user's videos, each of which document specific intentional falsehoods perpetrated by the so-called Fox News. This isn't some great conspiracy to smear Fox, you know? If you're as interested in this issue as your shrill rage suggests, you should try watching one or two.

      If you have enough time to post, you have enough time to toss your question into google and find more. I also have that time! Here you go.

      http://www.google.com/search?q=republican+labeled+as+democrat+fox

      Evidently, Marks Foley and Sanford are two, although I have to admit I didn't read past the second link.

      enjoy

      --
      "All these years believing you're the signified monkey, only to find out you're just a big hunk of nobody cares."
    72. Re:I am offended by scot4875 · · Score: 1

      This happens both ways. What you (and all the other butthurt Republicans who also bitch about this) are experiencing is called "confirmation bias".

      You can spot "trends" in a lot of things if you don't actually collect data.

      --Jeremy

      --
      Jesus was a liberal
    73. Re:I am offended by Obfuscant · · Score: 1

      Maybe you should try getting more of your news from the Daily Show as well.

      When comedy programs are presented as the best source of news, something is wrong. But how can people not be tricked into thinking The Daily Show is "news" when it is carried on CNN International and presented to the entire world as "news"?

      The comment about learning all about England from Benny Hill is spot on. Duels of honor are conducted in England by slapping each other with fish (Monty Python), and all young children are obvious liars (Outnumbered). B&B's in that country are all run by people like Basil Fawlty, too.

      It has been shown that Daily Show viewers are more informed than others.

      Given the name of the website, I suspect that what you meant to say was that viewers of the humor of Jon Stewart agree with more progressive concepts than those who don't. Yes, I think that is an obvious conclusion. And yes, "Think Progress" pretty much sums it up.

      At best, it's a case of "people who are more informed might watch more topical programming than those who aren't, and that might include 'The Daily Show', a humor program based on current events." Causal link? Unproven.

      Of course you would already know this if you watched the Daily Show.

      There are many things you would "know" if you watched "The Daily Show", and one of them should be that comedy is, for the most part, based on deliberate and often biased distortions of the truth. The latter is often overlooked by Daily Show viewers.

    74. Re:I am offended by sycodon · · Score: 1

      Well, if you are not an America, then you are a foreigner using my frame of reference.

      I don't get it. Were you responding to someone else?

      --
      When Fascism comes to America, it will call itself Anti-Fascism, and tell you to give up your guns.
    75. Re:I am offended by jahudabudy · · Score: 1

      Or maybe it was b/c these four Senators specifically broke away from the Democratic party and labeling them IDC would confuse most people? Or maybe it's just fucking TechDirt, who apparently don't bother with that custom?

      I knew you were a Republican as soon as you started crying about the "Liberal Media". It's funny, the wimps (D) are usually the biggest whiners (R) in real life, but not in politics.

      --
      ...sometimes, in order to hurt someone very badly, you have to tell that person terrible lies. - PA
    76. Re:I am offended by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Or like when some does or try's to blow up an abortion clinic. It goes with out saying that they are or think they are christian.

    77. Re:I am offended by Fjandr · · Score: 1

      Yes, they may, but only if it's collective. We can't be having individual rights now, that would make some people uncomfortable.

    78. Re:I am offended by elbonia · · Score: 1

      No it's just in better shape and not regressing, there's actual progress rather than just sitting and debating what to do.

    79. Re:I am offended by mr100percent · · Score: 1

      I wasn't really pointing out any Christian conspiracy, but rather pointing out how ridiculous bodhammer's above argument about media bias is.

    80. Re:I am offended by mosb1000 · · Score: 1

      I'm not a collectivist. I'm making fun of how absurd it is to claim that there is such a thing as a collective right. To me the thing I said is so absurd it's hard for me to imagine that someone could have thought I really meant it.

      I mean, who thinks that way? Can speech belong to the collective rather than the individual? We aren't ants.

    81. Re:I am offended by Quila · · Score: 1

      That these people weren't Christian has been answered, but it doesn't matter. Motive matters in a crime story, and any reasonable person would have the motive prominent in the story. In fact, the press makes up motives where no immediate apparent one exists (Sarah Palin's map making Loughner shoot Giffords).

      These guys didn't commit their crimes because of Christian motives, so it is reasonable that Christianity wouldn't be mentioned. But these Muslims are doing it because they are part of a large Muslim movement that believes Allah instructs them to do it. Their motive is closely intertwined with their religion -- in fact there is no rational motive without their religion -- so the religion should be prominent in the story.

      Make it simple:

      Muslim robs a gas station with no mention of religion. There is no need for the press to mention his religion, and mentioning it could be considered unnecessarily inflammatory.

      Muslim plans to bomb a government building, stating he wants to strike at "the enemies of Allah." Islam is now central to the story, and not mentioning it is an abdication of journalistic integrity.

      Unfortunately, that abdication is common.

    82. Re:I am offended by Runaway1956 · · Score: 1

      Ahhh, but that is the argument seriously put forward for revoking the right to bear arms. Really, really seriously. A number of people insist that the right to bear arms belongs to the collective, and is exercised by the armed forces - therefore it does not apply to individuals.

      Forgive me for not hearing the sarcasm in your voice, after hearing the same argument from voices with no sarcasm at all!

      --
      "Windows is like the faint smell of piss in a subway: it's there, and there's nothing you can do about it." - Charlie Br
    83. Re:I am offended by WNight · · Score: 1

      That's ridiculous.

      If the masses were right nothing would need to be said, and nobody would be offended. But that's not how it works. Everything is discovered by a small group first and propagates to others. But the masses, if we were to listen to them, wouldn't have any of it because they hadn't heard it yet. Circular, and useless.

      All rights not only must reside in the individual to offer any protection to individuals or the collective, but government only has legitimacy through the people it represents and they wouldn't very well sign their essential freedoms away to do so. The rights are inherently the people's. No constitution, treaty, or law, can take it away.

    84. Re:I am offended by mr100percent · · Score: 1

      Yes and no. A lot of the crime in the Muslim world is blamed on Islam in places like Fox News, although it has almost no bearing. Plenty of Pakistan's internal turmoil is little different than Mexico's killing sprees, but one is blamed on religion and the other is not.

      Furthermore, when Islam is stated as a motive, there's little effort in the media to separate it from the mainstream. Muslims are aghast at the violence committed by extremists and hold press conferences and issue loud denunciations, but for some reason their narrative is ignored. It's like how Terry Jones' or Fred Phelps' religion isn't mentioned, or when it is the media doesn't bother to call him extreme or not.

    85. Re:I am offended by Binestar · · Score: 1

      Did you actually read the links I posted? I know this is slashdot and all, but you'll see that these are actual studies where current events questions were asked and Daily Show Viewers scored better than other TV show viewers.

      --
      Do you Gentoo!?
    86. Re:I am offended by Quila · · Score: 1

      A lot of the crime in the Muslim world is blamed on Islam in places like Fox News, although it has almost no bearing.

      Crime not related to Islam rarely hits our news anyway. But Fox isn't exactly a bastion of responsible journalism. On the other hand, you can count on them to report the non-PC stories that others often won't.

      Plenty of Pakistan's internal turmoil is little different than Mexico's killing sprees, but one is blamed on religion and the other is not.

      One is often based on religion and the other isn't. I have an ex-Muslim Pakistani friend here in the US exactly because of the religious violence there.

      Muslims are aghast at the violence committed by extremists and hold press conferences and issue loud denunciations, but for some reason their narrative is ignored.

      Probably because the number of Muslims who commit the violence is quite large, the number of those who support the violence is much larger, the number who are willing to passively accept the violence is even vastly larger, and those who publicly condemn it are relatively few. And even among groups who publicly condemn it we see that it is sometimes a PR sham, as they silently support terrorist groups at the same time (*cough* CAIR *cough*).

      It's like how Terry Jones' or Fred Phelps' religion isn't mentioned

      I see both of their religions mentioned, although remember that the Phelps clan rarely if ever brakes any laws. In fact, they're mainly funded through winning lawsuits against cities who violate their rights during legal protests. Also, I have yet to find one established church that endorses the Phelps clan's interpretation of Christianity.

      Fun fact: Right wing Christians were pretty much silent on the Phelps clan while they were mainly picketing gay funerals. This is equivalent to the passive acceptance of Muslim violence above, except that the Phelps clan never commits violence. They didn't get indignant and denounce Phelps until his inbred freak show started picketing soldier funerals.

      Another fun fact: The Phelps clan was a supporter of Al Gore, even helped with his campaign and ran fundraisers, back when Gore opposed gay rights legislation in the 80s. There are some nice photos with them all friendly together.

    87. Re:I am offended by mr100percent · · Score: 1

      the number of those who support the violence is much larger, the number who are willing to passively accept the violence is even vastly larger, and those who publicly condemn it are relatively few

      What's your basis for this belief? If you watch any Urdu or Arabic TV you'll see that the population is outraged by what's happening, and there are scathing denunciations in the press and large anti-terrorism rallies by the publics. Don't assume that if it's not reported on your English-language website that somehow the people are quietly going along with this. You're falling into the same mistake that middle easterners are when they think Americans are silent at the atrocities committed in their names.

    88. Re:I am offended by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, that his ideology and motives has more than likely been somewhat shaped by his religious beliefs has no relevance whatsoever and is completely unrelated to the issue. His train of thought and the cause of his motives has nothing to do with religion, it is completely arbitrary.

    89. Re:I am offended by Quila · · Score: 1

      and there are scathing denunciations in the press and large anti-terrorism rallies by the publics

      I remember a while back in London that one famous anti-militant imam (ul-Qadri?) held a rally where a few thousand showed up.

      Of course, at the same time there were pro-terrorism rallies across the country, dwarfing his. For every one of him, there are probably several examples of Anjem Choudary. Even people who constantly preach peace like Feisal Rauf are Hezbollah sympathizers, since they see them as part of a "trend towards Islamic law and justice."

      I will believe this whole platform of "Islam is peace" and "Islam wants to peacefully coexist with Christianity" when there is a Christian church, a Jewish synagogue and a Buddhist temple in Mecca. Until then, it's just blowing smoke.

    90. Re:I am offended by mr100percent · · Score: 1

      The size of a rally is irrelevant when public opinion polling shows that the vast majority of Muslims condemn terrorism and support coexistence. And Feisal Rauf never said he was sympathetic to hizbullah etc. Your quote was in the context of someone asking why religious movements gain popularity, not whether he endorsed it or not. He's been quite a critic of those groups.

      If you're going to judge my religion based on whether some arab dictator allows a buddhist temple or not, then we're going to be here a long time. I'm not Arab, and the Saudi king doesn't speak for me. Instead, I go to a mosque in New York that's in the basement of a Catholic church. We have a great relationship with the Christians in our community, please don't try to lump us all together with the extremists you mention.

    91. Re:I am offended by Bodhammer · · Score: 1

      Exercise for you - Find the word ":Muslim" in this article: http://security.blogs.cnn.com/2011/09/29/analysis-model-planes-as-weapons-of-terror/

      --
      "I say we take off, nuke the site from orbit. It's the only way to be sure."
    92. Re:I am offended by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      that believes Allah instructs them to do it

      No they don't. Only a schizophrenic would think that God, Allah or Krishna tells them to do something.
        It's called war against infiltrating cultures, the main enemies being of course the US culture, the Indian and Han cultures and any other culture which tries to make some footprint on the geographical areas these people think as Muslim lands. Terror attacks on the soils of US and any other culturally or militarily invading country is just a little counter balance. They are the one of the very few peoples on this earth who believe they can win globalization. See what sacrifices has to be done: basic subsistence in places like Somalia, constant fear of dropping bombs and hostile governments everywhere, who of course benefit from the globalization.
        Invasion of the US culture has been a hot topic throughout the Europe, Asia and even Africa for a long time and the counter moves the governments have done range from barbaric and stupid to protectionist and counterproductive and ultimately, submission aided by the US diplomatic involvement and money changing hands and the opposition hunted down by charges relating to extremism, subversion, terrorism or lack of patriotism.

    93. Re:I am offended by CharlyFoxtrot · · Score: 1

      Well, if you are not an America,

      I'm an America, and so can you !

      then you are a foreigner using my frame of reference.

      So I'm not allowed an opinion because I'm a foreigner ? Maybe you'd like to point out where I was wrong instead of continuing with these ad hominem arguments ? Was the information I linked to incorrect ?

      I don't get it. Were you responding to someone else?

      No, I was responding to your "criticism" that I am like an american thinking he knows something about England after watching Benny Hill. It's a silly, and insulting, assumption on your part that because I reference one TV show that that comprises the whole of basis of my knowledge about your country.

      --
      If all else fails, immortality can always be assured by spectacular error.
    94. Re:I am offended by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually, they are part of the "Independent Democratic Conference". Please note, this is NOT part of the Democratic party you seem to be referring to. It's more of a quasi-political party of its own.

    95. Re:I am offended by Sumtingwong · · Score: 1

      This is a fact of REPORTING, you troglodyte, not a political point. Now get the fuck off my lawn, tool.

      --
      Word!
  2. Whoever voted for these politicians... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Insightful

    ...should go die in a fire. For fuck's sake, people, what were you thinking??

    1. Re:Whoever voted for these politicians... by eln · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I'm going to go out on a limb here and say they probably didn't campaign on an anti-Bill of Rights platform.

    2. Re:Whoever voted for these politicians... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Mod parent up. Said representatives were voted in because they promised to vote the right way on abortion and gay marriage.

      Looking forward to see the next crop of incompetent losers voted in in 2012!

    3. Re:Whoever voted for these politicians... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And that's what a 2-party system gets us. Two parties who both want to take our rights away, but with a different priority in where to screw us first.

  3. Welcome to Canada? by Jailbrekr · · Score: 2, Interesting

    In Canada, we do not have free speech in absolute terms like our southern counterparts. The difference between us and what those senators are suggesting is that we have a Charter of Rights which protects us from any attempt of gov't approved censorship. It can be annoying at times, but it keeps the holocaust deniers at bay.

    --
    Feed the need: Digitaladdiction.net
    1. Re:Welcome to Canada? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      why would you want to keep the holocaust deniers at bay by giving up the right of free speech?
      are holocaust deniers that big a pest or is your free speech worth that little?

    2. Re:Welcome to Canada? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Can't say we have a major problem down here with holocaust denies down here either.

      The power to stop people from denying the holocaust is the power to stifle other kinds of speech that the authorities don't like.

    3. Re:Welcome to Canada? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They are concerned that people will be convinced by the holocaust deniers.

      Look at the US -- no restrictions on holocaust deniers -- and I bet they don't even believe WWII happened!

    4. Re:Welcome to Canada? by Jailbrekr · · Score: 0

      Do you have something against being made accountable for your own words? I am free to say whatever I want whenever I want, but I am held accountable for those words. If my words encourage hatred towards a minority, I am committing a hate crime. If my words encourage suicide, I am complicit in their demise. Thats the only real implication.

      --
      Feed the need: Digitaladdiction.net
    5. Re:Welcome to Canada? by Alex+Belits · · Score: 1

      "First they came for serial axe murderers..."

      --
      Contrary to the popular belief, there indeed is no God.
    6. Re:Welcome to Canada? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      you are just asking it the wrong way, instead of asking what happened in world war two, ask them what happened in certain hollywood movies they have seen.
      they know the concept and believe in it, they just link it differently.

    7. Re:Welcome to Canada? by currently_awake · · Score: 2

      The Canadian government can override those rights with the notwithstanding clause, where the US gov just ignores the constitution. (same result)

    8. Re:Welcome to Canada? by Coolhand2120 · · Score: 0

      So how's it feel to subjugated rather than free? Call the U.S. what you will, at least we have universal suffrage. I don't know how you feel about it, but if I knew that some of these people in my government would be able to stay in positions of power regardless of public opinion and would pass their positions onto their children (law of succession) it would make be want to start a revolution. Err. I guess I'm a little late to that little party, but I think you get my point. If God had to choose, I'd rather he bless America, Canada included than save the queen. No offense.

    9. Re:Welcome to Canada? by Zirbert · · Score: 3, Interesting

      In Canada, we do not have free speech in absolute terms like our southern counterparts. The difference between us and what those senators are suggesting is that we have a Charter of Rights which protects us from any attempt of gov't approved censorship. It can be annoying at times, but it keeps the holocaust deniers at bay.

      We actually have massive government-perpetrated censorship. So-called "human rights commissions", which are government bureaucracies, impose large fines, with no real legal recourse, on those targets (carefully chosen, of course) who violate the supposed rights of others not to be offended. As long as those others are members of the correct groups, of course.

      I know a lot of people in general, and Slashdot readers in particular, won't/don't agree with many of Ezra Levant's positions, but he's done more to shine disinfecting sunlight on the HRCs than all the "civil liberties" groups in Canada combined. Googling his name and doing some reading will quickly show just how fragile supposed freedom of speech really is in Canada. That may be gradually changing, thankfully - there are movements afoot to remove or re-word Section 13 of the Human Rights Act so that just hurting someone's feelings is no longer an offense. In fact, Ezra just did a segment on his show about it: http://ezralevant.com/2011/10/free-speechs-only-hope.html.

      The solution to Holocaust deniers is not to stifle everyone's freedom of speech. Let them say their piece, then let the rest of us refute, rebuke, and roundly mock.

    10. Re:Welcome to Canada? by halivar · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Cultures who outlaw dickwads are at the mercy of those who define the term "dickwad." Wait until your favorite religion/race/affiliation/cereal-brand is a "hate crime."

      The US has free speech so that no man may stifle another man's conscience.

    11. Re:Welcome to Canada? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      the senators aren't that good eh? so if i kick you off my facebook now im a bully? then give me your lunch tickets nerd.

    12. Re:Welcome to Canada? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      There mere expression of an idea cannot hurt anyone. The only way harm can arise is if somebody else acts in a way that is harmful after having heard or seen the idea that was expressed.

      You talk about accountability, but you clearly have no idea how to properly assign it. The person who expressed the idea should not be held responsible if somebody else does something that's harmful. Only the perpetrator should be held accountable.

      If somebody tells you to smear your own shit in your face, it's not their fault if you go ahead and do it, and then don't enjoy the experience. The only person who should face any sort of accountability in that situation is you, for not controlling your actions.

      If somebody tells you to smear your own shit in the face of some third person, it's not the instructor nor the recipient who should be held accountable. Again, it's you, because you're the one who acted on what you heard. In such a situation, you are the one who caused the harm to happen, not the person who merely expressed an idea.

    13. Re:Welcome to Canada? by cheekyjohnson · · Score: 2

      I am free to say whatever I want whenever I want, but I am held accountable for those words.

      Then I wouldn't exactly call that "free speech."

      If my words encourage hatred towards a minority, I am committing a hate crime.

      Are you saying that people shouldn't be able to voice that kind of opinion?

      If people listen to your words, then I believe they are at fault (and partly you, but I don't care about the person who said it). If they act 'irrationally', then I think punishment should go to them (if necessary or if possible).

      --
      Filthy, filthy copyrapists!
    14. Re:Welcome to Canada? by cheekyjohnson · · Score: 2

      Yeah, but what if someone yells "fire" in a crowded theater? Clearly an intelligent person would instantly believe them and then trample over everyone else (it's not your fault for trampling over them, though) to save their own skin!

      --
      Filthy, filthy copyrapists!
    15. Re:Welcome to Canada? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And what's the problem with them thinking the way they do? Most other Americas will exercise their free speech and call them idiots in some fashion or other. The same goes for (truly) racist groups, truthers, birthers, etc. As far as I've seen, the only reason these people get any lime light is because our media gets more clicks and reads when something insanely controversial is in the head lines. Before 24/7 news these kind of people were generally ignored or were at least easier to ignore.

    16. Re:Welcome to Canada? by Svippy · · Score: 1

      Do you even know what the word 'universal suffrage' means? Last time I checked, all people have the right to vote in Canada. In fact, as far as I know (and I might be wrong though), in Canada they don't take away your right to vote if you are convicted of a crime.

      --
      Clicked pie.
    17. Re:Welcome to Canada? by malkavian · · Score: 1

      "There mere expression of an idea cannot hurt anyone"
      Interesting theory. It does fly in the face of psychology, but hey.. Sometimes, expressions of ideas are the most harmful things around.. And they leave scars you don't get to see, which makes them really convenient if you want to hurt someone and get off free..

    18. Re:Welcome to Canada? by cheekyjohnson · · Score: 1

      It's true that it can emotionally harm someone. But that isn't an absolute certainty. Different people are offended by different things, and I believe there are ways to desensitize yourself so that insults will harm you rarely, if ever.

      --
      Filthy, filthy copyrapists!
    19. Re:Welcome to Canada? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are correct, election polls are setup in prisons, etc. You never lose your right to vote. There are no crazy registration laws and myriad restrictions on voting either. If you are 18, and a citizen, you can vote, simple as that.

    20. Re:Welcome to Canada? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It can be annoying at times, but it keeps the holocaust deniers at bay.

      What holocaust deniers?

    21. Re:Welcome to Canada? by Synerg1y · · Score: 1

      There is nothing about the Canadian government that the USA should/ can, Canada is not a world player, the USA is, also if the states collapsed, guess who would follow. If our first amendment collapsed, guess who's charter would as well (Mexico would suffer too maybe)? It's fine to be the copy cat with a little revision and common sense, but keep them views north of the border ;)

      Having SOME free speech would make Washington roll in his grave and the British invade, if we turn to socialistic "common sense" values that do no promote extreme freedom and let people piss other people off to almost unlimited extents, what fun is that?

      These senators probably have over plump kids who have been bullied for posting pics of themselves on 4chan? :)

    22. Re:Welcome to Canada? by UnknownSoldier · · Score: 1

      > Yeah, but what if someone yells "fire" in a crowded theater?

      a) If the theater REALLY is on fire, no problem
      b) If the theater is NOT on fire ...

      For the LAST time, that is NOT a Free Speech issue, it is a PROPERTY issue. You agreed to an implicit contract that while on someone else's property (the Movie Theater's) you don't have the right to cause panic or disrupt the general public.

    23. Re:Welcome to Canada? by chispito · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Cultures who outlaw dickwads are at the mercy of those who define the term "dickwad." Wait until your favorite religion/race/affiliation/cereal-brand is a "hate crime."

      This is why, as a morally and theologically conservative Christian, I would describe myself as libertarian. The more power you give the government to enforce your views, the more power you give the government to use against you.

      --
      The Daddy casts sleep on the Baby. The Baby resists!
    24. Re:Welcome to Canada? by cheekyjohnson · · Score: 1

      But if the government gets involved, I think it is a problem. I don't believe that you can just magically sign away your free speech rights (allowing the government to punish you if you say something the property owner doesn't like) just because you step on someone's property. They could ask you to leave, sure, but I think your right to free speech should remain.

      --
      Filthy, filthy copyrapists!
    25. Re:Welcome to Canada? by malkavian · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I suspect you weren't listening. It was pretty clear to me.
      In a free society, you are free to do things. However, you are also responsible for the things you do (with freedom comes responsibility). Your implied concept that freedom must mean the abrogation of responsibility, then you're building the foundations of a lunatic asylum. There are already a whole slew of things that you're free to say, but reap the downside of (slander etc.).
      I suspect the intention of "free speech" was to prevent the government repressing the people, not being able to speak out against tyranny and being forced to be mere silent pawns of the state (you know, kind of how the peasantry of England was at the time of the war of independence).
      Instead, you now have abusive petty tyrants in the thousands who believe they have the absolute right to bully, demean and abuse people by way of words and expressions, and somehow, it's magically OK to do this because they're guaranteed freedom of speech, supposedly with no repercussion or consequence to their actions? This is definitely not the utopia imagined; more of a dystopia that wasn't even imagined back then. Actions have consequences.
      The idea of freedom is you get to choose the consequences, good or bad. Same as you get the choice about whether to pick a potato from the fire with a toasting fork, or use your bare hand.
      If people listen to the words, that's up to them. It gives you no real idea of their thoughts on it. As soon as they act on it, you know, and that's when you punish the illegal. However, incitement to crimes doesn't let you walk away free, as far as I believe.. Same as you'd be unhappy if someone kept threatening (in a serious way) to kill you, and asking people around to rough you up. Would you be happy that he was perfectly free to pursue this activity as 'just words' and fight for their freedom to say them? Or would you turn round and say "This guy's nuts, this is just plain dangerous and insane" and request that the cops do something?
      Know what I'd do.. Request that this loon reap the consequences of their actions (speech is an action).

    26. Re:Welcome to Canada? by Maltheus · · Score: 1

      No I hold people responsible for their actions. If people would focus more on what others do and less on what they say, then they'd be less likely to elect the douche bags that they do.

    27. Re:Welcome to Canada? by Obfuscant · · Score: 1

      You agreed to an implicit contract that while on someone else's property (the Movie Theater's) you don't have the right to cause panic or disrupt the general public.

      Umm, no I didn't.

      And I suspect that the owner of the theater would be in just as much trouble with the law over yelling "fire" when there's a crowd in his house and there is no fire as anyone else would be.

      Probably more, since he'll be the one liable for deaths due to insufficient exits.

    28. Re:Welcome to Canada? by dbc · · Score: 1

      Free speech is not absolute in the USA, either. Lots of case law around that. Political speech, by-and-large is protected in something close to the absolute. The Supreme Court has always taken a very dim view of attempts to curtail anything that could be considered political speech. Of course, you are not free of consequences -- you need to deal with result of what you say. But outside of contributions to the political discourse, however broadly construed, there are definite limits to free speech. "Hate speech", speech that contributes nothing to political discussion but advocates hatred, is certainly curtailed. "Commercial speech" comes under much regulation -- think false advertising, or regulations on prescription medication advertising.

      Most USA-ians misunderstand what their freedom of speech really is -- it really means the government can't use censorship to protect itself from critics. Outside of that, there are definite boundaries.

      As far as holocaust deniers go, I'm perfectly happy to let them make idiots of themselves. The other side gets to present their evidence as well. I don't think the government should be in the business of deciding truthiness.

    29. Re:Welcome to Canada? by cheekyjohnson · · Score: 1

      However, you are also responsible for the things you do (with freedom comes responsibility).

      You can speak, write, or do anything that is possible for a human being to do. What good would free speech be if you were immediately punished (by the government) for saying something? We already know that we can speak. I think everyone is aware of that. In that case, if we didn't care that the government could punish us for saying something they disliked, stating that we have a right to free speech (as in, we have the ability to speak, but could be punished for it) would be absolutely redundant and useless.

      That is what I meant by that statement. I wouldn't say you truly have "free speech" if the government then punishes you for the speech they claimed was free (because you need to take "responsibility" for your actions).

      Same as you'd be unhappy if someone kept threatening (in a serious way) to kill you, and asking people around to rough you up.

      Are you talking about me? I think I'd most likely ignore it. In such a situation, I believe they should only be punished when it's demonstrated that they truly are doing something (either they were about to kill them, or they already have). Just my opinion.

      --
      Filthy, filthy copyrapists!
    30. Re:Welcome to Canada? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In Canada, we do not have free speech in absolute terms like our southern counterparts.

      Well, we don't really have absolutely free speech either -- "Fire!" in a crowded theater, slander and all that. But the presumption is the government cannot censor speech without a very compelling reason. I seriously doubt cyberbullying rises to that level.

    31. Re:Welcome to Canada? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Call the U.S. what you will, at least we have universal suffrage.

      Funny, mod parent up please.

    32. Re:Welcome to Canada? by Coolhand2120 · · Score: 0

      Really? You can vote for the queen?! Maybe you don't know what you're talking about. I put a link to Law of succession just in case you didn't know what I was talking about. Do you now?

    33. Re:Welcome to Canada? by jc42 · · Score: 1

      Yeah, but what if someone yells "fire" in a crowded theater? Clearly an intelligent person would instantly believe them ... [usual scenario deleted]

      This has been one of my favorite memes ever since I saw it happen. The place was fairly full, and the movie reached a scene where the Good Guys got the drop on the Bad Guys. As several of the Good Guys lifted their weapons, someone in the audience shouted "Fire!". This was instantly followed by many other voices shouting "Fire!". Then the ruckus died down, and everyone in the audience broke into laughter.

      It was pretty obvious what everyone was thinking. They'd all just violate the hoary old meme about shouting "Fire!" in a crowded theater. And nobody was injured. It was fairly obvious that nobody was going to be arrested for their actions. Then we all went back to watching the movie.

      And ever since then, I've laughed to myself every time someone mentions the yelling-fire-in-a-crowded-theater meme.

      Maybe we need a new, more credible example of why the evil old gummint should exercise prior restraint on our speech. When a crowded theater breaks into a communal "Fire!" followed by laughter, you just know that it's not working any more.

      --
      Those who do study history are doomed to stand helplessly by while everyone else repeats it.
    34. Re:Welcome to Canada? by stephanruby · · Score: 1

      It can be annoying at times, but it keeps the holocaust deniers at bay.

      Why would you want to? Do you fear that holocaust denying will suddenly become accepted by the mainstream Canadian population if you get rid of that law? Somehow, I doubt that.

    35. Re:Welcome to Canada? by Isaac+Remuant · · Score: 1

      And who gets to decide if your words actually encouraged crimes, violence or whatever else you think is so evil and consequence of your words? What happens when you are adversarial to the government and they consider it a threat?

      --
      "Science can amuse and fascinate us all, but it is engineering that changes the world. " - Asimov.
    36. Re:Welcome to Canada? by Chris+Tucker · · Score: 1

      "If my words encourage hatred towards a minority, I am committing a hate crime."

      No, you're not.

      "I hate fucking niggers!" is not hate speech. It's indicative of brain damage or being a Teabagger. (Yeah, I went there.)

      "I hate fucking niggers, kill 'em all!" is hate speech, in that it is promoting murder against a defined group.

      In my opinion. IANAL.

      --
      Guaranteed! This comment 100% Anthrax free!
    37. Re:Welcome to Canada? by a_mari_usque_ad_mare · · Score: 1

      I'm guessing the above is a joke (good one, my Yankee brother), but I would like to point out the Queen is not part of the Canadian government.

      The Government advises the Queen; the Queen listens to the Government by custom. For example when a new Governor-General is chosen the Prime Minister gives the Queen a list of one name and basically says, 'take your pick'. Our system splits those who make decisions (government) from those who have authority (crown). This is also why the provincial governments are theoretically equal to the federal government, as they each ultimately derive their authority from the crown. This is also why bills passed by parliament need approval from the crown before they are law, though in practice this approval is just a formality.

      I always think of the crown as a referee rather than an active participant in our politics.

      --
      The map is not the territory.
    38. Re:Welcome to Canada? by DarwinSurvivor · · Score: 1

      The queen has VERY little power at all in Canada. It's a "formality" more than anything.

    39. Re:Welcome to Canada? by russotto · · Score: 1

      "Hate speech", speech that contributes nothing to political discussion but advocates hatred, is certainly curtailed.

      Actually, the US Supreme Court has been fairly consistent in not accepting the sorts of restrictions on hate speech that Canadians take for granted.

    40. Re:Welcome to Canada? by TrekkieGod · · Score: 2

      In a free society, you are free to do things. However, you are also responsible for the things you do (with freedom comes responsibility)...There are already a whole slew of things that you're free to say, but reap the downside of (slander etc.).

      I never understood that argument. Is there any society that is not free by that measure? In a dictatorship, you're free to speak out against the government. They'll arrest you for it, but that's the consequence of your speech, right?

      I think you confuse consequences with punishment. Freedom necessarily means you won't be punished for the action you're free to do. That doesn't mean there are no consequences. Let's use the cyber-bullying as an example. You're free to say mean things about somebody on the net. When the kid commits suicide, that's a consequence of your action. You didn't mean for it to go that far, but now you have to live with it for the rest of your life. That's responsibility. If in addition to it, the government tries to charge you with a crime, then you didn't have freedom of speech after all.

      Think about it...I'm sure you're physically capable of pulling the trigger and shooting someone. However, nobody says you're free to do that. What makes you not free is that we have a punishment for it. It's not that you're free but have to suffer the consequence of life in prison or a death sentence.

      --

      Warning: Opinions known to be heavily biased.

    41. Re:Welcome to Canada? by misexistentialist · · Score: 1

      It is obviously a Constitutional issue, since the most a property owner can do is demand that you leave and not come back.

    42. Re:Welcome to Canada? by mosb1000 · · Score: 1

      While I generally agree with your sentiment, this is clearly wrong:

      If people listen to your words, then I believe they are at fault

      If you take some time to think about the information you use to make decisions (and even the logical process used) you may be surprised just how much you take to be true based solely on the fact someone told it to you.

      If someone lies to you, and you have reason to trust them, or you make a reasonable effort to uncover the truth, you really can't be held accountable for believing the lie. The thing that trips people up is sometimes they want to believe the lie so they can do something they couldn't justify otherwise (for example WMD in Iraq and the whole Bush lied thousands died thing).

      You can tell the difference in the way people respond to learning they were lied to. If they make excuses like "I'm not responsible because I was lied to" or "I was just following orders" and they shift responsibility, "Bush should be imprisoned" and whatnot, chances are they are culpable for their actions. On the other hand, if they are remorseful, take responsibility, and take action to try to set things right, chances are they actually were deceived.

    43. Re:Welcome to Canada? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The solution to Holocaust deniers is not to stifle everyone's freedom of speech. Let them say their piece, then let the rest of us refute, rebuke, and roundly mock.

      And when they start advocating violence against certain groups, and the HRCs have been made useless?

    44. Re:Welcome to Canada? by cheekyjohnson · · Score: 1

      If someone lies to you, and you have reason to trust them, or you make a reasonable effort to uncover the truth, you really can't be held accountable for believing the lie.

      I think you can. You believed it.

      --
      Filthy, filthy copyrapists!
    45. Re:Welcome to Canada? by betterunixthanunix · · Score: 1

      And ever since then, I've laughed to myself every time someone mentions the yelling-fire-in-a-crowded-theater meme.

      I cry a little bit inside every time I hear it, when I remember that the meme originated with a SCOTUS opinion that it was acceptable to arrest someone for passing out anti-draft literature during World War I.

      --
      Palm trees and 8
    46. Re:Welcome to Canada? by misexistentialist · · Score: 1

      Actions have consequences: don't recognize the right to free speech and things become worse! Some may be cowed, but the bully or crazy person with enough foresight will get their satisfaction by breaking your bones instead of calling you names. The government becomes ever more oppressive, until you end up in jail for some accidental swear uttered near a child. Soon enough you are dodging car bombs and bullets from various insurrections caused by the lack of a legitimate government that recognizes human rights.

    47. Re:Welcome to Canada? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      wooosh!

      my post was sarcastic :)

    48. Re:Welcome to Canada? by R3d+M3rcury · · Score: 1

      Or would you turn round and say "This guy's nuts, this is just plain dangerous and insane" and request that the cops do something? [I] Know what I'd do.. Request that this loon reap the consequences of their actions (speech is an action).

      Yes, you'd be afraid. Is the government's job to make sure that nobody scares you? Gosh, you must be fun around hallowe'en.

      So this guy climbs up on his soapbox and says, "R3dM3rcury is the problem! Let's all go burn down his house with him inside it!" and nothing happens. Then the consequences of his actions are...nothing but looking like a loon. If people grab their pitchforks and torches and go burn down my house, then the consequences are, of course, that I die and the people who killed me go to jail for a long period of time.

      Of course, I'm dead. I would certainly argue that this is not a beneficial outcome--I'd rather not be dead. But do we throw out all we believe in order to protect the life of one individual?

    49. Re:Welcome to Canada? by Svippy · · Score: 1

      What does the queen have to do with anything? She is just a figurehead.

      --
      Clicked pie.
    50. Re:Welcome to Canada? by Coolhand2120 · · Score: 1

      I always think of the crown as a referee rather than an active participant in our politics.

      One whom you cannot vote to remove. One whom lives on the tit of the government in perpetuity and apparently by divine right. According to your law, the queen is not your equal. You are less than the queen. You are less than anyone of royal blood. Don't agree? Than you agree with me. If the queen was a tyrant would you still feel as happy? Do you think then you would be given a choice? Do you like your new king? If you don't, too bad. He is your king and your better by mere accident of birth. But you must submit to the whim of the king! You are his subject!

      Nobody has "rank" over anyone in the U.S. Nobody can tell anyone what they must or can do or say. It's freedom. I know this is an alien concept to you, so let me explain it how people in my country understand it: We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness. — That to secure these rights, Governments are instituted among Men, deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed.

      I'm not trying to be all patriotic or anything, I'm trying to illustrate the difference between you and me. I think Alexis de Tocqueville said it best, and I'm paraphrasing because I don't have Democracy in America with me:

      The biggest difference I see in the democracies of America and the democracies of Europe is that in Europe the government cedes a portion of their power to the people, while in America the people cedes a portion of their power to the government.

      And yes, Canada is a European [style] democracy before you argue that point.

    51. Re:Welcome to Canada? by Svippy · · Score: 1

      I always think of the crown as a referee rather than an active participant in our politics.

      One whom you cannot vote to remove. One whom lives on the tit of the government in perpetuity and apparently by divine right. According to your law, the queen is not your equal. You are less than the queen. You are less than anyone of royal blood. Don't agree? Than you agree with me. If the queen was a tyrant would you still feel as happy? Do you think then you would be given a choice? Do you like your new king? If you don't, too bad. He is your king and your better by mere accident of birth. But you must submit to the whim of the king! You are his subject! Nobody has "rank" over anyone in the U.S. Nobody can tell anyone what they must or can do or say. It's freedom. I know this is an alien concept to you, so let me explain it how people in my country understand it: We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness. — That to secure these rights, Governments are instituted among Men, deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed. I'm not trying to be all patriotic or anything, I'm trying to illustrate the difference between you and me. I think Alexis de Tocqueville said it best, and I'm paraphrasing because I don't have Democracy in America with me:

      The biggest difference I see in the democracies of America and the democracies of Europe is that in Europe the government cedes a portion of their power to the people, while in America the people cedes a portion of their power to the government.

      And yes, Canada is a European [style] democracy before you argue that point.

      You are a truly hilarious fellow, I got to say that. By the way, 'freedom' is the amount of things you can do, not what titles people have. The queen is not even a referee, she cannot actually do anything. She is just a formality. She cannot oust the parliament or veto a law.

      She is a care-over from an older era, and we have changed the laws so she is just an expensive figurehead. So rather than talking about 'freedom' and 'universal suffrages' (concepts you clearly do not understand), you should talk about whether it is the right way to spend a government's money. Then again, a president isn't cheap either, I hear.

      --
      Clicked pie.
    52. Re:Welcome to Canada? by JD-1027 · · Score: 1

      There are already a whole slew of things that you're free to say, but reap the downside of (slander etc.).

      I can't wrap my head around this "free speech with consequences" thing. It doesn't seem to logically make sense (1+1=2 unless 1 is really big).

      So by this definition of "free speech with consequences", the Chinese have free speech. They can say whatever they want (no one is duct taping their mouths shut), but they have consequences for what they say against the government (prison/arrest/whatever). It is the exact same thing as me slandering someone in the US and getting whatever consequences for it. My speech was not free. The Chinese guys speech against the government was not free.

      So if we say "free speech with consequences" == "free speech" (is that logically possible?), can someone give me a case in point where someone does not have free speech.

      Let me ask this as well. If our definition of free speech is "free speech but with consequences", what do you call "free speech without consequences"? Would that be "No-really-I-mean-it-this-time free speech"?

    53. Re:Welcome to Canada? by Coolhand2120 · · Score: 1
      Why am I being portrayed as a fool when you are the one who is wrong? The Queen/King whoever is 1) the head of state 2) the head of the armed forces 3) Appoints the prime ministers. What the hell are you talking about when you say that "she cannot actually do anything". Maybe you can provide a better citation than this one:

      From www.royal.gov.uk > How The Monarchy Works > What is Constitutional Monarchy?

      Constitutional monarchy is a form of government in which a king or queen acts as Head of State.

      The ability to make and pass legislation resides with an elected Parliament, not with the Monarch.

      As a system of government, constitutional monarchy separates the Head of State’s ceremonial and official duties from party politics.

      A constitutional monarchy also provides stability, continuity and a national focus, as the Head of State remains the same even as governments change.

      The Sovereign/Monarch governs according to the constitution - that is, according to rules, rather than according to his or her own free will. The United Kingdom does not have a written constitution which sets out the rights and duties of the Sovereign, they are established by conventions. These are non-statutory rules which can be just as binding as formal constitutional rules.

      As a constitutional monarch, the Sovereign must remain politically neutral.

      On almost all matters the Sovereign acts on the advice of ministers. However, the Sovereign retains an important political role as Head of State, formally appointing prime ministers, approving certain legislation and bestowing honours.

      The Sovereign has other official roles to play such as Head of the Armed Forces.

      And that's just what was on their summary page, I'm sure there are other powers that your unelected monarchs have as well. You must admit that their power is massive when compared to an ordanary citizen, which is what they would be in the U.S.. For example, Bush has no power to do anything at all. And unlike when you claim it, he really doesn't have any power. His children will not inherit his presidency. If in the middle of his presidency the people decided we didn't like him we can throw him out of office. So yes, there is a great deal of difference and yes, the queen of Canada has a great deal of power.

    54. Re:Welcome to Canada? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So you're saying the Democrats lied about Bush lying to justify them voting for the Iraq invasion?

    55. Re:Welcome to Canada? by mosb1000 · · Score: 1

      No, he did lie to them. But they didn't invest a lot of effort investigating his claims, which is strange since they are supposed to be on opposite teams, politically speaking. In that case, it is appropriate to say they are responsible for their actions in supporting the war.

    56. Re:Welcome to Canada? by bky1701 · · Score: 1

      Censorship makes it look like you have something to hide. Trying to keep people from denying the holocaust just gives them ammunition. In the process, you give up what you ought to consider your inalienable human rights.

      Canada (and Europe) likes to believe they're freer, and verbosely proclaim so, but I think they have it backwards. Americans complain about their freedoms so often because they actually value them, while Europeans (and Canadians are very culturally similar) do not.

    57. Re:Welcome to Canada? by Jason+Levine · · Score: 1

      There mere expression of an idea cannot hurt anyone.

      Suppose a TV personality gets on the air. He has quite a large following of people who he knows hang off his every word. He knows if he says that something should be done, at least one of his followers will do it. On this particular program, he is angry at someone. Whatever the reason for his anger (justified or not), he begins heavily implying that the person is a child pornographer. He never quite says it, but the implication is clearly there. He ends the program by saying "Someone should really do something about this scum." Two days later, the object of TV personality's anger is shot.

      Did the expression of the TV personality's ideas hurt someone? Should the TV personality face any repercussions for his speech or should he be protected to be able to say whatever he wants even if he knows it will lead to someone being injured?

      --
      My sci-fi novel, Ghost Thief, is now available from Amazon.com.
    58. Re:Welcome to Canada? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "I hate fucking niggers!" is not hate speech. It's indicative of brain damage or being a Teabagger. (Yeah, I went there.)

      Not to worry. That just makes you a douchebagger.

    59. Re:Welcome to Canada? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The Queen has absolute power in Canada. However, if she ever exercised it, she's lose that power in Canada and around the world. It's like being the parent of a teenage girl. You can politely ask her to do anything. But if you want to guarantee that she'll go out that night, ground her. You have absolute power, but abused (or even used, in many cases) and it'll all go away.

    60. Re:Welcome to Canada? by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      Holocaust denial does not inherently encourage hatred towards any minority.

    61. Re:Welcome to Canada? by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      In a free society, you are free to do things. However, you are also responsible for the things you do (with freedom comes responsibility).

      That kind of freedom exists in any society. After all, you can also speak freely about politics in North Korea. You'll find yourself against the wall in short order, of course, but that's just being responsible for things that you say.

      I understand that there is a big stretch between Canada and DPRK, but the way you use "freedom and responsibility" is so vague as to be completely meaningless.

      However, incitement to crimes doesn't let you walk away free, as far as I believe.

      "Incitement to crime" is quite different from "hate speech", however. Incitement is when there's obvious threat of imminent lawless action. Hate speech is far more broad, and covers cases where you merely say something nasty regardless of whether anyone is even listening, much less planning to take action on it. In case of Holocaust denial it's even worse, because it's merely denying that a certain historical event happened - any "hate" is completely orthogonal to this. In jurisdictions where it's considered a crime, it's usually explained off as being "offensive to the victims" - which is a completely inane reason to have such a law.

    62. Re:Welcome to Canada? by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      All powers of the Queen in practice are purely ceremonial. She doesn't actually order around the military, she appoints the prime minister that the government tells her to appoint, and her role as a head of the state is as a walking decoration - all actual relevant business is done by elected officials.

      What if the Queen ignores that tradition? Well, in that case Canada will likely become a republic the next day after. And everyone knows that, so...

      As for your claim that in U.S. "everyone is equal" etc, that's bullshit so obvious that everybody with a modicum of common sense knows it. A life of the president or a senator is worth more than yours, and any crime against them is more likely to be prevented, and will be investigated more thoroughly. On the other hand, if they do something illegal, they have much higher chances of getting away with it. U.S. claims equality of everyone before law, but it's just words on the paper (just like the rest of the Constitution), while in practice the things are run very differently.

      Oh, and speaking of power - look up "executive order" on Wikipedia.

    63. Re:Welcome to Canada? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The other side gets to present their evidence as well. I don't think the government should be in the business of deciding truthiness.

      A reasonable working modern governments do make decisions based on scientific truths. Their regulations reaching to various details in economy, environment, technology, crime and other social issues and culture are based on expert opinion. If those government are letting various arbitrary non-expert opinions to interfere in the administrative processes beyond what is required to letting stakeholders (and local environmental groups, or in general, groups influential according to the international treaties) to protect and realize their rights, decision making becomes ineffective, expensive and ultimately detrimental to the rights of the stake holders. In that sense the governments should protect themselves and the citizens in certain sense from arbitrary incitement, obvious fallacies and even unverified facts, especially during administrative processes like legal proceedings, for example, according to what is necessary and proportional. This is what is actually happening in the real world, fortunately, at least is some countries..

    64. Re:Welcome to Canada? by unitron · · Score: 1

      So, in your first example, is the third word an adjective or a verb?

      --

      I see even classic Slashdot is now pretty much unusable on dial up anymore.

    65. Re:Welcome to Canada? by gmhowell · · Score: 1

      They are concerned that people will be convinced by the holocaust deniers.

      Look at the US -- no restrictions on holocaust deniers -- and I bet they don't even believe WWII happened!

      Of course we believe WWII happened. We couldn't hold it over the heads of the French, British, and Japanese if it had never happened.

      --
      Jesus was all right but his disciples were thick and ordinary. -John Lennon
    66. Re:Welcome to Canada? by gmhowell · · Score: 1

      'very little'>'none'

      --
      Jesus was all right but his disciples were thick and ordinary. -John Lennon
    67. Re:Welcome to Canada? by gmhowell · · Score: 1

      It can be annoying at times, but it keeps the holocaust deniers at bay.

      What holocaust deniers?

      What holocaust?

      --
      Jesus was all right but his disciples were thick and ordinary. -John Lennon
    68. Re:Welcome to Canada? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And the people of Canada can override any lost rights from the notwithstanding clause by electing a new form of government.

      The notwithstanding clause is only temporary (the time the elected are in office which is a maximum of 5 years) and only applies to taking away certain rights (does not apply to democratic rights).

      Unlike the American government which can blatantly violate their humans rights, the Canadian government can not (and in fact, respects human rights).

    69. Re:Welcome to Canada? by halivar · · Score: 1

      It's also why conservative Christian groups like the ACLJ will occasionally defend atheist groups in court on free speech issues. Stifling anyone's opinion because you don't like it sets a dangerous precedent. Freedom of speech, religion, and assembly are only possibly in a truly open idea exchange without circumscription.

    70. Re:Welcome to Canada? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm a Danish Sandwich denier myself. There is no true Danish sandwich!

    71. Re:Welcome to Canada? by Actually,+I+do+RTFA · · Score: 1

      It was pretty obvious what everyone was thinking. They'd all just violate the hoary old meme about shouting "Fire!" in a crowded theater. And nobody was injured. It was fairly obvious that nobody was going to be arrested for their actions. Then we all went back to watching the movie.

      Because it was a movie theater. Given a theater that showed plays, one where you cannot see the whole theater, and is not built up to a modern fire-code, the situation would be more serious.

      --
      Your ad here. Ask me how!
    72. Re:Welcome to Canada? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Denying the holocaust != incitement to violence.

      Saying "Six million Jews did not die at the hands of the Nazis" is not hatred towards a minority. It might be offensive to their historical memory, but it's not in of itself hatred.

    73. Re:Welcome to Canada? by dbet · · Score: 1

      Then I will provide a better example.

      A few years we had some public preacher on campus. He was very loud and very in your face. One day he walked up to a couple and screamed "WHORE" in some girls' face. The man with her punched the preacher. The cops showed up and arrested the preacher, not the puncher.

      This was an issue of words being used in a public place, in a hateful manner, which is apparently a crime (although certainly a minor one). I'm not even arguing for or against such laws, just that people should know they exist.

    74. Re:Welcome to Canada? by spire3661 · · Score: 1

      Your argument completely ignores the reality of human nature, where others can and DO influence others to do evil for them. As much as we like to think that every human is an independent free thinking individual, very few are. The rest are highly susceptible to properly couched suggestions. To ignore this fact is to ignore a basic fact of human existence.

      --
      Good-bye
    75. Re:Welcome to Canada? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hmm.. Lets see... Last time we Germans let the holocaust deniers roam free, the actual holocaust happened, and about 60 million people were killed.
      Is your free speech worth that much?

    76. Re:Welcome to Canada? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It can be annoying at times, but it keeps the holocaust deniers at bay.

      It really doesn't (at least in Europe), it just makes it possible for them to play the martyr, and ensures that nobody knows how many there are. Letting them say it and having everybody laugh them out of the room is much better than allowing them to play the victim.

    77. Re:Welcome to Canada? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Except the Notwithstanding Clause stipulates that any declaration issued under it will expire after five years. At least it prevents every Supreme Court nomination from becoming a constitutional convention in microcosm. And our system, where we just ignore the constitution where the Supreme Court says we can, creates an imprimatur on the exception. "Well, if the Supreme Court says it's constitutional, it must be!"

      Of course our constitution is over 200 years old and would be totally inadequate to modern society if it were still interpreted the way it was back then (for one thing, we'd have corporations with deeper pockets than the Federal government), but that's a discussion for another day.

    78. Re:Welcome to Canada? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      http://ezralevant.com/2011/10/free-speechs-only-hope.html.

      I love the way he prioritizes between truth and religion:
      "the truth is not a defense, éven religious belief is not a defense"

    79. Re:Welcome to Canada? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Holocaust deniers? In Canada?

      Seriously, is the fact that I as a Canadian don't hear anything about Holocaust deniers because their freedom of speech is being limited by the Canadian government or because Canadians and indeed any thinking persons largely ignore the insignificant contribution they make to our civilization's discourse? I see the right to free speech more as a responsibility to critically evaluate, each of us to the best of our own abilities, what others are saying more then I see it as the right to say whatever you want whenever you want to.

    80. Re:Welcome to Canada? by Coolhand2120 · · Score: 1

      I would like to know exactly when all the racists switched from the slave owning democrat's side to the abolitionist republican's side.

      Maybe read a little history before you make such a giant ass of yourself

      http://www.black-and-right.com/the-democrat-race-lie/

      STOP! Don't just reply. Get this shit through your head. republicans != racist. democrats == racist. Read your god damn history, and yes it is that simple. Ever hear of Robert Byrd? Democrat senator up until the day he died in 2010. And a member of the KKK. And one of the many democrats who filibustered the civil rights act. 2010! That shit is recent! Where's the republican governor who stopped black children from going to school? That's right, they were all democrats.

      Maybe you can find me the 'racist republicans' or the 'racist tea party members' that you're talking about, because I'm pretty sure you just made that shit up. I've shown you (in the link provided) tons of cold hard facts that prove the democrat party has a massive history of racism. I've shown you, again facts, that prove that republicans are the champions of civil rights. If you don't get your facts right you're nothing but a tool of the democrat party, echoing exactly what they want you to say. A lie. That's nothing new for democrats though. Do you really think 90%+ of blacks would vote for the party who ran the confederacy? Do you really think they would vote for the champions of slavery? For democrats ignorance is power.

      Reminds me of a saying: "Republicans are afraid you don't understand what they're talking about, Democrats are afraid you do."

    81. Re:Welcome to Canada? by NiteShaed · · Score: 1

      It's also why conservative Christian groups like the ACLJ will occasionally defend atheist groups in court on free speech issues.

      I hate to be citation-needed guy, but I haven't seen any cases of this happening with the ACLJ. What atheist group have they defended?

      --
      Some bring out the best in others, some the worst. Some bring out far more.
    82. Re:Welcome to Canada? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think you need to re-investigate the facts. Your statement is incorrect sir. He never said we went to war because Iraq had WMDs. He made the case for going to war based on the fact that Iraq had been giving the finger to the UN for 12 years. 12 years. Think about that.

    83. Re:Welcome to Canada? by phorm · · Score: 1

      Don't know so much about the holocaust deniers. I've run into a few and they pretty easily identified themselves as "wacko not worth my time" within a few moments.

      I'm more happy to not deal with the KKK or other such groups.

    84. Re:Welcome to Canada? by NiteShaed · · Score: 1

      Ah, so because long ago something was true, it's obviously still the case today. There's no possibility that over time the two parties changed, and that their views even managed to slowly trade places, is there? There's no such thing as the Southern Strategy, and Nixon's political strategist (Nixon was a Republican, wasn't he?) never ever said: "The more Negroes who register as Democrats in the South, the sooner the Negrophobe whites will quit the Democrats and become Republicans. That's where the votes are. Without that prodding from the blacks, the whites will backslide into their old comfortable arrangement with the local Democrats". Nope, all just a part of the big democrat conspiracy.....

      --
      Some bring out the best in others, some the worst. Some bring out far more.
    85. Re:Welcome to Canada? by Chris+Tucker · · Score: 1

      Well played, sir!

      --
      Guaranteed! This comment 100% Anthrax free!
    86. Re:Welcome to Canada? by Chris+Tucker · · Score: 1

      Thank you for that! You said it far better than I ever could.

      --
      Guaranteed! This comment 100% Anthrax free!
    87. Re:Welcome to Canada? by Joey+Vegetables · · Score: 1

      Like the GP I am a theologically and culturally conservative aspiring Christian, and also a libertarian (anarchist actually, but for purposes of this discussion the difference doesn't matter). And I was an enthusiastic member of the ACLJ when it first started up. But in recent years I've found its behavior quite troubling; for instance, I can think of no reason why trying to prevent Muslims from building a mosque in lower Manhattan helps to protect liberty and/or justice, for anyone; all I can see resulting is an increase in the level of hostility and a further erosion of liberty for everyone. They do not seem to understand, at least not consistently, that if we demand respect for our rights we must also respect the rights of others, including those who may be different than ourselves. I still applaud some of the work they do, but cringe at much of the rest, and I no longer support them financially or in any other way.

    88. Re:Welcome to Canada? by Chris+Tucker · · Score: 1

      One merely has to wade through Google Images to find innumerable photographs of racist words and images culled from Teabagger rallies across the nation.

      Senator Byrd was indeed a Klan member in his youth. Something he publicly regretted and apologized for innumerable times over the decades. Of course, if you have to point to the bones of Senator Byrd to prove that the Democratic Party is as racist today as it was in the 1800s, how do you explain a Southern Democratic President forcing the Civil Rights Act and the Voting Rights Act through Congress?

      Lyndon Johnson, mid 60s. It was in all the papers.

      Going back from that era less than 20 years, a Democrat from Missouri, Harry Truman desegregated the Armed Forces of the United States, and before that, FDR made the first efforts in desegregation when he banned the Pentagon from having separate bathrooms and drinking fountains for white and black, in defiance of the current Virginia law of the time.

      I think you would have a very hard time producing a list of current KKK members who are registered voting Democrats that would fill more than one page, even using triple spaced, 36 point type.

      But do continue the trolling, every time pathetic losers such as yourself bring up Robert Byrd as "proof" of the inherent racism of the Democratic Party, the majority of the American people get a good laugh out of your desperation.

      --
      Guaranteed! This comment 100% Anthrax free!
    89. Re:Welcome to Canada? by d3ac0n · · Score: 1

      The solution to Holocaust deniers is not to stifle everyone's freedom of speech. Let them say their piece, then let the rest of us refute, rebuke, and roundly mock.

      Wholeheartedly agreed. The solution to bad speech is MORE speech, not less.

      It always boggles my mind when I hear people from Canada and the various Euro-zone countries talk so proudly about their "hate speech" laws. They truly don't understand the prison they have put themselves in.

      --
      Official Heretic from the "Church of Global Warming". Proven right thanks to whistle blowers. AGW = Flat Earth Theory
    90. Re:Welcome to Canada? by Coolhand2120 · · Score: 1
      So the last chair of the RNC, Michael Steele is a black man, but republicans are racist. The front runner (today) in the RNC nomination for president is a black man (Cain), but republicans are racist. I show you a throng of evidence that democrats not only have a history of slavery and oppression, the very creators of the Jim Crow laws. Democrats had a actual member of the KKK in office up till 2010... but the republicans, who fought the civil war against democrats to free the slaves - they're the racists.

      Somehow a misattributed quote is going to undo all of that? And now republicans are racist when they never were in the past? If republicans are so racist why would they ever have the head of the RNC be a black man? How could they allow for their presidential candidate to be a black man? Doesn't that invalidate what you're saying? And yes, this "read between the lines" bull shit about saying that "tax cuts" are racist is a conspiracy by the democrats to try and get everyone to believe that anything a republican says is inherently racist. For example: From http://www.discoverthenetworks.org/individualProfile.asp?indid=2085

      Rangel, who is black, has a long history of levying charges of racism against his political and ideological adversaries. For example, when the Republican-led Congress pushed for tax relief in 1994, Rangel denounced the plan as a form of modern-day racism. "It's not 'spic' or 'nigger' anymore," he raged. "[Instead,] they say, 'Let's cut taxes.'"

      -CHARLES RANGEL (D-NY)

      Who's the real racist? The party trying to ignore race, one who was founded to abolish slavery? Or the party that is constantly bringing race into the equation where it does not belong? I really must ask. Do you think "cut taxes" is racist? I for one think that giving special favor to people based on the color of their skin is racist - something that democrats have championed over and over again through race based college admissions, race based hiring, race based taxation, race based everything. Democrats are very interested in the color of your skin. Republicans don't care what color your skin is. Republicans want a society that is blind to skin color.

      One group is logical and righteous, the other is a group of resent building, racist demagogues. "Whitey's got it too good!", "the rich man has got it too good". Just how the fuck are you going to pick yourself up by dragging everyone else down? If the rich are taxed at a higher rate does that money go to the jobless poor? No - it goes to the federal government who can't even run a fucking lemonade stand without loosing tens of billions of dollars. It could have gone to make jobs - but instead the government will squander it as they squander all money they confiscate. Lower taxes mean employers can hire more people - higher taxes mean employers can hire fewer people, it's not racist and it's pretty fucking simple.

    91. Re:Welcome to Canada? by Musc · · Score: 1

      I'm afraid I dont follow your logic. The liar was someone who you had good reason to trust, and maybe you even investigated to determine whether or not he was telling the truth, but for whatever reason your investigation yielded the wrong answer. All logic pointed to the notion that he was telling the truth. How are you at fault for believing him, rather than him being at fault for deceiving you?

      --
      Hamsters are at least as feathery as penguins. HamLix
    92. Re:Welcome to Canada? by Musc · · Score: 1

      It's true that it can emotionally harm someone. But that isn't an absolute certainty. Different people are offended by different things, and I believe there are ways to desensitize yourself so that insults will harm you rarely, if ever.

      Perhaps there are ways to desensitize yourself, but I would argue that you ought to be very careful with this. Certainly it is good to have a somewhat thick skin so that you aren't driven to a tearful, trembling mess if someone gently teases you. But if you shutoff your emotions completely, and are therefore unable to feel anything, neither good feelings nor bad feelings, then what is the point of being alive? To coldly calculate logic, in a machine-like manner, rather than be the warm, feeling creatures we generally naturally are?

      --
      Hamsters are at least as feathery as penguins. HamLix
    93. Re:Welcome to Canada? by cheekyjohnson · · Score: 1

      The liar was someone who you had good reason to trust

      "Good" is subjective. In any case, it doesn't matter whether you had a "good" reason to truth them or not. What matters is that if you hadn't believed them, no 'damages' would have occurred (even if there was no way for you to know otherwise).

      --
      Filthy, filthy copyrapists!
    94. Re:Welcome to Canada? by cheekyjohnson · · Score: 1

      then what is the point of being alive?

      To do whatever you wish to do. I didn't say to shut off your "good" feelings, either.

      To coldly calculate logic, in a machine-like manner, rather than be the warm, feeling creatures we generally naturally are?

      Well, I'd say ignorant and idiotic most of the time.

      --
      Filthy, filthy copyrapists!
    95. Re:Welcome to Canada? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      OH G*D ZE SUFFERINK!

    96. Re:Welcome to Canada? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      why would you want to keep the holocaust deniers at bay by giving up the right of free speech?

      We as a society have recognized that the telling of hateful lies is wrong and should be punished, and that the individual right to expression can be constrained to promote the general welfare of the society. You are allowed your own opinions, but you are not allowed your own facts. If you try to teach, as was the case in Alberta (google it, CBC even did a made-for-tv movie), that the Holocaust was a lie you will be charged with hate crimes. Such is the intent and effect of Canada's hate-speech laws, redneck ravings to the contrary.

      are holocaust deniers that big a pest or is your free speech worth that little?

      It's human dignity and truth we value in this equation. You can be as free as you want to be, right up until you start promoting genocide and lying to children about the Holocaust; then you're doing time.

    97. Re:Welcome to Canada? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm sorry did you just say that the republicans allowing a black man to be their presidential candidate invalidates the assertian that they are racist? Are you the same person that two posts earlier said "democracts == racists ... yes it is that simple"? I could be wrong but I'm pretty sure the democrats have had a black presidential candidate before. Am I missing something or is this the epitome of a double standard.

      I think you need to consider if you have a strong emotional bias clouding your judgement of political parties. You wouldn't be the first.

    98. Re:Welcome to Canada? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And yet america has higher unemployment than a lot of countries with both higher taxes and a higher minimum wage. Maybe it's not so fucking simple, or if it is, you're simply wrong.

      Maybe what creates jobs is a large middle class with a lot of disposable income to drive demand across many sectors, rather than a handful of super-rich people who need to be very careful about what businesses they invest in because consumer confidence is low.

    99. Re:Welcome to Canada? by NiteShaed · · Score: 1

      You race around in so many different directions, it's nearly impossible to formulate a coherent answer, yet I'll try.

      So the last chair of the RNC, Michael Steele is a black man, but republicans are racist. The front runner (today) in the RNC nomination for president is a black man (Cain), but republicans are racist. I show you a throng of evidence that democrats not only have a history of slavery and oppression, the very creators of the Jim Crow laws. Democrats had a actual member of the KKK in office up till 2010... but the republicans, who fought the civil war against democrats to free the slaves - they're the racists.

      Firstly, you're trying to create a position that doesn't exist. Nobody's saying that all republicans are racist. The position is that racists are more common in, and more likely to be attracted to the Republican party. You offer up black Republicans as "proof" that Republicans aren't racist, while asserting that Democrats are racist, and yet the current president of the United States is both black and a Democrat. Following your own logic you can't assert that either party is racist due to the presence of black members in each.

      Somehow a misattributed quote is going to undo all of that?

      The quote is attributed correctly. Read the article again. Kevin Philips did not create the Southern Strategy, but the comments supporting it that I quoted were indeed made by him.

      And now republicans are racist when they never were in the past? If republicans are so racist why would they ever have the head of the RNC be a black man? How could they allow for their presidential candidate to be a black man? Doesn't that invalidate what you're saying?

      I could ask you the same question, but I'm not saying the presence of black members indemnifies a party against charges of racism. The point remains though, the presence of those members does not have any impact at all on whether Republicans are more likely to be attracted to the Republican party than to the Democrats.

      Who's the real racist? The party trying to ignore race, one who was founded to abolish slavery? Or the party that is constantly bringing race into the equation where it does not belong?

      Okay, so a black democrat, complaining that Republican strategies having racist undertones (leaving aside whether he's right or wrong), somehow means the Democratic party is racist? I'm not following that logic at all unless your complaint is that the Democrats are racist towards whites, in which case I fail to see how any of your comments about the civil war era Republicans have anything to do with this conversation.

      Do you think "cut taxes" is racist?

      Personally I wouldn't cast it that way, but I can see the argument being made, which is that cuts in social service due to lack of funding may disproportionately affect minorities who rely on those services.

      I for one think that giving special favor to people based on the color of their skin is racist - something that democrats have championed over and over again through race based college admissions, race based hiring, race based taxation, race based everything. Democrats are very interested in the color of your skin.

      So your real complaint really is that their policies can be construed to be racist towards white people. Fair enough, but again, stop trying to say the issue has anything to do with their position on black civil rights dating back to the civil war.

      Republicans don't care what color your skin is. Republicans want a society that is blind to skin color.

      You've made that opinion clear, the problem is that things like The Southern Strategy don't support that.

      One group is logical and righteous, the other is a group of resent building

      --
      Some bring out the best in others, some the worst. Some bring out far more.
  4. Shitstorm in 5... 4... 3... by discord5 · · Score: 1

    insert government moderated speech here

    1. Re:Shitstorm in 5... 4... 3... by mapsjanhere · · Score: 1

      I can't wait for them trying to enforce that on 4chan ...

      --
      I'm aging rapidly, I bought a new game and had no idea if my machine was good for it.
    2. Re:Shitstorm in 5... 4... 3... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Easy. DNS Block.

      Of course infringers will easily get around that...

  5. why dont you beat them up ? by unity100 · · Score: 1

    really ? this is outright violation of first amendment of the constitution your country is based upon. these representatives can propose and attempt such a thing. when does the 'right to revolt against tyranny' in your constitution gets invoked ? never ?

    1. Re:why dont you beat them up ? by Martin+Blank · · Score: 3, Insightful

      They wrote a paper that explains an opinion about an idea that is controversial and unpopular. It is exactly the kind of thing that the First Amendment was intended to protect.

      Incidentally, there is no "right to revolt" in the Constitution. The concept is covered in the Declaration of Independence which, while culturally and politically significant, holds no legal weight.

      --
      You can never go home again... but I guess you can shop there.
    2. Re:why dont you beat them up ? by Grave · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I believe Thomas Jefferson would argue that the "right to revolt" comes from nature, and does not need to be outlined in any legal document.

    3. Re:why dont you beat them up ? by idontgno · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Since revolution is fundamentally extralegal, that makes sense. It's also a fine illustration of the limitations of Law: it's meaningless in the face of sufficiently-commited violence.

      Silent enim leges inter arma. -- Cicero

      --
      Welcome to the Panopticon. Used to be a prison, now it's your home.
    4. Re:why dont you beat them up ? by Purpleslog · · Score: 1

      Mod this guy up!

    5. Re:why dont you beat them up ? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      The paper doesn't bother me, it's that they're basing their legislative views on it. Why should my tax dollars go to the salaries of people who are actively trying to debase the First Amendment? And for what, bullying? What happened to the debt crisis, civil rights issues, and fixing the broken state of education? I swear, this country has priorities all backward.

    6. Re:why dont you beat them up ? by Bucky24 · · Score: 1

      The right to revolt against tyranny is in the Declaration of Independence, not the Constitution, which is not considered a legally binding document AFAIK. Not that I disagree with you.

      --
      All the world's a CPU, and all the men and women merely AI agents
    7. Re:why dont you beat them up ? by Coolhand2120 · · Score: 2

      Right on! These people need to read some Locke, Paine or Bastiat!

    8. Re:why dont you beat them up ? by Coolhand2120 · · Score: 1

      ...

      I only wish I was as naive as you were. 9 out of 10 deaths are attributable to some sort of bullying early in life. There's been correlation between an increase in bullying and a proportional increase in the average temperature of the earth leading to cyclic global warming. Bullying kills more than cancer, smoking, car accidents and Chuck Norris combined. I for one think we should dedicate a larger portion of our GDP towards trying to stomp out bullying rather than stupid things like national defense and education. It should break down like this:

      Bullying
      Austerity
      Silly Walks
      Education
      Defense
      Housing

    9. Re:why dont you beat them up ? by lexsird · · Score: 1

      There is no "right to revolt against tyranny". Mechanisms to insure liberty put in place by our founding fathers have been systematically disassembled decades ago. In fact countermeasures versus insurrection have been updated and implemented in the past several decades. The President can now roll troops on civilians should the population get "out of line". Word around the campfires are they have a plan called REX 84 involving FEMA camps for dealing with martial law situations. Do a Google search on REX 84 and feast your paranoia on that.

      It's classic fascism that we are goosestepping towards at "quick time, march" rate. It's all seriously fucked, we're fucked, and the whole world is fucked along with us. Welcome to corporate globalization. Nations are middle management now. Politicians are fucking sock puppets. "Rights" and "Laws" don't mean a damn thing unless they are enforced. Every cocksucker that has sworn to uphold the Constitution, has proven to be fucking liars these days. If you seriously held to that oath, you would have to kill every politician we have on the fucking spot.

      Vote? Are you high? Our political system is so corrupted it's pathetic. By all means go vote for one of your favorite puppets. They petty fog the living shit out of the political landscape, casting red herrings willy nilly until it looks like salmon swimming upstream to spawn. Both sides of the isle are all in the same pockets of those who own this world. It's all a circus to placate the ignorant masses.

      What are you going to do, start a Revolution? You will be standing alone with your dick in your hand, this lemming brained batch of sheeple are too fucking chicken shit, or too damn brainwashed or ignorant to grasp the concept of WHY. So you and perhaps a few other dumb fucks do something stupid, and get killed or put in a hole somewhere; they have a prison industry all ready for you. Not to mention, they will use you as an excuse to take away even more privileges.

      So be a good little drone; shut the fuck up and don't draw attention to yourself or others. Do as you are told, and don't ask for more gruel. Our fathers and grandfathers fucked us over being dumb pussies who should have kicked someone's ass long time ago. It's too late now. This generation doesn't have the brains or the balls to do anything but whine. Let's settle in and take our bite out of the shit sandwich before we get the whole thing shoved down our throats.

      --
      Take the Red Pill.
    10. Re:why dont you beat them up ? by Tom · · Score: 1

      Actually, I believe he would argue that some things don't need a "right". Revolting, by definition, pretty much is the act of saying "fuck you and your rights, you can only write down so much bullshit before we burn it and start again from scratch".

      Given that politicians are like software developers in this regard - they never think their product is finished, so sooner or later it is guaranteed to suffer from bloat - it may be necessary to do that every once in a while. Imagine living in a world where every law ever passed since we invented laws were still in effect.

      --
      Assorted stuff I do sometimes: Lemuria.org
    11. Re:why dont you beat them up ? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Incidentally, there is no "right to revolt" in the Constitution. The concept is covered in the Declaration of Independence which, while culturally and politically significant, holds no legal weight.

      Actually...if you look it up on Wikipedia, several of the states have that specific right enshrined in their respective constitutions.

    12. Re:why dont you beat them up ? by Coolhand2120 · · Score: 1

      Actually, I believe he would argue that some things don't need a "right".

      He would say: "We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness."

      These unalienable rights are called "Natural Law" and there is quite a bit written about it already.
      Start with Thomas Paine's Common Sense. Very short, easy to read. Then move on to: The Law by Frederic Bastiat again, very short, very simple read. Both books are very old (>100 years old) and both books transcend time - when you read them you'll think they were written about today's events. It sounds like you're on the razors edge, I hope these books help bring you over to the light side.

    13. Re:why dont you beat them up ? by Martin+Blank · · Score: 1

      I disagree with the viewpoint, though I think they're doing it for what they believe are good reasons. Bullying is something with which I am intimately familiar, having been much shorter than normal in childhood and usually acing everything. By the time I got to high school, I figured out some ways to befriend a few football jocks and managed to get some protection. Not everyone I knew was so lucky. Back then, bullying was largely limited to a single school or sometimes just one grade; with e-mail and social networking, bullies can get friends from all over to gang up on a target. But as much as the issue needs attention, I don't think this is the way to address it.

      My tax dollars go to support a lot of people I don't like. It's the nature of the system. But the system helps to balance all of this. There are other legislators who may (and probably will) prevent this from passing (or even getting to the floor); there is a governor who has to agree with and sign the legislation to law if it passes; and at this level, both the state and federal courts are avenues of challenge.

      --
      You can never go home again... but I guess you can shop there.
    14. Re:why dont you beat them up ? by bill_mcgonigle · · Score: 1

      Incidentally, there is no "right to revolt" in the Constitution. The concept is covered in the Declaration of Independence which, while culturally and politically significant, holds no legal weight.

      The United States are governed supremely by the US Constitution, then subordinately by the State Constitutions, then subordinately by Federal Law, then State Law.

      Several State Constitutions specifically codify the right of revolution.

      --
      My God, it's Full of Source!
      OUTSIDE_IP=$(dig +short my.ip @outsideip.net)
    15. Re:why dont you beat them up ? by unitron · · Score: 1

      One might make an argument that the 10th Amendment

      "The powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the States, are reserved to the States respectively, or to the people."

      puts the "right to revolt" into The Constitution.

      The catch, of course, is how to revolt without violating any of the laws that prohibit the kinds of activity and behavior that ordinarily are part of engaging in revolt.

      In reality,of course, the only people with a right to revolt are those whose revolution succeeds.

      --

      I see even classic Slashdot is now pretty much unusable on dial up anymore.

    16. Re:why dont you beat them up ? by Tom · · Score: 1

      I don't believe in "light side" stuff. I do believe that everyone always thinks they are on the right/light side, and I am utterly fascinated by the psychological processes that enable us to think that way.

      I do agree on the point, though. The remaining disagreement is only semantical - a right is something given to you by someone else. If you believe there is a god to give you some "natural rights", then you can use that word. Since I don't believe in any gods above me, nobody can give me such a right, thus it isn't a "right" in the sense of the word, but simply an option I always have.

      --
      Assorted stuff I do sometimes: Lemuria.org
    17. Re:why dont you beat them up ? by Coolhand2120 · · Score: 1
      Nobody can give you something they do not first poses. Therefore nobody can bestow upon you rights they didn't first take from you. It's pretty well known that the founders of this country, Jefferson, the writer of the declaration included, were big time Freemasons, so it's also useful to know about Freemasonry and what they're all about:

      Candidates for regular Freemasonry are required to declare a belief in a Supreme Being. However, the candidate is not asked to expand on, or explain, his interpretation of Supreme Being. The discussion of politics and religion is forbidden within a Masonic Lodge, in part so a Mason will not be placed in the situation of having to justify his personal interpretation. Thus, reference to the Supreme Being can mean the Christian Trinity to a Christian Mason, Allah to a Muslim Mason, Para Brahman to a Hindu Mason, etc. While most Freemasons would take the view that the term Supreme Being equates to God, others may hold a more complex or philosophical interpretation of the term.

      Doesn't sound like the Creator you thought they were talking about does it? You need to have a little background on the words Jefferson was using and what they mean in the sense that they were used back then before you try and pass any sort of judgement. Unalienable individual rights was a revolutionary thing at the time and is still forbidden in many "civilized" countries, Canada and the UK for example lacks freedom of speech (and have a monarchy! doh!).

      Democrats love to paint the founding fathers as Christian zealots. But you have to ask yourself: Would Christian zealots allow the free practice of any religion and explicitly protect that in the Constitution? Wouldn't they have used the words "Jehovah" or "Jesus" rather than the more generic "God" and "Creator"? Sounds more like the agnostic Freemasons they were.

      Please read the two books I linked earlier, they are very short, free, and in text at the links I provided and very easy to read. They were actually originally published as pamphlets just to give you an idea how short they are. They explain conservatism/libertarianism perfectly, so when you're done you'll know where in the political spectrum you are. You can be a leftist like Pierre-Joseph Proudhon who's famous saying is "Property is theft", or you can be a rightist like Frédéric Bastiat who says "The Law is perverted to legalize the plunder of private property".

      There stands, in stark contrast, the two political philosophies. You can't really choose half way because they are in such total contradiction of each other, but many people claim to - I think they are just deluded or ignorant of what it is they really believe in. For example the libertarian who says "We all have a right to private property" but turns around and wants to stick it to the rich guy. Or the democrat who wants more government but doesn't individually want to pay more in taxes.

      I choose rightist because the arguments put forth in these two books use strong deductive reasoning and that is the only proper way to logically deduce anything. Proudhon uses endless platitudes and class warfare to define his arguments. But don't take my word for it, read yourself and decide for yourself, but for the love of god make sure you read a few books before you start forming opinions about the topic. If you don't read about this stuff I'm afraid the chances of you becoming a leftist are very good.

    18. Re:why dont you beat them up ? by UnHolier+than+ever · · Score: 1

      Unalienable individual rights was a revolutionary thing at the time and is still forbidden in many "civilized" countries, Canada and the UK for example lacks freedom of speech (and have a monarchy! doh!).

      Canadian Charter of Rights (part of the constitution), 2: Everyone has the following fundamental freedoms: (a) freedom of conscience and religion; (b) freedom of thought, belief, opinion and expression, including freedom of the press and other media of communication; (c) freedom of peaceful assembly; and (d) freedom of association.

    19. Re:why dont you beat them up ? by Martin+Blank · · Score: 1

      Article I, Section 8 of the US Constitution provides Congress the power to call forth the militia to "suppress Insurrections." Article III, Section 3 defines treason as "levying war against [the United States]." Given that these are delegated by the Constitution, it would seem to me an implicit denial of the right to revolt.

      --
      You can never go home again... but I guess you can shop there.
    20. Re:why dont you beat them up ? by unitron · · Score: 1

      I said one might argue.

      I never said anything about winning the argument. : - )

      --

      I see even classic Slashdot is now pretty much unusable on dial up anymore.

    21. Re:why dont you beat them up ? by Coolhand2120 · · Score: 1
      Be that as it may, there is still no intrinsic freedom of speech when the government can censor what they like when they like for whatever reason they make up. From: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Censorship_in_Canada

      Over the twentieth century, standards shifted from a "strong state-centred practice" done to protect the community from perceived social degradation, to a more decentralised censorship practiced by societal groups invoking state support to restrict the free speech abilities of political and ideological opponents. Subsequently, Canada is believed to have more hate crime legislation forbidding certain ideas from being promulgated than any other country in the world.

      Ouch! Doesn't sound like you have freedom of speech to me! And really, that's not just the opinion of Wikipedia editors, you can browse around the comments here and see a ton of complains about the lack of free speech in Canada and the UK. I'm not a fan of Michael Savage but I hear his books and his person is banned from the UK for "hate speech", and of course there is no "hate speech". Hate speech is such a subjective thing that just about anything can be misconstrued as hate speech. Why, right now it sounds to me like either I hate Canada, I hate the fact that they have restricted speech, or I hate the government of Canada. Well, that sounds like a lot of hate and my speech could be subject to censorship under the laws of Canada.

      I'm sure you're well aware that hate speech is alive and well in the U.S. and there is no such thing as "hate censorship" here. We may have Holocaust deniers but we also have freedom. Lacking a 1776 like event, I think you're going to be stuck with the British at the helm of your government.

    22. Re:why dont you beat them up ? by Tom · · Score: 1

      The "only we have freedom of speech" part is a bold lie. Sorry, your country isn't all that special and all that cool. Other countries don't have it as prominent as you do with the 1st Amendment (which, if you face it, really only means it was the first thing they realized they had forgotten in the original document). But it's there alrights. There are nuances and differences in how it's put, how absolute it's seen, etc. - in the real, practical reality, there is not that much difference. The americans are regularily the only people in a discussion who feel that everyone else doesn't have freedom of speech. Everyone else usually disagrees.

      --
      Assorted stuff I do sometimes: Lemuria.org
    23. Re:why dont you beat them up ? by danaris · · Score: 1

      Democrats love to paint the founding fathers as Christian zealots.

      Beg pardon?

      I've never heard a Democrat do that. I've heard many Republicans do it, though, usually as part of their attempt to prove that in order to be a "real American," you must conform to their particular brand of Christianity.

      Most Democrats that I've heard from who have an opinion on the issue at all tend toward the "separation of church and state" side.

      Dan Aris

      --
      Fun. Free. Online. RPG. BattleMaster.
  6. Constitutional hate speech by ZankerH · · Score: 1

    Tree of liberty, blood of patriots, permanent freedom, temporary safety, et cetera.

    (I await the SA with bated breath)

    1. Re:Constitutional hate speech by unitron · · Score: 1

      ...

      (I await the SA with bated breath)

      But what about the SI?

      I'll bet you're not expecting that!

      --

      I see even classic Slashdot is now pretty much unusable on dial up anymore.

  7. Kick these guys out! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Vote these fuckers out of office!

  8. what next not voteing for someone or saying that y by Joe_Dragon · · Score: 1

    What is next not voteing for someone or saying that you will vote for the other guy is a form of bullying as well?

  9. God damn Republicans by OverlordQ · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Those god damn Republicans continuing to erode our rights like this, first Bush and the Patriot Act and now . . . what? They're Democrats? Oh, well then, carry on.

    --
    Your hair look like poop, Bob! - Wanker.
    1. Re:God damn Republicans by bonch · · Score: 1

      Seriously, it will be interesting to see how Slashdot's usual anti-corporation, pro-government readership reacts to this submission.

    2. Re:God damn Republicans by log0n · · Score: 1

      Their all fucking idiots [Senators].

    3. Re:God damn Republicans by log0n · · Score: 3, Funny

      (they're rather - i'm a fucking idiot as well)

    4. Re:God damn Republicans by mrmeval · · Score: 1

      I want to get a grant from the NAACP!

      --
      I'd go on a Vegan diet but the delivery time from Vega is too long. --brownkitty
    5. Re:God damn Republicans by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Of course, Democrats. Knew it intuitively.

    6. Re:God damn Republicans by Baloroth · · Score: 0

      I can always tell which political side proposes something in the summary by looking at the comments. If it was done by Republicans, there are a good 100+ comments lambasting them as pro-corporate anti-freedom bigots. If Democrats did it, no one mentions their party affiliation. Also, the Republican stories tend to get a lot more comments. As if Democrats are all intelligent, freedom-lovers and anyone who isn't can't be a Democrat.

      The truth tends to be that most politicians, whatever they say, tend to seek to extend the power of the government, since that gives those who run it (i.e. them) more power (or money from lobbyists, money being a kind of power). This is why we have a Constitution, to prevent them from going beyond a certain point. Unfortunately, the US Constitution tends to get completely ignored these days, or bypassed by reading in new "powers" that really aren't there and never were.

      --
      "None can love freedom heartily, but good men; the rest love not freedom, but license." --John Milton
    7. Re:God damn Republicans by swanzilla · · Score: 1

      You have my vote.

    8. Re:God damn Republicans by Greyfox · · Score: 1
      Democrats always seem to be more for censorship. Look at Tipper Gore. Perfect example.

      I'm largely OK with the first amendment as it stands, though I would like some clarifying language about freedom of speech not being freedom of corruption. It is widely perceived that Congress are a bunch of whores, collectively for-sale to the highest... well... any... bidder. As this perception is corrosive to our system of government, any activities that contribute to these views should not be allowed. I would argue that this includes attempting to undermine amendments to our constitution...

      --

      I'm trying to teach myself to set people on fire with my mind... Is it hot in here?

    9. Re:God damn Republicans by Bucky24 · · Score: 1

      (does that makes you a senator? :P)

      --
      All the world's a CPU, and all the men and women merely AI agents
    10. Re:God damn Republicans by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Corporations would do the same thing, just worse.

    11. Re:God damn Republicans by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well it seems revolution has been popular in other parts of the world (i.e. Libya?) Might be the US's turn up next. Just think then you can go hang those bastards who screw the economy then magically exit with a golden parachute.

    12. Re:God damn Republicans by caitsith01 · · Score: 1

      Those god damn Republicans continuing to erode our rights like this, first Bush and the Patriot Act and now . . . what? They're Democrats? Oh, well then, carry on.

      Show me one person saying this is fine due to their Democrat affiliation?

      --
      Read Pynchon.
    13. Re:God damn Republicans by TheBrutalTruth · · Score: 1
      It was never about Communism, nor the Nazis (only involved because our asses got attacked). Capitalism has always been about the perversion of Democracy using the guise of $$ to take your rights. I just moved back East, after 10 years in the Midwest. I laughed at the dirt poor folks at the farm store bitching about "Democrats". Here I laugh at the liberal "I think I'm Smart & Cool" set (read:Hipsters) bitching about Republicans.

      It's all a scam folks - doesn't matter who runs the show. If the ones in power (corporations - who have been VERY adept at paying our "elected" officials to erode almost every labor right) want to take your freedoms - they can and will.

      I say hang 'em all - treason against the Republic.

      --
      Enlightenment is a pipe dream. So where's the pipe?
    14. Re:God damn Republicans by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Democrats always seem to be more for censorship

      Republicans and their bible-thumper butt buddies are all for censorship as well. Republicans just want to censor things that make you feel good, while Democrats want to censor things that make you feel bad.

    15. Re:God damn Republicans by airfoobar · · Score: 1

      (and if he floats, he's a witch)

    16. Re:God damn Republicans by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Stupid partisan fucktard: wrestling is FAKE.

    17. Re:God damn Republicans by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And my axe!

    18. Re:God damn Republicans by Coolhand2120 · · Score: 1

      I was with you for most of that rant, but there are Republicans (admittedly not as many as there should be) who want to shrink the size of government. There are a lot of RINOs. But at least Republicans have the 'conservative principal' that is written down in so many great books by giants like Locke, Smith, Paine, Bastiat, Freedman and many others. We can look at the actions of Republicans and compare them to what they should behave like and decide if they are Republicans or RINOs. Democrats on the other hand are stuck with "Democrat principals" like Proudhon (Property is Theft!) or Marx. And all democrats share one goal: grow the size and power of government.

      Sometimes the socialists have more control than the libertarians, but there is no getting away from the diametrical nature of government.

      One thing that I think is intentionally obfuscated by democrats is that they have always been on the wrong side. After the revolution they were for keeping the law of succession, they were the "south" during the civil war, indeed the Republican party was created as an abolitionist party. North vs. South was also Republican vs. Democrat. Democrats were for Jim Crow laws, and many democrat governors stood in doorways of schools to prevent black children from entering. No republican governors did that! Republicans voted for every civil rights act, and democrats voted against every civil rights act, down party lines. All of these are cold hard facts, you can look them up if you don't believe me, that they are even called into question shows how effective the democrat "ignorance machine" is.

      And now democrats want to say "well this party has changed. The democrat party of today is different!" Well then why did you vote Robert Bird, a member of the KKK into the senate every election until he died in 2010!? A god damn genuine "rode around in a white hood and strung up blacks for being black" KKK member. That should be all you need to know about the "democrat party of today".

      People say the republicans are the racists - Well, I need a citation for that.

    19. Re:God damn Republicans by Duradin · · Score: 1

      /. pro-government? You're thinking of ./ . ./ HATES any sort of authority that isn't the GPL.

    20. Re:God damn Republicans by babblefrog · · Score: 1

      One slight correction, the Democratic party didn't vote in Robert Byrd, the voters of West Virginia did. Carry on.

    21. Re:God damn Republicans by Coolhand2120 · · Score: 1

      Nope! Byrd won the democrat primary, which is a closed selection made only by top democrat leaders, not even necessarily elected democrats either! It is not the voters who choose Byrd. The voters simply approved of who the DNC choose. The democrats appealed to the "good 'ol boy" attitude in the south because they will do anything to win an election. What better way to get a bunch of red neck racists to vote for you than by running a KKK member! Never forget! This is who they are today.

      Too bad the democrats don't have primaries like republicans where anyone can vote. Of course this leaves open the chance that democrats will infiltrate the primaries (and often do) and choose poor candidates, but republicans are willing to take that chance so everyone can vote. Some democrats have the nerve to call this racist too. Of course democrats call anything anyone does that they don't agree with a racist.

    22. Re:God damn Republicans by Coolhand2120 · · Score: 1

      Citation needed.

    23. Re:God damn Republicans by RazorSharp · · Score: 1

      Republicans voted for every civil rights act? What about The Civil Rights Act of 1964? Although the 'solid south' Dems were the ones who tried to filibuster it, ones like Strom Thurmond changed parties after the bill's passage. Racists never forgave Kennedy/LBJ for the bill, which resulted in the solidly Democratic south turning solidly Republican. Furthermore, Byrd often sided with Republicans, especially late in his career, but he was too much of a moderate to be a true example of either party's values. It is notable that he later said that his top regrets in life were his association with the KKK and his filibuster of The Civil Rights Act.

      One thing to note about The Civil Rights Act of 1964 is that voting was most strictly divided by region rather than party. More Republicans voted for it than Democrats, but every southern Republican voted against the bill. More northern Democratic voted for the bill than northern Republicans (both in number and %, at the time the Democrats had a large majority in congress - hence more southern Democrats voted against the bill, but less as a %)

      The fact of the matter is that LBJ knew that passing the bill would likely result in losing the solid Democratic south but he did it anyway. He threw away political advantage to do what's right (had it not been for Vietnam LBJ would have been a damn good president overall).

      Not to mention that common Republican presidential candidate Barry Goldwater voted against the bill, saying, "You can't legislate morality."

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Civil_Rights_Act_of_1964

      So there's your citation. Passage of The Civil Rights Act of 1964 by a Democratic president turned the south against the Democratic party. If you want a second citation I present The Tea Party.

      Not all Republicans are racist, but it's a definite trend in the south. Not all Democrats are paternalistic, but it's a definite trend in New York and California.

      btw - being the 'south' during the Civil War didn't make them on the wrong side. Lincoln was on the wrong side. If legislation without representation is a true justification for the Revolutionary War, then the same must apply to the Civil War. The south didn't have a large enough population to represent it's vastly larger geography in the United States government. The system was rigged against them and that's what the war was about. It wasn't Lincoln's abolitionist crusade as everyone likes to believe (it's just another good example of history written by the winners).

      --
      "From the depths of my skeptical and rationalist soul, I ask the Lord to protect me from California touchie-feeliedom."
    24. Re:God damn Republicans by RazorSharp · · Score: 1

      That's the most racist shit I've ever heard.

      --
      "From the depths of my skeptical and rationalist soul, I ask the Lord to protect me from California touchie-feeliedom."
    25. Re:God damn Republicans by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Threatening speech is already an arrestable offense (i.e. saying "I'm going to kill you" while wielding a knife). Even in that case, immediate intent to do harm has to be clear. There's a fine line that is not always clear. Whoever writes legislation based on this idea needs to keep that in mind. Threats directed at any non-person entity should *not* be considered as a threat unless acting upon the threat would cause immediate harm to others.

    26. Re:God damn Republicans by thePuck77 · · Score: 1

      Wait...I'm pretty sure I got on the anti-corporation, anti-government bus. They're pretty much the same thing nowadays, anyhow. It seems difficult to hold the position you claim we hold...it's like being pro-steak and anti-beef.

      --
      "We live as though the world were as it should be, to show it what it can be." - Joss Whedon via Angel
    27. Re:God damn Republicans by Coolhand2120 · · Score: 1
      While the very last civil rights act was more about region, every other civil rights act up till then was down party lines, I'm sure you can navigate Wikipedia to find that too. Lincoln was not on the wrong side, and I don't want to get into a lengthily debate about the civil war, but the south wanted some unreasonable things.

      They wanted to count slaves as part of their representation. They wanted to allow new states to become slave states even though the constitution explicitly prohibits that. Their only source of wealth was that of farming and we all know what that shit was built on. If I was alive back then I would do everything in my power to oppose slavery including trying to subversively legislate it out of existence with tariffs, 3/5ths laws and anything else I could bring to the fight.

      That people still drone on about how unfair Lincoln was to the south is rather insensitive to the people the south held as slaves. How do you think they felt about the 3/5ths law? Or was it just the wealthy plantation owners you felt were being treated unfairly? Read this Timeline of events leading to the American Civil war. Read all the compromises that were made by Republicans to try and prevent war. Slavery is indefensible, even as a means of economic survival. You can't tell me you must enslave someone or you'll go broke, that's a fucking joke.

      All the south ever really wanted was slavery in perpetuity. The constitution prohibited that. Lincoln fought to preserve the union, the south fought to preserve slavery. Which of these sides are more righteous? Well, you're offering a defense of Byrd so you may just be a little bias. So maybe ask a black friend what his opinion is.

      A quote from the timeline article:

      Although slavery was at the heart of the sectional impasse between the North and South in 1860, it was not the singular cause of the Civil War. Rather, it was the multitude of differences arising from the slavery issue that impelled the Southern States to secede....The new republic claimed its justification to be the protection of state rights. In truth, close reading of the states' secession proclamations and of the new Confederate Constitution reveal that it was primarily one state right that impelled their separation: the right to preserve African American slavery within their borders....Thus, the North went to war to preserve the Union, and the white South went to war for independence so that it might protect slavery.

    28. Re:God damn Republicans by bky1701 · · Score: 1

      Oh, get over your bullshit partisanship. Look around here. I don't see a single person, except maybe Canadians, who aren't outraged at this. And let me try to remember, slashdot has a very liberal slant according to certain people, does it not? Add it up; there is no vast conspiracy against the poor little Republicans here.

    29. Re:God damn Republicans by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In fairness, these 4 NY State Senate Democrats are the "Independent Democratic Conference", http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/New_York_State_Senate a faction that has walked away from the Senate Democrat minority, and voted lockstep with the Republican Majority in exchange for committee posts that carry lulu's, or additional wages, as well as increased benefits for their districts. They're members of the Democratic party yes, but not exactly what you're thinking.

    30. Re:God damn Republicans by glodime · · Score: 1

      The Bill's Sponsors.

    31. Re:God damn Republicans by glodime · · Score: 1

      [Censored]

    32. Re:God damn Republicans by RazorSharp · · Score: 1

      Over 500,000 dead. Had there been no civil war it would have been only a few decades before new farm equipment made slavery economically unviable.

      Not to mention that most blacks in the south suffered more under reconstruction than they did as actual slaves. Many moved up north because they assumed the northerners, with their abolitionist sentiments, would treat them justly. Instead they just encountered a different type of racism: become a wage slave and live in a ghetto - be a citizen but a second-class citizen. Most slave owners provided better living conditions for their slaves than that which was provided for the average northern factory worker (regardless of race). Invisible Man by Ralph Ellison is a good examination of this.

      You can keep telling yourself the Republicans have a longstanding historical moral high ground, but that's a black-and-white attitude in a world that is anything but. "Only the Sith deal in absolutes."

      The fact of the matter is that the arguments the southerns had for secession are almost identical to those Jefferson made in the Declaration of Independence for breaking away from England. With the election of Lincoln the south had absolutely no influence on the federal government. The House of Representatives was 59% Republican and none of those men represented a southern state.

      --
      "From the depths of my skeptical and rationalist soul, I ask the Lord to protect me from California touchie-feeliedom."
    33. Re:God damn Republicans by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      The reps tell us what is offensive and the dems come along and put a sticker on it and try to put restrictions on who can sell it to who. It's a bi-partisan effort. There is a difference between the two parties; one is the left hand, the other the right.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    34. Re:God damn Republicans by Coolhand2120 · · Score: 1

      This is a great rundown of the history of the democrats in their relationship with minorities, blacks in particular:

      http://www.black-and-right.com/the-democrat-race-lie/

      Racists are not welcome in the Republican party. It was and is now a party that stands for equal rights and a color blind society. Anyone opposed to this idea isn't really a Republican at all. Read the history of the democrat party and compare it with the history of the republican party (in the link above). The republican party was founded in order to eliminate slavery. Can you honestly say that one is just as racist as the other?

    35. Re:God damn Republicans by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I assumed that since their party wasn't mentioned in either the summary or the article, they MUST be democrats!

    36. Re:God damn Republicans by rgviza · · Score: 1

      Free speech was created to _allow_ people to undermine the government, especially when it exceeds it's mandate and is corrupt. It allows us to spread the word that these people need to be voted out of office.

      Much in the same way that the 2nd amendment was created to allow us to protect ourselves from the tyranny of government. If the entire citizenry is armed and allowed to mass communicate it's impossible for a dictatorship or other non-republic government to come into power and flourish. The first steps in any totalitarian regime is to disarm the citizenry and shut them up. That's why the first two items in the bill of rights are the right to bear arms and the right to free speech. Without these rights, the rest of them mean nothing because the government is free to take them without the possibility of recourse.

      Liberals want both of these rights removed, presumably to keep us from hurting each other. I think the real reasons are much darker since people will find a way to hurt each other no matter what.

      --
      Don't kid yourself. It's the size of the regexp AND how you use it that counts.
  10. I don't see a problem. by jd · · Score: 1

    If excluding someone from a group is cyberbullying and cyberbullying is illegal, then that would presumably apply to all committees, press conferences, political funding bodies, etc. Right? Or is it only groups out of favour with the politicians in power who can't exclude?

    --
    It's a small world and it smells funny; I'd buy another if it wasn't for the money; Take back what I paid (SoM)
    1. Re:I don't see a problem. by Bucky24 · · Score: 1

      Or is it only groups out of favour with the politicians in power who can't exclude?

      Exactly this.

      --
      All the world's a CPU, and all the men and women merely AI agents
    2. Re:I don't see a problem. by PRMan · · Score: 1

      I want to be a member of the UN! That's in New York! It would be hilarious if a judge ruled that they couldn't stop you from joining...

      --
      Peter predicted that you would "deliberately forget" creation 2000 years ago...
    3. Re:I don't see a problem. by jd · · Score: 1

      Hey, it's worth a shot. But in order for it to be proper and everything, we need a vote to establish you as a legal representative of Slashdania. This is a democracy, there's no quorum defined, so all you need is more votes for than against. I hereby vote for you as Slashdania's UN Representative.

      --
      It's a small world and it smells funny; I'd buy another if it wasn't for the money; Take back what I paid (SoM)
  11. They're welcome in my group... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ... but first they have to sit still for 2 hours inside a cardboard box which I tape shut around them. Hopefully they won't mind the noise made by the excavating equipment and cement truck.

    1. Re:They're welcome in my group... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "....excavating equipment and cement truck."

      Wait so you put them in the box before digging the hole?

      If you weren't an idiot they would only hear the cement truck.....

      The box would implode from the weight and it would be just easier to shoot them.

  12. Treason by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Did the senators not take an oath to uphold the constitution? What is wrong with these people?

    1. Re:Treason by readin · · Score: 1

      Did the senators not take an oath to uphold the constitution? What is wrong with these people?

      The senators are Democrats and it's a living Constitution!

      --
      I often don't like the choices people make, but I like the fact that people make choices. That's why I'm a conservative.
  13. Land of the Free Home of the Brave - NOT by jo42 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    They spent World War II fighting the Nazis. Then they spent the Cold War fighting the Communists. Now they are becoming them. Fucking bastard asshole bags of shit. Hang'em high.

    1. Re:Land of the Free Home of the Brave - NOT by Maltheus · · Score: 1

      Well you can't have a homeland without a motherland and a fatherland. We've learned from the best.

    2. Re:Land of the Free Home of the Brave - NOT by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They spent World War II fighting the Nazis. Then they spent the Cold War fighting the Communists. Now they are becoming them. Fucking bastard asshole bags of shit. Hang'em high.

      Need some meta moderation here...not at all an insightful comment.

    3. Re:Land of the Free Home of the Brave - NOT by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Vote them out... (yes, I do mean both the demoflatulants and the rebunglerkins) All of them...

      It's the only way to be sure...

  14. Bullshit by cappp · · Score: 4, Informative
    Only thats not at all what's written. Read the entire report for yourself, you'll be pleasantly suprised.
    The quote given is taken completely out of context, infacT the report notes on the page previous that

    THE CHALLENGE LIES IN PROTECTING TEENAGERS FROM CYBERBULLYING WITHOUT TRAMPLING ON THE FREE SPEECH PROTECTIONS AFFORDED BY THE FIRST AMENDMENT. THIS PROPOSED LEGISLATION ACCOMPLISHES THAT IN THE FOLLOWING WAY:

    The report has some fairly decently nuanced considerations and is being damned by a single, out of context quote. Hell read onto the next page if you like

    IN SUMMARY, ALTHOUGH SPEECH IS GENERALLY PROTECTED UNDER THE FIRST AMENDMENT, THERE ARE INSTANCES IN WHICH RESTRICTIONS ARE WARRANTED. IN

    HOLY SHIT, THEYRE CONSIDERING THE LAW AS IT'S WRITTEN AND APPLIED IN THE REAL WORLD, NOT MY IDEOLOGICAL BUNKER!!!!!

    1. Re:Bullshit by wickerprints · · Score: 0

      I wish I could give you mod points for pointing out the yellow journalism in this biased and misleading summary. Alas, it looks like the knee-jerk responses calling for heads to roll have already hit the comments full force, and nobody is going to actually bother trying to see what was actually proposed because it doesn't fit into their delusional partisan worldview.

    2. Re:Bullshit by TapeCutter · · Score: 4, Funny

      Reading the primary source is cheating, you're supposed to be outraged, not curious.

      --
      And did you exchange a walk on part in the war for a lead role in a cage? - Pink Floyd.
    3. Re:Bullshit by Registered+Coward+v2 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Only thats not at all what's written. Read the entire report for yourself, you'll be pleasantly suprised. The report has some fairly decently nuanced considerations and is being damned by a single, out of context quote. Hell read onto the next page if you like

      IN SUMMARY, ALTHOUGH SPEECH IS GENERALLY PROTECTED UNDER THE FIRST AMENDMENT, THERE ARE INSTANCES IN WHICH RESTRICTIONS ARE WARRANTED. IN

      HOLY SHIT, THEYRE CONSIDERING THE LAW AS IT'S WRITTEN AND APPLIED IN THE REAL WORLD, NOT MY IDEOLOGICAL BUNKER!!!!!

      Actually, no. The first amendment is pretty clear - and prior restraint is a violation of free speech. Just because something is bad doesn't mean you should ban it - you can still make certain types of statements a crime - but to suggest that preventing someone from uttering them is not a first amendment violation is wrong, IMHO.

      They may be trying to make a good faith effort to not violate the first, but I think they fail.

      --
      I'm a consultant - I convert gibberish into cash-flow.
    4. Re:Bullshit by B1oodAnge1 · · Score: 2, Informative

      ALTHOUGH SPEECH IS GENERALLY PROTECTED UNDER THE FIRST AMENDMENT, THERE ARE INSTANCES IN WHICH RESTRICTIONS ARE WARRANTED.

      HOLY SHIT, THEYRE CONSIDERING THE LAW AS IT'S WRITTEN AND APPLIED IN THE REAL WORLD

      There is no "general protection" for speech in the first amendment, there is absolute protection:

      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.

      How are they considering the law as it is written?

      --
      RUGBYRUGBYRUGBY
    5. Re:Bullshit by Kohath · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Why don't these Democrat NY State Senators mind their own business?

      It's possible to exercise freedom outside the perfectly defined bounds of the First Amendment, you know.

      It's also possible to govern without trying to be everyone's Mom. Why should we tolerate governments trying to take away every tiny sliver of human freedom except the ones that are explicitly protected by the Bill of Rights? We all know these people would take away even more freedoms if they could get away with it.

      Do you want the author of this piece arrested for "Cyberbullying"? Or the Slashdot editors? Just wondering.

    6. Re:Bullshit by eparker05 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      In essence;

              WE ARE AWARE OF THE EXISTENCE OF A CONSTITUTION THAT PROTECTS PEOPLE'S RIGHTS, BUT WE WILL CIRCUMVENT THESE PROTECTIONS IN THE FOLLOWING WAY:

      It also has a plenty of nuance, read the next page if you like

              IN SUMMARY, ALTHOUGH SPEECH IS GENERALLY PROTECTED, OUR ACKNOWLEDGEMENT OF THIS FACT SHOULD MAKE YOU LESS SCARED THAT WE ARE ABOUT TO ERODE YOUR RIGHTS. IN

      Holy crikey, the OP might have made some sense.

    7. Re:Bullshit by countertrolling · · Score: 1

      In what part of 'NO LAW' do you find nuance? If they want to restrict speech, they must modify/repeal the 1st amendment. It's that simple. Already too many faulty interpretations have made it virtually toothless. A procedure is in place to make changes. They should be followed to the letter.

      --
      For justice, we must go to Don Corleone
    8. Re:Bullshit by Kreigaffe · · Score: 4, Informative

      it's textbook knee-jerk reactionaryism.

      cyberbullying. root word: bullying. THE SAME SHIT HAS BEEN GOING ON FOREVER. except now you put "... on a computer!" and are granted a new patent I MEAN a new call to action to restrict the rights of citizens BECAUSE OF THE CHILDREN!

      rights, mind you, that aren't meant to be restricted. these are not rights granted by the government. these are rights inherent to all people by virtue of their being people -- these are simply rights which the government has recognized the infringement of is inexcusable and tyrannical.

      I like the part of the bill where it mentions "...USING ELECTRONIC COMMUNICATION DIRECTED AT A CHILD UNDER THE AGE OF TWENTY-ONE YEARS,..." .. "CAUSES MATERIAL HARM TO THE MENTAL OR EMOTIONAL HEALTH, SAFETY OR PROPERTY OF SUCH CHILD ."

      And yes, they do say free speech is a privilege GRANTED BY THE FUCKING STATE -- and not an inborn, inalienable right.
      What bullshit.
      This is not the use of force to prevent the unjust use of force, these fucktwits have corrupted Mills for their own big-government nanny-state ends. This is simply the outright abuse of force and twisting of the very concept of our rights recognized, not granted, by the government. I'm sorry. Words do not hurt. You can call me what you want -- it only affects me as much as I allow it.

      You want to deal with cyberbullying? Get some fucking parents with half a clue to raise their kids. Get some schools that aren't afraid to deal with troublesome students. And yes, they are. Little Jimmy, you see, is special needs, and only acts out because of his bullshit ADHD -- and his parents, gosh, any time the school punishes Jimmy they're down there causing a ruckus because they KNOW Jimmy didn't punch that poor boy and call him a fag! Jimmy wouldn't do that!

      Kids: Ignore unkind words that bother you. If someone physically harms you, that's fucking assault and don't let the school fucking feed you any bullshit -- you were fucking assaulted, and if they don't want to deal with it get the fucking cops involved. No, it's not fair you keep getting picked on. Life's not fair. Don't do stupid shit like take nude photos of yourself -- they WILL be distributed, what the hell were you even thinking in the first place. The more you let the bullies know this shit bothers you, the more they will bother you.

      This law? This law is bullshit. Flaming some 20 year old is not a crime. I don't give half a fuck. This very post could be argued to cause "... MATERIAL HARM TO THE MENTAL OR EMOTIONAL HEALTH, SAFETY OR PROPERTY OF SUCH CHILD". Fuck that. A child under 21? Since when were fucking children able to enter into binding legal contracts.

      Fuck you, New York, fuck you and your liberal fucking totalitarian dreams and desires.

      Oh, and the one citation of a court case I saw in that mess of shit? Was for a case involving cross burning. They used that to justify their crap. Y'see, the difference is, in that case, the burning of the crosses was intended to intimidate -- it was a threat. There are actually already laws regarding the making of threats of violence. Nope, let's not apply those, let's just throw the fucking philosophical foundation of our constitution in the shitter FOR THE CHILDREN!

      --
      ... still waiting for this free-as-in-beer free beer I keep hearing about. :|
    9. Re:Bullshit by Endo13 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      It's pretty much irrelevant what they're proposing, because they're trying to fix something that really doesn't need fixing. In fact, if anything their solution makes the problem worse.

      The correct solution is to help kids deal with emotional and verbal abuse, not try to outlaw it. You're not doing anyone any favors by putting them in a protective shell until they hit a certain age, then releasing them into the wild to get hammered by all the nasty stuff Real Life has to offer all at once. Some parts of life suck. But you have to learn to deal.

      --
      There is no -1 Disagree mod. Slashdot.org/faq defines mod options. USE IT.
    10. Re:Bullshit by RazzleFrog · · Score: 5, Insightful

      You were that easily fooled? It's exactly like saying - "Not to insult you or anything but you are an idiot." Just because they preface it by saying that they don't want to piss on the first amendment. If YOU read the whole thing you'll see they are trying to broaden a couple of decisions to be so all-encompassing and vague that even this message I am writing right now will be covered if there happens to be a minor reading it who gets offended.

    11. Re:Bullshit by EvanED · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Considering the 1st amendment as absolute protection is something that I'm pretty sure has absolutely never been done. There's precedent out the wazoo for it, from defamation laws to false advertising laws to copyright laws.

    12. Re:Bullshit by MagusSlurpy · · Score: 1

      it's textbook knee-jerk reactionaryism.

      cyberbullying. root word: bullying. THE SAME SHIT HAS BEEN GOING ON FOREVER. except now you put "... on a computer!" and are granted a new patent I MEAN a new call to action to restrict the rights of citizens BECAUSE OF THE CHILDREN!

      Cyberbullying is so twentieth century. Luckily I was able to patent iBullying before Apple!

      --
      My sister opened a computer store in Hawaii. She sells C shells by the seashore.
    13. Re:Bullshit by NeutronCowboy · · Score: 3, Informative

      They might be nuanced considerations, but the considerations lead to some really, really stupid consequences. The VC blog has some more level-headed analysis of their proposal.

      The end result is still that the proposed limitations on free speech will lead to some serious abuses. Not to mention that I find it strangely disturbing that a human being of 20 years, 11 months and 360 days is described as a child.

      It's not complete crazy talk, and, unlike some others, find it an idea that should be discussed in the open. And then the idea should be shot into itty, bitty little philosophical pieces.

      --
      Those who can, do. Those who can't, sue.
    14. Re:Bullshit by NeutronCowboy · · Score: 0

      As much as the conclusions of the committee disturb me, I find the violence directed at these senators for merely discussing the idea to be even more disturbing. What, we can't discuss things anymore?

      --
      Those who can, do. Those who can't, sue.
    15. Re:Bullshit by airfoobar · · Score: 3, Informative
      How nice, you posted a few select bits and pieces where they SAY the 1st Amendment is important, but didn't post the bits and pieces where they say the 1st Amendment sucks and should only be applied half of the time. Did you miss these parts:

      [Freedom of speech] should be treated not as a right but as a privilege -- a special entitlement granted by the state on a conditional basis that can be revoked if it is ever abused or maltreated.

      In the case of cyberbullying, the perceived protections of free speech are exactly what enable harmful speech and cruel behavior on the internet. it is the notion that people can post anything they want, regardless of the harm it might cause another person that has perpetuated, if not created, this cyberbullying culture. but "hate speech" that causes material harm to children should have consequences.

      In summary, although speech is generally protected under the first amendment, there are instances in which restrictions are warranted.

      Quick! Save the children from the hate speech!! Freedom of Speech will not be abridged except when it will be.

    16. Re:Bullshit by RazzleFrog · · Score: 1

      They can discuss it just as much as people can make empty threats of violence. Well that is unless they get their way and this becomes law.

    17. Re:Bullshit by NeutronCowboy · · Score: 1

      How is making empty threats of violence a discussion?

      --
      Those who can, do. Those who can't, sue.
    18. Re:Bullshit by Nutria · · Score: 2

      You missed the parts that's written:

      Proponents of a more refined First Amendment argue that this freedom should be treated not as a right but as a privilege — a special entitlement granted by the state on a conditional basis that can be revoked if it is ever abused or maltreated.

      --
      "I don't know, therefore Aliens" Wafflebox1
    19. Re:Bullshit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Cyber-bullying... Tough shit. Stop treating your kids like everything they do is 100% right and they could never do anything wrong or be any better and that there are no losers, just winners. You are not teaching them self esteem and to be happy with themselves. You are teaching them they can do no wrong and everything in life is perfect as long as you give it your best. They are unprepared to go out on their own, they do not know their true weaknesses or strengths You held their hand as they grew up and "protected" them from wrong and negative with a shell but once they hit the teens, they venture out of that protected parent zone you've had them in and they meet the real world unprepared to handle a simple everyday failure and some name calling. Some see the new freedom as a chance to pick on others, some are the ones picked on. They start failing, they are confused, they start listening to others telling them they have failed because they thmyselves do not know what failure is or have not experienced it before. You continue to tell them everything is fine, you are strong, you are great but their friends are telling them something completely different. Now you the parent is seen as not knowing what they hell you are talking about and you can't possibly understand what your child is going though, the one "friend" they had that understood them went out with another friend last night and was talking about them and now your kid has "no friends" and everyone hates them. OMG the stress!!!!!! What can they do to fit in? The teenage girls seem to post pictures of themselves in the mirror with as much cleavage and provocative poses they can possibly come up with (refresh http://photobucket.com/images/recent/ a few times and you'll see them) and then they go out partying with some older kids on a school night while you think your perfect kid is at their friends house watching Disney movies and eating pizza in a family setting. Those older kids don't "like" your kid either, they want to see what they can get away with.

      Okay, I got off the subject but I just went through this phase with two teenagers. Bottom line, let the kids fail and stop telling them everything they do is 100% right and perfect. Watch and let them fail and let them find what they are really good and bad at.

    20. Re:Bullshit by cappp · · Score: 1
      The First Amendment has never been absolute. Years of case law and precident demonstate this - shouting fire in a crowded theatre blah blah blah.

      This report in no way seeks to undermine the rights of speech, infact they go out of their way to avoid it. What is suggested is two changes to current laws (stalking and manslaughter specifically) to faciliate prosecution of malicious internet communications. This is already a crime in every other medium.

      A PERSON IS GUILTY OF STALKING IN THE THIRD DEGREE WHEN HE OR SHE INTENTIONALLY, AND FOR NO LEGITIMATE PURPOSE, ENGAGES IN A COURSE OF CONDUCT USING ELECTRONIC COMMUNICATION DIRECTED AT A CHILD UNDER THE AGE OF TWENTY-ONE YEARS, AND KNOWS OR REASONABLY KNOW THAT SUCH CONDUCT:
      A) IS LIKELY TO CAUSE REASONABLE FEAR OF MATERIAL HARM TO THE PHYSICAL HEALTH, SAFETY OR PROPERTY OF SUCH CHILD; OR
      B) CAUSES MATERIAL HARM TO THE MENTAL OR EMOTIONAL HEALTH, SAFETY OR PROPERTY OF SUCH CHILD

      This is merely updating the laws to better reflect today's means of communication - the content of said law already exists. You're not allowed to intentially cause fear in othe people, nor cause material harm. Those principles already exist in the law.

      I should have used the earlier post to elaborate more on the point and apologise for that failure. The proposed changes are not about stiffling free speech, as the report if read in it's entirety makes clear, but rather about updating current laws to reflect technological realities. This is not new content nor judicial reaching, it's whats already on the books merely applied to a new medium.

    21. Re:Bullshit by Anguirel · · Score: 1

      In what part of 'NO LAW' do you find nuance?

      Apparently all over the place:
      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shouting_fire_in_a_crowded_theater
      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Defamation
      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/False_advertising
      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Perjury
      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Assault

      --
      ~Anguirel (lit. Living Star-Iron)
      QA: The art of telling someone that their baby is ugly without getting punched.
    22. Re:Bullshit by russotto · · Score: 1

      As much as the conclusions of the committee disturb me, I find the violence directed at these senators for merely discussing the idea to be even more disturbing. What, we can't discuss things anymore?

      Did you see the amount of UPPERCASE in that report? That's cyberspeechcrime all by itself, and calls for a lynching.

    23. Re:Bullshit by countertrolling · · Score: 1

      Those are expedience, not nuance.

      --
      For justice, we must go to Don Corleone
    24. Re:Bullshit by swalve · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Actually, the correct solution is to do both. You teach the children how to deal with it, but you also make it illegal since some kids haven't yet mastered the art of ignoring bullies. It doesn't take much bullying to turn a relatively normal kid into a basket case, and they need to have a better "out" of the situation than someone telling them to "toughen up".

    25. Re:Bullshit by swalve · · Score: 1

      This isn't metafilter.

    26. Re:Bullshit by eparker05 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I agree that the report is primarly an informative piece with a few suggested policies. I disagree with your conclusion; you seem to think the inclusion of moderate language and statements somehow offsets the damage that these policies, and this mindset, would do to our freedoms. Policy is often a one way street and it is hard to regain freedoms once lost.

      Yes, cyber-bullying is an issue. No, this guys extreme view on the 'privilege' of free speech isn't going to help prevent kids from being bullies.

    27. Re:Bullshit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      In summary, although speech is generall protected under the first amendment, there are instances in which restrictions are warranted.

      HOLY SHIT, THEYRE CONSIDERING THE LAW AS IT'S WRITTEN AND APPLIED IN THE REAL WORLD, NOT MY IDEOLOGICAL BUNKER!!!!!

      Actually "the law as it's written" in the first amendment (which is supposed to trump any legislation) doesn't mention any restrictions at all, which is curious considering how many lawmakers and judges seem to think they are there somewhere.

      Where do they get this shit about "there are instances in which restrictions are warranted"? Maybe because they happen to want the restrictions and just assert that they're constitutional?

      Sorry, but I don't recognize anyone's right to restrict my speech just because they think they should be able to!

    28. Re:Bullshit by Oxford_Comma_Lover · · Score: 4, Insightful

      The correct solution is to help kids deal with emotional and verbal abuse, not try to outlaw it.

      The correct solution is to help emotional and verbal abusers stop emotionally and verbally abusing people, not try to outlaw it. Only helping kids deal with it is like only helping the victims of any crime--it doesn't actually disincentivize the behavior on the part of the abuser.

      Just because someone should have a thick enough skin or enough self-confidence to shrug off a verbal attack does not mean that someone else should be making that attack.

      --
      -- IANAL, this isn't legal advice, and definitely isn't legal advice for you. Also, Squee!
    29. Re:Bullshit by Endo13 · · Score: 1

      Couldn't agree more.

      --
      There is no -1 Disagree mod. Slashdot.org/faq defines mod options. USE IT.
    30. Re:Bullshit by Zancarius · · Score: 2

      You were that easily fooled? It's exactly like saying - "Not to insult you or anything but you are an idiot." Just because they preface it by saying that they don't want to piss on the first amendment. If YOU read the whole thing you'll see they are trying to broaden a couple of decisions to be so all-encompassing and vague that even this message I am writing right now will be covered if there happens to be a minor reading it who gets offended.

      The OP you're responding to worries me, but mostly because I don't think care was taken to consider other parts of the document. Instead, the OP mentions that there's a single, out of context quote (which I don't believe was taken out of context that much), yet avoids other, juicier claims.

      To illustrate:

      IN MANY WAYS, THE HARM CAUSED BY CYBERBULLYING MAY BE GREATER THAN THE
      HARM CAUSED BY TRADITIONAL BULLYING.

      There's no citation, except for an article from Vanderbilt Law Review; there's no mention of peer-reviewed psychological studies. This is almost the very definition of a knee-jerk reaction to a real or imagined threat that has dangerous potential for abuse. We were all kids once, and I'm sure we've all said unpleasant things toward one or more of our peers during some part of our life. It isn't a very wise thing to criminalize the somewhat typical behavior of children simply because it has greater exposure, particularly when kids are not fully capable of rationalizing or appreciating the breadth of the impact their words might hold.

      There are also other, perhaps more humorous implications. For instance, since exclusion is used as an example of "cyberbullying," it makes me wonder: Would we therefore, in a written forum like Slashdot, be excluding the illiterate? Yes, that's tongue-in-cheek, but it's not a far stretch to imagine in this political climate someone interpreting exclusion to mean something of that sort.

      --
      He who has no .plan has small finger. ~ Confucius on UNIX
    31. Re:Bullshit by betterunixthanunix · · Score: 1

      The quote is not at all out of context. The report is arguing that since we already restrict free speech rights, we should go ahead and restrict those rights further. Every time the law chips away a bit more of our free speech rights, someone makes the argument, "Where does this end?" and this report proves that point: where does it end? What future arguments will be made to erode free speech just a little bit further, if the recommendations from this report are enacted?

      --
      Palm trees and 8
    32. Re:Bullshit by betterunixthanunix · · Score: 5, Informative

      shouting fire in a crowded theatre

      Why does nobody bother to cite the actual case this came from? Probably because it flies in the face of the first amendment:

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Schenck_v._United_States

      No, that is not a joke, the Supreme Court really did rule that Schenck did not have the right to speak against the draft during World War I.

      --
      Palm trees and 8
    33. Re:Bullshit by debiankicksass · · Score: 2, Interesting

      The correct solution is to help kids deal with emotional and verbal abuse, not try to outlaw it. What ever happened to the good old days when as kids we could beat each others ass and have the outcome be what stands? Why are we falling for all of this crap that kids need an emotional outlet? Boys like to fight and need to fight, say what you want and mod me down a notch but I'm of the old school belief of a good scrap settles way more than any counseling.

    34. Re:Bullshit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Congress shall make no law...

      That's the US Congress. This is the NY State Senate.

    35. Re:Bullshit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There are NEVER instances in which restrictions are warranted. NEVER.

    36. Re:Bullshit by Jason+Levine · · Score: 4, Insightful

      From personal experience, I agree. In high school, I was bullied so much by one group of kids (who would ignore me if they passed me in the hall individually) that I became paranoid. Any laughter I heard, I assumed was directed at me. I didn't feel like I could talk to my parents or teachers, I only had one friend I felt comfortable confiding in. I couldn't fight back since a) I didn't want to get in trouble and b) even if I did, the five or six of them could easily beat me up. I ignored them the best I could, but that just bottles the feelings up. I dreaded going to school every day because I knew I'd be tormented at every turn.

      My one friend finally spoke with the bullies (late in senior year). They thought they were just having some fun and didn't realize there were consequences. Although they stopped, it took many years of college before I recovered. In some ways, I've never recovered and never will.

      Fighting bullying needs a three pronged approach. You need to help the kids who are bullied, educate the bullies as to the consequences for their actions, and, should the bullies not care about the bullied child at all, have some legal recourse to take against them. If cappp's assessment is right, this is a good thing. We might have freedom of speech but that doesn't mean we get to say whatever we want without any consequences.

      --
      My sci-fi novel, Ghost Thief, is now available from Amazon.com.
    37. Re:Bullshit by RazzleFrog · · Score: 1

      Does speech have to be a discussion? I didn't realize that was a requirement.

    38. Re:Bullshit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You might think they fail, but they make the law, not you! Yes there may be layers of protection, but things like this will get through eventually.

    39. Re:Bullshit by NeutronCowboy · · Score: 1

      I wasn't talking about speech, I was talking about discussion. Speech without intent for discussion is either a proclamation or mental masturbation.

      --
      Those who can, do. Those who can't, sue.
    40. Re:Bullshit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Nobody ever cites it when they're using it as a way to try to promote the suppression of free speech, because they've either never actually looked at the case and are completely unaware of it, or they are aware of it, and know that it was really bad law which has essentially been completely overturned by subsequent decisions, but wish to keep that fact to themselves.

      It's as bad as trying to make a point with a quote from Dred Scott v. Sanford or Plessy v. Ferguson.

    41. Re:Bullshit by RazzleFrog · · Score: 1

      So when I stand in front of a classroom and teach them how to use Excel am I proclaiming or masturbating?

    42. Re:Bullshit by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 2

      It's actually directly mentioned in the paper in question:

      IN SUMMARY, ALTHOUGH SPEECH IS GENERALLY PROTECTED UNDER THE FIRST AMENDMENT, THERE ARE INSTANCES IN WHICH RESTRICTIONS ARE WARRANTED. IN VIRGINIA V. BLACK, FOR EXAMPLE, THE COURT RULED THAT “THE PROTECTIONS AFFORDED BY THE FIRST AMENDMENT () ARE NOT ABSOLUTE, AND WE HAVE LONG RECOGNIZED THAT THE GOVERNMENT MAY REGULATE CERTAIN CATEGORIES OF
      EXPRESSION CONSISTENT WITH THE CONSTITUTION. THE FIRST AMENDMENT PERMITS ‘RESTRICTIONS UPON THE CONTENT OF SPEECH IN A FEW LIMITED AREAS, WHICH ARE OF SUCH SLIGHT SOCIAL VALUE AS A STEP TO TRUTH THAT ANY BENEFIT DERIVED FROM THEM IS CLEARLY OUTWEIGHED BY THE SOCIAL INTEREST IN ORDER AND MORALITY.’”

      ...

      THE NEWYORK COURT OF APPEALS FOUND THAT PORTION OF THE STATE’S HARASSMENT LAW UNCONSTITUTIONAL EXPLAINING THAT SPEECH MAY BE “ABUSIVE,” EVEN “VULGAR, DERISIVE, AND PROVOCATIVE,” AND STILL NOT FALL WITHIN THE REALM OF “CONSTITUTIONALLY PROSCRIBABLE EXPRESSION.” THE COURT FURTHER EXPLAINED THAT SPEECH COULD ONLY BE RESTRICTED WITH REGARDS TO “WORDS THAT INFLICT INJURY OR OTHERWISE INCITE IMMEDIATE VIOLENCE OR [BREACHES] OF PEACE,” AND THAT IS WHAT REMAINS THE LAW NOW. THE INDEPENDENT DEMOCRATIC CONFERENCE BELIEVES THERE SHOULD BE CONSEQUENCES FOR THOSE WHO CYBERBULLY AND COMMIT BULLYCIDE AND THAT THOSE CONSEQUENCES PROPOSED IN THIS BILL ARE WITHIN THE ABOVE STATED PARAMETERS OF CONSTITUTIONAL LAW.

      so they're not inventing something new here.

    43. Re:Bullshit by Archangel+Michael · · Score: 1

      If they consider people between 18 and 21 to be children, unable to deal with "bullies" then I suggest we revoke voting and other "adult" "rights" from them immediately.

      On the one hand, they are children innocent and defenseless and on the other hand, they are sophisticated adults. Which is it guys, make up your mind.

      --
      Agent K: A *person* is smart. People are dumb, stupid, panicky animals, and you know it.
    44. Re:Bullshit by cayenne8 · · Score: 3, Insightful
      Funny, I learned to ignore bullying quite early on...that led fairly quickly to.being accepted by a large.swath of kids.

      Part of growing up is learning to deal with adversity and what in general can be a.cruel world that doesn't give a shit about your precious self esteem....part of this experience is learning to grow your skin a bit thicker, and learn the only person you should really care about their thoughts of you...is yourself...

      --
      Light travels faster than sound. This is why some people appear bright until you hear them speak.........
    45. Re:Bullshit by cayenne8 · · Score: 1

      So, after thousands of years, we should outlaw kids being kids? Geez, this has been what kids do since the end of time...why are kids not able to cope anymore? It certainly should not be a crime....it is the nature of kids and part of growing up.

      --
      Light travels faster than sound. This is why some people appear bright until you hear them speak.........
    46. Re:Bullshit by Sarusa · · Score: 1

      No, I read the entire report, that's how I knew it was from the 'Independent Democratic Conference'.

      I also don't care how many disclaimers you put on something saying you're not doing X, it doesn't matter when you're still doing X. In fact that's a favorite tactic of people who are doing X.

      The kicker is page 33-35, which is almost entirely an argument for throwing the First Amendment under the bus when you don't care for it 'PROPONENTS OF A MORE REFINED FIRST AMENDMENT ARGUE THAT THIS FREEDOM SHOULD BE TREATED NOT AS A RIGHT BUT AS A PRIVILEGE – A SPECIAL ENTITLEMENT GRANTED BY THE STATE ON A CONDITIONAL BASIS THAT CAN BE REVOKED IF IT IS EVER ABUSED OR MALTREATED.'

    47. Re:Bullshit by sycodon · · Score: 3, Insightful

      It wasn't that long ago that it would be normal and acceptable to kick the shit out the bully.

      Ahh...those were the good old days.

      --
      When Fascism comes to America, it will call itself Anti-Fascism, and tell you to give up your guns.
    48. Re:Bullshit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      all the nasty stuff Real Life has to offer all at once.

      Don't worry, that stuff is being regulated away too.

    49. Re:Bullshit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      THE SAME SHIT HAS BEEN GOING ON FOREVER. except now you put "... on a computer!" and are granted a new patent I MEAN a new call to action to restrict the rights of citizens

      Maybe because, when you do it "on a computer", frequently it greatly increases the effect, thus actually making it a more serious problem.

      But yeah, let's just compare it to patents and hope that everyone will just shut down their brains and get on your side.

    50. Re:Bullshit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not to mention that the hypocrites who wrote that amendment turned around just a few years later made speech critical of the government illegal. Why should the NY Senate be blamed if they are just following in the footsteps of the founding fathers?

    51. Re:Bullshit by NeutronCowboy · · Score: 1

      You're proclaiming. Duh. What, you thought teaching how a program works is anything but declarative statements, with exactly zero impact on anything outside of that program?

      --
      Those who can, do. Those who can't, sue.
    52. Re:Bullshit by Pseudonym+Authority · · Score: 1

      What part of ``Congress'' don't you understand?

      <rot13>Abg gung V yvxr guvf ovyy.</rot13>

    53. Re:Bullshit by Oxford_Comma_Lover · · Score: 0

      The problem is that "Kids being kids" is effectively the same rationale used to rationalize all kinds of completely unacceptable behavior. Date rape? Just guys being guys. Beating the hell out of each other? Just kids being kids.

      At least, that's one problem. The other is that people don't "grow up" if you don't tell them, for example, that it's wrong to go around calling people names.

      We do have a real problem with outlawing "kids being kids," but it's less in the area of name-calling and more in the area of "a kid accidentally killed someone so let's prosecute him for it," and also in the area of putting cops in the schools and treating school discipline as something that should be criminalized right away. Google the school-to-prison pipeline for some ridiculous examples.

      But if a kid is going around name-calling, that behavior has to stop. It helps him and it helps everyone else when he stops.

      What you're talking about is, I think, not quite as bad. I assume you're thinking about the scenario where, basically, teachers may set ground rules (no ganging up, as fair a fight as you can have between the two people, and maybe no fight at all if it's clearly unfair).

      --
      -- IANAL, this isn't legal advice, and definitely isn't legal advice for you. Also, Squee!
    54. Re:Bullshit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I like it when people don't know their history. It really makes me chuckle.

      That said, I don't agree with this bill, I think its dumb and a complete violation of the 1st amendment, but its really not the first. Allow me to elaborate:

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shouting_fire_in_a_crowded_theater

      "The most stringent protection of free speech would not protect a man falsely shouting fire in a theater and causing a panic. [...] The question in every case is whether the words used are used in such circumstances and are of such a nature as to create a clear and present danger that they will bring about the substantive evils that Congress has a right to prevent."

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fighting_words#United_States

      "The fighting words doctrine, in United States constitutional law, is a limitation to freedom of speech as protected by the First Amendment to the United States Constitution. In its 9-0 decision, Chaplinsky v. New Hampshire (1942), the U.S. Supreme Court established the doctrine and held that "insulting or 'fighting words,' those that by their very utterance inflict injury or tend to incite an immediate breach of the peace" are among the "well-defined and narrowly limited classes of speech [that] the prevention and punishment of...have never been thought to raise any constitutional problem.""

      Your move, guys.

    55. Re:Bullshit by cappp · · Score: 1

      But it is out of context. The paper uses a basic rhetorical device: some people say X, some people say Y, we say blah blah blah. It's not advocating the stated positions at all, and if the entire thing is taken as a whole it makes a compelling legal argument for the protection of the first amendment in an area that is otherwise pushing in the opposite direction. We can argue about if it's a necissary expansion of the law, I would argue that it's codifying principles that already exist throughout anyway, and we can argue about the validity of the conditions and standards applied; but what we shouldn't do is cherry pick a sentance, divorce it from the context in which is sat, and then make hyperbolic statements.

      Some people think the death penalty is flawed, some people think that the death penalty is a good idea. Headline: Cappp says the death penalty is a good idea!

    56. Re:Bullshit by roman_mir · · Score: 1

      they're trying to fix something that really doesn't need fixing

      - orly?

      How do you know WHAT they are trying to fix exactly? Just because the text of the bill says something or other about bullying, doesn't mean that's the INTENTION of the bill.

      After all, everything that gov't does can only be understood if you consider the behavior modification of individuals and the usefulness of that bill in court to judge unrelated cases.

      No, I presume they are trying to fix something that in their heads is a problem - your freedom of speech.

    57. Re:Bullshit by cappp · · Score: 1
      The section you're citing to reads

      PROPONENTS OF FREE SPEECH HAVE LONG ARGUED THAT A SOCIETY THAT PUTS PEOPLE ON TRIAL FOR THINGS THEY HAVE WRITTEN OR SAID IS NO LONGER A TRULY DEMOCRATIC SOCIETY. THE POWER OF THE WORD HAS BEEN UNDISPUTABLE; IT HAS BEEN ESSENTIAL TO PRESERVING DEMOCRACY AND, IN FACT, ITS FOUNDING PREMISE WAS TO PRESERVE THE EXCHANGE OF IDEAS: A “MARKET PLACE” WHERE CITIZENS COULD SORT THROUGH BELIEFS AND IDEAS WHICH BEST RESONATED WITH THEM AND DISCARD THOSE THAT DID NOT,74 THEREBY ALLOWING FOR THE CREATION OF AN EVER-EVOLVING, OPEN SOCIETY. MOREOVER, THEY CONTEND THAT FREEDOM OF SPEECH IS RECOGNIZED AS A HUMAN RIGHT UNDER ARTICLE 19 OF THE UNIVERSAL DECLARATION OF HUMAN RIGHTS,75 SO IT CANNOT AND MUST NOT BE LIMITED. AND YET, PROPONENTS OF A MORE REFINED FIRST AMENDMENT ARGUE THAT THIS FREEDOM SHOULD BE TREATED NOT AS A RIGHT BUT AS A PRIVILEGE – A SPECIAL ENTITLEMENT GRANTED BY THE STATE ON A CONDITIONAL BASIS THAT CAN BE REVOKED IF IT IS EVER ABUSED OR MALTREATED. BRITISH PHILOSOPHER JOHN STUART MILL LONG ARGUED THAT “THE ONLY PURPOSE FOR WHICH POWER CAN BE RIGHTFULLY EXERCISED OVER ANY MEMBER OF A CIVILIZED COMMUNITY, AGAINST HIS WILL, IS TO PREVENT HARM FROM OTHERS.”76 HIS “HARM PRINCIPLE” WAS ARTICULATED IN AN ANALOGY BY OLIVER WENDELL HOLMES, JR. (1841-1935), AND STILL HOLDS TRUE TODAY: “THE RIGHT TO SWING MY FIST ENDS WHERE THE OTHER MAN’S NOSE BEGINS,” OR, A PERSON’S RIGHT TO FREE SPEECH ENDS WHEN IT SEVERELY INFRINGES UPON THE SAFETY AND WELL-BEING OF ANOTHER. 74

      It's not an argument one way or the other. It's merely a statement of two differing stances. The report also notes that the First Amendment has never been absolute, an important fact that a lot of people don't seem to realize. Nothing is being thrown under the bus, these are basic legal principles that exist in the law anyway.

    58. Re:Bullshit by ravenshrike · · Score: 1

      No, they're claiming that their law falls under previous exceptions to the1st amendment when it decidedly does not.

    59. Re:Bullshit by Sarusa · · Score: 1

      It says that the first half a strawman, yes, before unleashing the 'BUT THIS IS WRONG'. This is quite obvious from reading it.

      The entire paper is a dissertation on why we can't let the first amendment keep us from disallowing speech we don't like. Your penultimate sentence admits this, so stop using 'bullshit' tactics to pretend it doesn't say this and just defend that position forthrightly instead of bizarrely trying to claim a neutral position. I object far more to your intellectual dishonesty here in baldfacedly claiming 'It's not an argument one way or the other' than I object to your actual position, because I realize a lot of people have what they think are good reasons for not allowing free speech.

    60. Re:Bullshit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      *sigh*, you are so wrong. “THE RIGHT TO SWING MY FIST ENDS WHERE THE OTHER MAN’S NOSE BEGINS”

      Look, the WHOLE POINT of free speech is that all bad things should be banned. All of them. But speech is an ambiguous issue because it is hard to tell what is bad, and what is good. So while speech which appears might be offensive or harmful is allowed, it is to give the benefit of the doubt. It is NEVER EVER about allowing harm in the name of an ideological affinity.

      ALL the freedoms of the constitution, and the law in the US in general, are about maximizing one person's freedom without restricting another person's freedom.

      What this law does: if you do "something" online which cause a person fear, and is generally regarded as something which would cause a normal person fear (you know, bullying), then you can be charged with cyber stalking.
      If the above cyber stalking leads to a person committing suicide, then you can be charge with murder (manslaughter).

      Frankly, bullying sucks. If they outlaw it, good riddance.

      Anyway, the slashdot summary sucks. Slashdot is not a news website, it is a troll website, designed to get you angry. That gets them page views and money. We are all stupid for being here.

    61. Re:Bullshit by Sarusa · · Score: 1

      > I like it when people don't know their history. It really makes me chuckle.

      We know our history. That's why we have to defend the Bill of Rights against the overwhelming legions of mouthbreathers who want to neuter it at every step, even when they sometimes succeed at it. It's very sad to have to take such a hard position, but as this report, which even defines NO SPEECH as hate speech, demonstrates, everyone has a really really really good reason for not letting you say what you want while they get to say whatever they want. There's a very obvious just down the slope point here, which is Britain, where The Sun gets to say almost any ridiculous salacious thing it wants while a scientist who says homeopathy might not work gets the crap sued out of him.

      Just because someone did something short sighted doesn't mean we have to let it happen again and again.

    62. Re:Bullshit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      did you even read my post?

    63. Re:Bullshit by epyT-R · · Score: 1

      what these politicians are doing is selectively choosing what law is 'axiomatic' (what supports their political bias) and what isn't. they think that shielding peoples' feelings from reality is more important than protecting their rights.

      this report you linked to is full of generalities like 'emotional distress' and it places the choices of the victim (ie to hurt himself or commit suicide) on the person who sent the supposedly 'offensive' message. that's just fucked up. this is the very antithesis of personal responsibility. how the 'offender' is supposed to 'reasonably know' that such comment is 'hurtful' is beyond me. you can't legislate in such away to guarantee that no one ever gets their feelings hurt...even with a precrime style police state.

      this bill will just encourage schools to write policies that legally indemnifies it from parental lawsuits...ie more 'zero tolerance' policy that dictates student behaviors from a very subjective list of behaviors that have multiple contexts, many of which the older generations (teachers /administration) aren't aware of.

    64. Re:Bullshit by epyT-R · · Score: 1

      ..and just because someone is thin skinned doesn't mean everyone else should silence themselves down to that persons' unrealistic expectations... rewarding ultrasensitivity is just as bad for society as rewarding chronic abuse. it cramps expression, causing it to out in more insidious ways which continue to harm the target. it also gives the police state groupies another bogey man to justify even more draconian trampling of speech and prevents the target from learning to deal with adversity.

    65. Re:Bullshit by epyT-R · · Score: 1

      the problem with your date rape example is that the definition of it keeps expanding...if you were to believe an extrapolation (no I'm not saying you should necessarily), by 2030, 'date rape' will be asking a girl to a date, and her feeling 'uncomfortable.' to parallel your other examples of kids being kids, it's about time the girls started taking some of the responsibility for the outcome of the evening... ie saying 'no' halfway through drunken intercourse should be thrown out of court.

    66. Re:Bullshit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Does sound reasonable, too bad it's going to be used as precedent to allow corporations and special interest groups (in particular left-wing ones) to make more laws that allow them to go after any criticism of them online. Also I highly doubt that it's going to be used properly at all.

    67. Re:Bullshit by jez9999 · · Score: 1

      And yes, they do say free speech is a privilege GRANTED BY THE FUCKING STATE -- and not an inborn, inalienable right.
      What bullshit.

      The very fact that free speech needs to be *defended* would seem to be rather strong evidence that there is nothing 'inalienable' about this right.

    68. Re:Bullshit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So it would be a privilege to publish Palestinian stories in case they are cyberbullying the tank commander outside their door?

    69. Re:Bullshit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Congress shall make no law

      Notice that it doesn't say anything about the States.

    70. Re:Bullshit by Kjella · · Score: 2

      That they left you alone probably only means they found easier victims, you were no fun. For everybody who thinks this is the solution to end bullying, I'd quote this old story:

      Two guys are hiking in the Alaskan wilderness when they realize they're being stalked by a hungry grizzly bear. One of them bends down to tighten his shoelaces, stretches and discards his backpack. His partner asks him if he seriously thinks he can outrun a bear. "No," he replies, "but all I have to do is outrun you."

      The bear is the bully and you are the faster runner. It saves you but someone will be the slowest runner. And it doesn't matter how hard a shell he has because they're going to pound and jab and poke at it until they find some angle that hurts or just wears you down. Being frozen out is hardly the worst kind of bullying there is, a lot of bullying victims are harassed or abused. You can grow as thick a hide as you want, but it won't stop them destroying your homework or taking your lunch money or throwing things at you or rubbing your face in the dirt. At some point you are going to snap and either break down or rage.

      Personally I fought, one against one much stronger and one against three a year younger. And I lost, but I never quit. If they harassed me again, we'd fight again. Eventually they realized I wasn't going to break and that it'd be more fun with someone who didn't fight back. It didn't stop them harassing people, it only stopped them harassing me. Some years later I actually grabbed one tiny little squirt by the throat and lifted him off the ground to make them stop harassing me and it worked. All I wanted was to be left alone and even that took a struggle. Just because you got off easy you shouldn't assume everyone else could.

      --
      Live today, because you never know what tomorrow brings
    71. Re:Bullshit by DarkOx · · Score: 1

      I got bullied in school, I put up with for a long time then I finally realized, I could fight them. I thought for a long time I could not fight them because I could not win. That is simply untrue, bullies bully because there are no consequences for them. If you can make in unpleasant enough to get tangled up with you they will leave you alone. Do this once or twice and you will have a rep as around school as someone not to be F'd with.

      So one day when they were doing their usual crap of shoving my into the lockers on their way down the hall I simply turned an drove my fist into the guy who did its eye socket as hard I as could. I kept fighting until the school admins broke it up. I was losing badly the entire time. My sole focus was not self preservation but rather causing as much damage as possible to the other guy. I wanted to make absolutely sure he'd look terrible and feel it for weeks, and I did.

      Naturally we both got suspended.

      You know what nobody picked on me after that because they all feared I would escalate things way outside what would be fun for them. People just need to learn to stand up for themselves. You might not be able to win but if you make it a Pyrrhic victory for the other guy that is good enough.

      --
      Repeal the 17th Amendment TODAY! Also Please Read http://www.gnu.org/philosophy/right-to-read.html
    72. Re:Bullshit by ultranova · · Score: 1

      The correct solution is to help emotional and verbal abusers stop emotionally and verbally abusing people, not try to outlaw it.

      The correct solution is to force abusers to stop abusing people. Have abuse result in a series of escalating penalties culminating in imprisonment, and abuse will end. This whole notion that we can't control a few teenage psychopaths, or that anyone should suffer being their punching bag, is ridiculous.

      --

      Forget magic. Any technology distinguishable from divine power is insufficiently advanced.

    73. Re:Bullshit by Dinghy · · Score: 1

      There is no such thing as truly free speech, due to the existence of slander lawsuits. You can also experience the lack of truly free speech by talking with a friend about what all is required in weaponizing a plane while you're going through the security checkpoints at an airplane. If you prefer a more old fashioned example, start screaming "FIRE!" in a movie theater.

      While we say we have free speech, we also have laws to enforce consequences based on the reactions to that speech. Incite a panic? There's consequences. Make threats? There's consequences. Yeah it's a delicate balance, which is why discussion is good, but it's hard to advocate that people have a right to verbally and emotionally abuse others.

    74. Re:Bullshit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Go tell the drill sargents. :P It'll be illegal to go yelling at the 18 year old recruits.

    75. Re:Bullshit by RazzleFrog · · Score: 1

      Then I do proclaim that you need to look up the word "proclaim" in the dictionary. A proclamation is more than just a declaration. It requires a little bit pride, defiance, glorification, etc. Just standard up there telling people how to write a program typically has none of them. Same goes for telling your wife/gf how your day at work was or listening to your child talk about what he wants to be when he grows up.

    76. Re:Bullshit by AP31R0N · · Score: 1

      Yell "Fire" in a packed movie theater.

      There's no such thing as a absolute freedom. Otherwise i could kill people and claim protection under free speech and the right to bear arms.

      --
      Utilizing the synergization of benchmark e-solutions to pre-workaround action items!
    77. Re:Bullshit by Dorkmaster+Flek · · Score: 1

      By that logic, no rights are "inalienable". They all need to be defended; even your right to live. Price of freedom blah blah blah eternal vigilance, you know how it goes...

      --
      I like to think of online DRM as something akin to a college -- you pay for lessons until you learn something.
    78. Re:Bullshit by ultranova · · Score: 1

      So, after thousands of years, we should outlaw kids being kids?

      No. We should, however, outlaw unacceptable behaviour.

      Geez, this has been what kids do since the end of time...why are kids not able to cope anymore?

      Why should anyone have to "cope" with being someone else's punching bag? And why do you think that kids can't cope with limits on their behaviour?

      It certainly should not be a crime....it is the nature of kids and part of growing up.

      It is the nature of kids and growing up to try things to see what they can or can't get away with. Do you a specific reason why abusing others should be on the "can do" category? Do you perhaps think that prisons need more inmates?

      Also, the parents of bullies taking an attitude like yours is precisely why this law is needed.

      --

      Forget magic. Any technology distinguishable from divine power is insufficiently advanced.

    79. Re:Bullshit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      that is just the history of senile judges and lawyers doing everything their feeble minds can to subvert our rights. precedent is largely just an accumulation of errors and fallacious reasoning.

    80. Re:Bullshit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So we'llprotect them from bullies, so when the enter the real world they will be walked all over. How about this, let them grow a spine or suffer their fate. The problem is not bullies, it's the fragility that has be taught to them.

    81. Re:Bullshit by AP31R0N · · Score: 1

      Most of your post is insane BS, but the line about "ignore unkind words" is especially stupid and dangerous. The brain records emotional abuse and physical abuse the same way in the same part of the brain. To the victim physical and emotional abuse are the same.

      The Columbine kids weren't assaulted, they were verbally abused. There's been a rash of suicides from non-physical bullying. Hell, MOST suicides are the results of words spoken... not violent beatings.

      All rights are granted by the state, by the way. Rights are extended by society and can be therefore revoked by society: see capital punishment, the entire criminal justice system. You can drive your car, but if you drive in a way that poses at threat to others you can lose that privilege. That's social contract.

      Wait. Are you trolling us? i'm having a Poe's Law moment. It seems unlikely that someone who could operate a computer should be able to spout such nonsense.

      --
      Utilizing the synergization of benchmark e-solutions to pre-workaround action items!
    82. Re:Bullshit by countertrolling · · Score: 1

      The bill o' rights applies to the states' legislators as well as the feds, as per the 14th amendment. Which, unfortunately, is being inadequately enforced.

      Since the majority takes a dim view of the 1st amendment, modification should be a gimme. So just go for it. It hardly matters anymore. Think of the children, bla bla bla. "Bullycide".. that's a good one. Everybody out there preaching that violent video games are a parental problem, but somehow nasty text messages can only be handled by politicians. Abg gung guvf nccyvrf gb lbh fcrpvsvpnyyl :-)

      --
      For justice, we must go to Don Corleone
    83. Re:Bullshit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      +1

    84. Re:Bullshit by cayenne8 · · Score: 1

      Why should anyone have to "cope" with being someone else's punching bag?

      Well, physical violence crosses a boundry from just being a bully....and putting someone down, calling names..etc. There are already laws against physical violence.

      That being said...if as a kid someone hits you, hit them back with everything and anything you can grab. It will certainly keep them from going after you again, like others have said on here....since you will no longer be a 'soft target'.

      Yes, boys fight....it is part of growing up...sad but true.

      But as I said..there is already punishment and rules for physical violence...but calling names or doing stupid shit on the internet....no, I don't think we need to criminalize it. That path can go way too far, way too fast.

      I hate to see the day when it is against the law to call someone a fuckwad, either to their face, or on a web forum.

      What ever happened to 'sticks and stones'?

      --
      Light travels faster than sound. This is why some people appear bright until you hear them speak.........
    85. Re:Bullshit by Registered+Coward+v2 · · Score: 1

      There is no such thing as truly free speech, due to the existence of slander lawsuits. You can also experience the lack of truly free speech by talking with a friend about what all is required in weaponizing a plane while you're going through the security checkpoints at an airplane. If you prefer a more old fashioned example, start screaming "FIRE!" in a movie theater.

      While we say we have free speech, we also have laws to enforce consequences based on the reactions to that speech. Incite a panic? There's consequences. Make threats? There's consequences. Yeah it's a delicate balance, which is why discussion is good, but it's hard to advocate that people have a right to verbally and emotionally abuse others.

      I fully agree - there are consequences to your actions, including when you exercise your right to free speech. I am not arguing that you have a right to harm others. But causing harm is separate form exercising your right to free speech; and I am troubled by people's willingness to limit that right, even when the desired outcome is good, because soon for later something your I may like will become "bad" and be banned as well.

      Free speech means an absence of prior restraint - the government does not have the right to prevent you from saying something, and you are still responsible of the consequences of your act. Many people tend to ignore the "and there are consequences" part of the equation.

      In addition, the right to free speech is one that limits the government's actions, not individuals. You have no right to use someone else's property as a forum to express your views; they are have very right to block or limit your access to their property - whether it is physical or online. That's something that many people seem to forget as well when they whine about being banned or having posts deleted.

      --
      I'm a consultant - I convert gibberish into cash-flow.
    86. Re:Bullshit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well after thousands (nay millions) of years, we finally outlawed rape. It's kind of the nature of the beast, but there's this whole "society" thing which we're trying out. Now, the girls may indeed have gotten a little "soft" because of it. They've even started demanding voting rights. But it does seem to be better this way. Even if it goes against our nature.

      And you're right, it IS kids being kids. Horrible nasty brutish uncaring kids who are selfish attention-seeking idiots. Children really shouldn't be given positions of power over other people, they tend to abuse the position. It's called "childish" for a reason. You have baby steps for the babies. Give them a plant. A pet. Overseen management of peers. And so on. It's a vastly important lesson though, eventually they'll have power of their own little tyrant.

    87. Re:Bullshit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      libel, fraud, and theft have always been illegal and have nothing to do with free speech itself.
      You have the right to own a gun also, that does not mean you can kill whoever you want without legal issues.

    88. Re:Bullshit by ultranova · · Score: 1

      Well, physical violence crosses a boundry from just being a bully....and putting someone down, calling names..etc.

      No, it doesn't. Children are a lot more honest than adults in this matter: if you want to hurt someone, you pick the most efficient method at your disposal, rather than refrain from one particular form of abuse and pretend it makes you somehow better.

      There are already laws against physical violence.

      And they aren't enforced, precisely because "it's all part of growing up".

      That being said...if as a kid someone hits you, hit them back with everything and anything you can grab. It will certainly keep them from going after you again, like others have said on here....since you will no longer be a 'soft target'.

      Too bad for whoever happens to be the softest target, eh?

      Yes, boys fight....it is part of growing up...sad but true.

      And little kids put everything they find into their mouths, including poisonous mushrooms, dog shit and small plastic objects.

      Kids do a lot of stupid things. It doesn't follow that they should be allowed to, rather than stopped and corrected.

      But as I said..there is already punishment and rules for physical violence...but calling names or doing stupid shit on the internet....no, I don't think we need to criminalize it. That path can go way too far, way too fast.

      As long as parents refuse to put limits on their darling little bully, and the cost falls on the rest of us, what choice do we have? Other than continue letting thugs-in-training continue perfecting their craft and making life a living Hell for their victims, that is. Which is not only immoral but also costly: those victims tend to have problems functioning as adults, leading to loss of economic productivity. And sometimes abuse victims snap in spectacular ways, with school shootings actually being at the low end of the scale (the high end would be Hitler and World War II, altough many of the Roman Emperors certainly put up a though competition).

      I hate to see the day when it is against the law to call someone a fuckwad, either to their face, or on a web forum.

      Heaven forbid you could no longer hide behind the law while unloading your emotional problems on others. Political freedoms are certainly imperiled by people having to actually articulate their point instead of just making noises to indicate they hate each other and calling it a debate.

      What ever happened to 'sticks and stones'?

      It ran headfirst into reality. Sticks and stones may break your bones, but humans are a social species, so words can tear your soul to pieces.

      Another way of looking at this is that pain is simply your brain interpreting signals from a broken foot in a certain way, and being emotionally hurt by mean words is simply your brain interpreting signals from your ears in a certain way. In a way both are entirely fictitious; in another way, both are entirely real to the person experiencing them. And in theory both can be ignored, but in reality neither can, especially not by an immature brain.

      Or take this very law as an example: it is nothing but words. Yet you seem to think it has the potential to cause harm.

      --

      Forget magic. Any technology distinguishable from divine power is insufficiently advanced.

    89. Re:Bullshit by tarlong · · Score: 1

      Right fucking on!!! People FAIL to raise their kids properly cuz they don't have time for them. Their jobs, lover, hobbies, FACEBOOK, TWITTER, etc. are far too important to withdraw attention from them to take care of their children. Since they can't raise their kids, they want the state to do it for them. Here comes the Zombied minds of congress (state or federal) a-waving their outstretched undead arms while low-moaning wannnnttrrrmmmoooorrrrlllaaaawwwss, issssbeeettttrrrr fffrrrrruuuurr......and people failing to see that surrendering their parenting (and bunch of other duties/chores) to the government is just like lining up, sheep like, for the zombies to eat their brains. Sheesh.

      It says right on the bill of rights: CONGRESS SHALL NOT PASS A LAW.... but people are too comfortable in their couches that they fail to register anything but the latest food adds from or if lady gaga has a new wig with sperm scented hair to fucking care.

      The USA used to be the house of the rebels, the inovators, free and forward thinkers, now we are just the pig pen of the lazies.

      Albert

      --
      What? A beutiful butterfly you say? And how exactly are you going to turn into a beutiful butterfly then?
    90. Re:Bullshit by stdarg · · Score: 1

      Why does one child's feelings (the one being bullied) matter more than the other child's feelings (the one punished by the state for "illegal bullying")?

    91. Re:Bullshit by stdarg · · Score: 1

      But the paper is supporting one side, not both equally (clue: subjective use of refined)

    92. Re:Bullshit by osgeek · · Score: 1

      Horseshit... Anyone trying to shimmy right up to the Bill of Rights to eek out every bit of State power that they can will get no benefit of the doubt for "good but misguided intentions", sorry.

      I'll gladly forgive anyone a knee-jerk reaction if they're on the side of personal freedom, since the inexorable movement of the State is to restrict liberty as it accrues power.

      I did read the source material and it displays a profound lack of respect for individual rights while trying to achieve a "no bullying" agenda. Bullying sucks, but to not realize that fundamentally destroying individual free speech to stamp it out is just idiotic.

    93. Re:Bullshit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You sir win an internet!

    94. Re:Bullshit by Khashishi · · Score: 1

      Unfortunately, the bullies tend to be bigger and older (having been held back a few grades).

    95. Re:Bullshit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Keep reading indeed.

      AND YET, PROPONENTS OF A MORE REFINED FIRST AMENDMENT ARGUE THAT THIS
      FREEDOM SHOULD BE TREATED NOT AS A RIGHT BUT AS A PRIVILEGE â" A SPECIAL
      ENTITLEMENT GRANTED BY THE STATE ON A CONDITIONAL BASIS THAT CAN BE REVOKED
      IF IT IS EVER ABUSED OR MALTREATED.

      IN THE CASE OF CYBERBULLYING, THE PERCEIVED PROTECTIONS OF FREE SPEECH ARE
      EXACTLY WHAT ENABLE HARMFUL SPEECH AND CRUEL BEHAVIOR ON THE INTERNET.

      The authors of this effort are seeking to expand Tinker doctrine, something that currently only applies to speech within a school setting, to the world at large. IOW, it is a full frontal assault on freedom of speech, using the oft repeated 'BUT IT'S FOR THE CHILDREN' defense.

    96. Re:Bullshit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm sorry, but the most important question should be 'What do you mean a child under the age of 21, you are an adult in all things except for drinking at age 18'. Or am I mistaken?

    97. Re:Bullshit by Jhon · · Score: 1

      "What, we can't discuss things anymore?"

      There was a reason why there was a "secrecy" mandate on the Constitutional Convention of 1787... It allowed for the free exchange of ideas without fear of public influence. Our entire Government, it can be argued, is founded on the idea that the "masses" cannot be trusted. Indeed, it can be argued that our government was designed to protect individual liberty and freedom at the expense of "group think" (what Madison refereed to as the "passions" which infringed on the rights and liberties of others).

      That's why we're a Republic and not a direct Democracy. That's why the 17th Amendment (imo) was a monstrous mistake.

    98. Re:Bullshit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      better yet! Lets cut all funding to education and police! Small government is better than big, right? So how about zero government?!

      Johnny doesn't have to get bullied because his parents cant afford a private school! No school, no bullies! Yay small government! Anarchy to the rescue!

    99. Re:Bullshit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, the poster must be a NOOB. All the old timers know that no one worthy of posting on /. rtfa

    100. Re:Bullshit by scot4875 · · Score: 1

      Look, it's already against the law to say a lot of things. You can't say "I'm going to shoot the president." You can't threaten someone that you're going to maim or kill them. (Try it; you'll have police knocking on your door if the recipient of your threat thinks you're serious.) You can't slander or libel someone without consequences. You can't outright lie in advertisements. You can't say a number of things, and I think most of us agree that the things you can't currently say are fairly reasonable restrictions on free speech.

      These guys are just trying to find a way to add another thing to that list. Some may think it's reasonable, some may not, but it's not an outright attack on the 1st amendment, and it's also not something that you can claim to have no precedence.

      --Jeremy

      --
      Jesus was a liberal
    101. Re:Bullshit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No state can pass a law that hinders or impedes any of the rights in the constitution or it's bill of rights, as they were all approved (ratified) by each and every state. (Part of the process of becoming a state is ratification of the bill of rights).

      This law will be tossed out in milliseconds if passed. The state senators should themselves be tried for treason.

    102. Re:Bullshit by cayenne8 · · Score: 1

      so words can tear your soul to pieces.

      Anybody THAT insecure, doesn't need laws to protect them...they need some serious therapy.

      Words cannot 'tear your soul to pieces'...unless you let them. Grow some thicker skin...and teach your children the same.

      --
      Light travels faster than sound. This is why some people appear bright until you hear them speak.........
    103. Re:Bullshit by suutar · · Score: 1

      Depends how you look at it. What I've seen of defamation/false advertising/shouting fire in a theater laws seems to indicate a "You can say anything you want. But if it's demonstrably false you're on the hook for any repercussions." approach. The problem I see with this proposed law is that it moves from "demonstrably false" to "allegedly disturbing to someone".

    104. Re:Bullshit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "it's textbook knee-jerk reactionaryism" . . . I would say the same of your post.

      It's wonderful that we have people like you to spell out such real and serious problems in black and white so that all the simpletons actually living and dealing with this can figure it out. By your stereotypical ignorant answers, you have made it clear you know nothing REAL of this issue, and you have never dealt with this situation in your life or even had someone close that has had to. Please grow up and reserve your judgements for things you actually have experience with.

    105. Re:Bullshit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      +6

      Goddamn, fucking informative.

      (btw, the captcha was actually "patriot")

    106. Re:Bullshit by Oxford_Comma_Lover · · Score: 1

      Grow some thicker skin...and teach your children the same.

      That a person should be able to withstand a verbal assault does not mean another person should make one.

      We should be working to build a world where nobody has to withstand a verbal assault, because people are reasonable and interact with one another reasonably.

      You may be fine if I punch you in the face, too. But that doesn't mean the solution to me punching you in the face is for you to get used to it.

      --
      -- IANAL, this isn't legal advice, and definitely isn't legal advice for you. Also, Squee!
    107. Re:Bullshit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hear hear.
      I live in Canada. Our speech is free as long as you don't advocate hate or violence. It's a pretty good deal.

    108. Re:Bullshit by ultranova · · Score: 1

      Anybody THAT insecure, doesn't need laws to protect them...they need some serious therapy.

      So I guess all those laws against workplace harassment are needless, then? Everyone who complains about being singled out by a boss or a coworker again and again is just a pussy who needs a thicker skin and therapy?

      Words cannot 'tear your soul to pieces'...unless you let them. Grow some thicker skin...and teach your children the same.

      And exactly why should the victim be forced to change rather than the perpetrator? And does this only apply to children, or do people suddenly become worthy of being protected by the law as they turn 18?

      --

      Forget magic. Any technology distinguishable from divine power is insufficiently advanced.

    109. Re:Bullshit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ah Men! People, parents and subsequently their kids lack so much self confidence and personal respect that we now have to legislate their protects. Why, as you state in other terms, are we trying to legislate ignorance at the expense of others.
      In addition, if the media spent some time covering issues of real concern, this crap wouldn't inundate our living rooms.

      I wish my friends wouldn't send me these links. Just makes me want to bury my head further. Thank God I don't have any children that will be subjected to the coming generations of pansy ass wimps that are being raised today!

    110. Re:Bullshit by rgviza · · Score: 1

      Yes but in a crowded theater, you can get trampled to death by people running over you and stepping on your head. That type of speech can get people killed. There's also an expectation of being able to enjoy a movie you paid for. Someone yelling "Fire" in a crowded theater is violating the rules put forth by the theater. In fact, talking about anything is. It's private property, so the theater owner makes up the rules about when you can talk.

      You can turn your computer off. There's no threat to life, limb and happiness when someone bans you from a forum. You choose to post on the internet. Anything can and will happen. If you don't like it, don't participate in forums. A direct threat, yes that's against the law. However we don't need to restrict free speech to criminalize a threat. It's already illegal to threaten other people no matter how it's done.

      As well law should define "child" and stick with one definition. A 20 year old child? Really?

      This is another liberal attempt at controlling the masses and creating a nanny state by exceeding the mandate of the constitution. I hope this crashes and burns spectacularly.

      --
      Don't kid yourself. It's the size of the regexp AND how you use it that counts.
    111. Re:Bullshit by rocket+rancher · · Score: 1

      This is not the use of force to prevent the unjust use of force, these fucktwits have corrupted Mills for their own big-government nanny-state ends. This is simply the outright abuse of force and twisting of the very concept of our rights recognized, not granted, by the government. I'm sorry. Words do not hurt. You can call me what you want -- it only affects me as much as I allow it.

      You are so fucking wrong. Where to begin? John Stuart Mill would have blanched in dismay at this screed of yours, especially with the liberty you have taken with his words. Here's Mill's quote that you are totally corrupting. I'll leave it as an exercise for the reader to determine if you got it right or wrong.

      That the only purpose for which power can be rightfully exercised over any member of a civilized community, against his will, is to prevent harm to others.

      John Stuart Mill, On Liberty Chap I, p. 14)

      Not only did you completely miss the point of that quote, you ignored a far more salient quote from the same goddamn work by Mill (emphasis mine).

      We have a right, also, in various ways, to act upon our unfavourable opinion of any one, not to the oppression of his individuality, but in the exercise of ours. We are not bound, for example, to seek his society; we have a right to avoid it (though not to parade the avoidance), for we have a right to choose the society most acceptable to us. We have a right, and it may be our duty, to caution others against him, if we think his example or conversation likely to have a pernicious effect on those with whom he associates.

      John Stuart Mill, On Liberty, Ch. IV, p. 95

      Indeed, your entire polemic seems to be founded on the very shaky ground that humans, absent laws or regulations, will always act rationally in every possible situation. Mills himself knew this wasn't the case, to wit:

      All that makes existence valuable to any one, depends on the enforcement of restraints upon the actions of other people. Some rules of conduct, therefore, must be imposed, by law in the first place, and by opinion on many things which are not fit subjects for the operation of law. What these rules should be, is the principal question in human affairs; but if we except a few of the most obvious cases, it is one of those which least progress has been made in resolving. No two ages, and scarcely any two countries, have decided it alike; and the decision of one age or country is a wonder to another.

      John Stuart Mill, On Liberty Ch. I, p. 10

      Dude, if you are going to cite one of the most rational thinkers of the Enlightenment to support your bullshit screed, you fucking A better take the time to really understand what he had to say. Otherwise, your words are just so much shit floating in a turd bowl full of it.

         

    112. Re:Bullshit by Kreigaffe · · Score: 1

      It was the NY state lawmakers -- not me -- who brought Mills into this. They were the ones trying to use him to justify their little pet law.

      I think if you actually read that shit you quotes you'll see that while he acknowledges that some things fall under the rule of law, that some conduct can or must be constrained by law, that there is much that CANNOT be regulated by law and instead can only rightfully be regulated by society. That we have a right -- or even an obligation -- to tell others that Some Jackass is a bad dude who will bring or cause harm.

      More importantly, that those statements we would make against Some Jackass not an oppression of Some Jackass -- they are simply a right of ours because we are not oppressed, just as Some Jackass is not oppressed and is able to make himself that jackass with whom no one wishes to associate. His behavior is not ILLEGAL, as that would be oppressive, but neither are we required to pay any attention to or associate with Some Jackass, as that would also be oppressive.

      Freedom to speak. Not a right to be heard.

      If you think a single word that Mill said could be construed as supportive of the concept of outlawing uncomfortable speech, I'm just not sure what to do here. The entirety of your quotations are him dancing around the issue and clarifying that though some things are regulated by law that it is an oppression to regulate other undesirable things by law but it is also an oppression to forbid the individual from exercising their freedoms and rights to warn against and avoid those undesirable things.
      Not a word supportive of the law proposed by the NY state lawmakers.

      --
      ... still waiting for this free-as-in-beer free beer I keep hearing about. :|
  15. The Clash said it best! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You have the right to Free Speech, as long as you are not dumb enough to actually try it.

  16. Okay.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So they want to make a law that would exclude people from free speech to stop people from excluding people in free speech...

  17. Why not both? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This article is under duress for one or the other; that is bully, no?

  18. Government mandated friends huh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Wonderful...

  19. Re:what next not voteing for someone or saying tha by Qzukk · · Score: 1

    Vote for me or I'll cry and then you'll be sorry!

    --
    If I have been able to see further than others, it is because I bought a pair of binoculars.
  20. Surprised? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It is no coincidence that they are all democrat. The far left want to control speech and this is just the latest attack.

  21. Reeks of Rorty by colnago · · Score: 1

    Wow, exclusion is a form of bullying. Post-modernity gone amuck.

    1. Re:Reeks of Rorty by black3d · · Score: 1

      Once I was in World of Warcraft (to judge me!) and I was inviting folks to a dungeon group in The Deadmines. I'm a nice guy and nothing rude was said, however one kid messaged and asked if he could come - I said "no, you're too low level" (we had no high-level toons running us through, and the highest member of the group so far was level 17 - kid was level 13 - backstory for anyone familiar with the game :)).

      Anywho, he replied "You have to take me!!!!" when I said no, he replied "I'm reporting you to a GM!!!" "For what?" "For exclusion!!!!"

      With young kids in school now, I can tell ya - they're being taught that exclusion is a form of bullying at a public level. In the school yard apparently it's so that nobody feels excluded because blah blah cry me a river. But the point is they're bring raised with this point of view. I was a skinny dweeby kid - I was exluded from everything. But I learnt a lot about life from my experiences as a kid. It seems kids are being raised today to think 1) life should be an easy ride 2) you deserve to be famous 3) the world owes you for gracing us with your presence 4) nobody has a right to tell you what to do or not to do - even if they're a parent trying to protect you.

      --
      "The true measure of a person is how they act when they know they won't get caught." - DSRilk
    2. Re:Reeks of Rorty by JonySuede · · Score: 1

      post-modernity ended somewhere at the end of the 90ies... we are now into Post-postmodernism also called post-millennialism which is also know (probably more appropriately) as pseudo-modernism

      --
      Jehovah be praised, Oracle was not selected
    3. Re:Reeks of Rorty by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Exclusion is a form of bullying, because it is coercion and intimidation. Do you think the practice of shunning came out of nowhere? Or exile?

      All you have to do is look at human behavior, and you'll realize...it's been done before.

    4. Re:Reeks of Rorty by Isaac+Remuant · · Score: 1

      therefore... ?

      --
      "Science can amuse and fascinate us all, but it is engineering that changes the world. " - Asimov.
    5. Re:Reeks of Rorty by ICLKennyG · · Score: 1

      At some point the warm light of day will shine on your sheltered, precious little snow flake and melt him in a matter of seconds. Get the fuck over it people. Kids commit suicide. It's not new. The only thing different is Nancy Grace shows it to ya (oh and boy does she show it to you) every night and decry's how terrible it is and that your kid will be next.
      One suicide is a tragedy, but everyone living in a rubber room singing Kum ba yah until we all kill ourselves is worse. Will these kids be able to go into a job interview and say "You have to hire me, or I will tell on you for excluding me!"? Stop preempting Darwin, people!

    6. Re:Reeks of Rorty by JonySuede · · Score: 1

      nothing, it was just a statement

      --
      Jehovah be praised, Oracle was not selected
    7. Re:Reeks of Rorty by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      amok

    8. Re:Reeks of Rorty by rocket+rancher · · Score: 1

      At some point the warm light of day will shine on your sheltered, precious little snow flake and melt him in a matter of seconds. Get the fuck over it people. Kids commit suicide. It's not new. The only thing different is Nancy Grace shows it to ya (oh and boy does she show it to you) every night and decry's how terrible it is and that your kid will be next.

      One suicide is a tragedy, but everyone living in a rubber room singing Kum ba yah until we all kill ourselves is worse. Will these kids be able to go into a job interview and say "You have to hire me, or I will tell on you for excluding me!"? Stop preempting Darwin, people!

      Darwinism can't be preempted -- but the various behaviors that emerge as the result of Darwinism can. Your understanding of Darwinism is a basic example of this.

  22. The courts have already upheld censorship by bigsexyjoe · · Score: 2

    The standing precedent is that the First Amendment is really just a law against "prior restraint." In other words, the courts have decided that, the First Amendment just says the government can't stop you from speaking. However, they can punish you for your speech after you do it!

    I think most normal people would find this interpretation of the First Amendment as ridiculous. But guess what? It is the precedent that our courts have upheld.

    1. Re:The courts have already upheld censorship by idontgno · · Score: 1

      That's an interesting perspective. Care to back it up with actual precedent? While doing so, please dispel if possible* the common concept of "chilling effect", which couldn't possibly exist as a consideration before the law if your assertion were true.

      *Here's a hint: don't even bother trying. The Supreme Court has repeatedly held that laws punishing, for instance, political speech is effectively prior restraint and specifically uses the phrase "chilling effect" or "deterring effect" to describe the situation you describe: you can speak but will be punished for it, so your speech is deterred.

      --
      Welcome to the Panopticon. Used to be a prison, now it's your home.
    2. Re:The courts have already upheld censorship by Qzukk · · Score: 2

      Here's a hint: don't even bother trying.

      Obscenity.

      You're right, I didn't even have to bother trying.

      --
      If I have been able to see further than others, it is because I bought a pair of binoculars.
    3. Re:The courts have already upheld censorship by IgnoramusMaximus · · Score: 3, Insightful

      *Here's a hint: don't even bother trying.

      Previous poster beat me to it, so here is another: thought crimes involving taboo subjects of the moment, like writing "child pornography" fiction, drawing "child pornography" cartoons or even just attempting to write a scholarly text on the subject, a work that disagrees with the official stance of the Holy Inquisition and which points out the psychotic attitude towards sex and minors in modern societies. People are in jail for this, and other "free speech we didn't like" crimes in the USA.

      Writing a book that glorifies the aims of the current "enemies of the state", such as for example Al-Queda, is also likely to deprive you of your freedom, this time even bypassing the judicial system all-together and straight into some secret "detention centre" complete with "enhanced interrogation techniques" or should your book become too popular, simply executed without any due course whatsoever, something that has been demonstrated rather forcefully just a few days back.

    4. Re:The courts have already upheld censorship by bigsexyjoe · · Score: 1

      Here's another hint. The Supreme Court can say a law should be thrown out without saying the First Amendment says it should be. There are plenty of legal concepts that can be used to throw out laws that seem unfair. In fact, the fact that they talk about a "chilling effect" argues your point for you. If they wanted to say there were no limits on free speech, they would just say first amendment in their rulings.

  23. Both parties hate you and the Bill of Rights by Sarusa · · Score: 4, Informative

    Just to drive it home, since the summary and article avoid it scrupulously, this is a Democratic party proposal from an 'Independent Democratic Conference'.

    Not because I think the Republicans are any better, but people seem to need reminding that both major political parties hate the Bill of Rights and love short sighted dangerous 'fixes' for whatever they think today's social panic is.

    1. Re:Both parties hate you and the Bill of Rights by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There's no social panic that a good trimming of the Constitution can't fix.

    2. Re:Both parties hate you and the Bill of Rights by RazzleFrog · · Score: 1

      They just hate different pieces. The tea party is looking to cut out that part about separation of church and state.

    3. Re:Both parties hate you and the Bill of Rights by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "both major political parties hate the Bill of Rights and love short sighted dangerous 'fixes' for whatever they think today's social panic is."

      I like this quote so much, I made it my Political Views description on the Facebook. thanks!

    4. Re:Both parties hate you and the Bill of Rights by PRMan · · Score: 1

      Which part would that be? The constitution does not say that church must be "separate" or even that they cannot support churches or other religious groups, only that the government cannot force everyone to go to the same church and burn everyone at the stake who believes otherwise (ie The Church of England at the time).

      The rest of that was added by judges later.

      You prefer a more modern interpretation of this Amendment. The Tea Partiers prefer a more classic definition. I assure you that no Tea Partier wants a Church of America to which everyone in America would give support upon penalty of death.

      --
      Peter predicted that you would "deliberately forget" creation 2000 years ago...
    5. Re:Both parties hate you and the Bill of Rights by amiga3D · · Score: 1

      This is why we have a Constitution and it's difficult to amend on a whim. The founding fathers did their best to idiot proof it but they never envisioned morons like these we have today.

    6. Re:Both parties hate you and the Bill of Rights by misexistentialist · · Score: 1

      Unfortunately with the reduction and homogenization of political parties the morons have taken over all three branches and the Constitution can be almost entirely ignored.

    7. Re:Both parties hate you and the Bill of Rights by RazorSharp · · Score: 1

      I think this attitude of putting the founding fathers on a pedestal is silly. The morons today aren't the problem, the problem is the system the founding fathers put in place that rewards morons with political power. The system was designed to govern 13 states 200 years ago, not 50 from coast to coast in modern times.

      Our best hope for the future is to completely scrap the Constitution in favor of a document that accounts for modern realities.

      Also, the founding fathers, with the exception of maybe Jefferson (who wasn't a primary architect of the Constitution, although he had influence, especially concerning the Bill of Rights), sought to create a system to poor-person proof the system. It's designed to keep the power in what was then the bourgeoisie - a class of Americans who often had serious European aristocracy envy. Considering this, should anyone be surprised by the wealth disparity in this country?

      --
      "From the depths of my skeptical and rationalist soul, I ask the Lord to protect me from California touchie-feeliedom."
    8. Re:Both parties hate you and the Bill of Rights by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Trouble is, people think of their rights, but they don't think of the responsibilities that go along with those rights.

      You have the right to bear arms. In exercising that right, you have the responsibility to make sure that you don't wilfully use those arms to harm others.

      You have the right to elect members of parliament. You have the responsibility to evaluate the candidates for election, and to understand what their intentions are within parliament, when casting your vote.

      You have the right to free speech. You have the responsibility to appreciate that what you say can cause harm to others, and to either refrain from causing that harm, or to accept that (at least some of) the responsibility for that harm falls upon your shoulders.

      I could go on, but you get the general idea. It all boils down to treating the "rights" granted to you with due care, dignity, and respect for their impact on others. All too often, people stand upon their rights without that care, and that can cause as much damage as not having that right in the first place.

      Doesn't mean that I think that any of these rights should be removed ... but it does mean that I think every member of society needs to think a little more about how their exercise of their rights impacts upon the rights of others, and finding a balance that shows due respect. ("Your right to swing your fist stops at the end of my nose", I think is the most succinct summation of this idea.)

    9. Re:Both parties hate you and the Bill of Rights by RazzleFrog · · Score: 1

      Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof.

      The phrase "wall of separation between church and state" came from Thomas Jefferson. There is no other interpretation. They want to change the Constitution.

    10. Re:Both parties hate you and the Bill of Rights by Archangel+Michael · · Score: 1

      Add on top of this other "scary" proposals coming from the (D) party (like, "Let's suspend elections"), I don't know how anyone can vote for that party any longer. And as you said, not that the (R)'s are better, because they are not.THEY are exactly the same. Neither care about citizens anymore, they only care about "groups".

      --
      Agent K: A *person* is smart. People are dumb, stupid, panicky animals, and you know it.
    11. Re:Both parties hate you and the Bill of Rights by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof.

      The phrase "wall of separation between church and state" came from Thomas Jefferson. There is no other interpretation. They want to change the Constitution.

      As written, the First Amendment prohibits them saying "Religion X is our religion; convert or die". It does not prohibit them from erecting laws whose origins are rooted in religion X.

    12. Re:Both parties hate you and the Bill of Rights by Sarusa · · Score: 0

      This entire thread (and I read every comment, gawd help me) just reinforces the original comment. There are an awful lot of people who have a really, really good reason - no really, really! - why they should be able to say what they want and you shouldn't be able to say what you want. And furthermore, you shouldn't even be able to /not/ say something you don't want to, because groupthink requires cohesion, so not agreeing or disagreeing is hate speech.

      It's obviously a losing battle, since there are always far more people who find it advantageous to exploit you than people who are willing to just let people be people, even if they're dicks, so it'll be interesting to see where this really gets neutered.

    13. Re:Both parties hate you and the Bill of Rights by RazzleFrog · · Score: 1

      They work the same way. If I base a law strictly on the dogma/mythology of one religion then I am in affect saying that our government is based on that religion which establishes a state religion.

      And I am not talking about generic stuff like "thou shall not kill". I am talking more specific stuff like banning meat on Fridays during lent.

      And who the hell really thinks they are going to win a fight against Thomas Jefferson.

      Even better. The primary author of the Constitution, James Madison said this:

      "Every new and successful example, therefore, of a perfect separation between the ecclesiastical and civil matters, is of importance; and I have no doubt that every new example will succeed, as every past one has done, in showing that religion and Government will both exist in greater purity the less they are mixed together (Letter to Edward Livingston, July 10, 1822). "

      I mean it's like telling Tolkien how he should interpret LotR.

    14. Re:Both parties hate you and the Bill of Rights by DigiTechGuy · · Score: 1

      Vote Libertarian. Ron Paul is the only hope this time around, as he respects individual liberty and natural rights and has no preferential treatment of any "group".

    15. Re:Both parties hate you and the Bill of Rights by osgeek · · Score: 0

      The Republicans are more than slightly better, IMO. At the very least, there are Republicans who consistently vote to decrease the funding of the government (lower taxes, balance the budget)... and most of those are Tea Party leaders. By decreasing funding for the government, you decrease its power. I'm willing to hold my nose with some of the Republicans who just can't help talking about Jesus, since Jesus seems to almost never be a hot topic of legislation -- as long as that Republican will continue to vote to decrease the power of the Federal government. That said, I have no use whatsoever of "socially conservative" Republicans like George W. Bush. What an f'up he was.

      I keep waiting for some sane Democrat leaders to emerge who will say no to just one increase in spending and the power grab by the government. I'm cool that Democrats have a different focus on where our money should be spent, but goddammit, you've got to be rational when it comes to spending more money than the government takes in. You've got to be rational about how you regulate the economic environment that we all depend upon to provide jobs and innovations. Certainly there are some Democrat leaders somewhere who believe in the importance of unions but who also believe in balancing the budget without resorting to class warfare and unlimited taxation.

      So far, those sane Democrat leaders remain conspicuously out of the spotlight.

    16. Re:Both parties hate you and the Bill of Rights by rgviza · · Score: 1

      So instead of enforcing laws that already exist, we change the constitution and remove the rights of law abiding people?

      Fuck that.

      All of the senators' concerns are already addressed.

      It's illegal to slander
      It's illegal to threaten

      You don't need to take away free speech to solve these problems. You just need to arrest the criminals.

      --
      Don't kid yourself. It's the size of the regexp AND how you use it that counts.
  24. More readable copy from NY Senate website by milbournosphere · · Score: 4, Informative

    All the article links to is a report which is in all caps, and is very hard to read. Here's the official copy, as linked to by the NY State Senate. http://www.nysenate.gov/files/pdfs/final%20cyberbullying_report_september_2011_0.pdf

  25. Ass-backwards "solution" by Endo13 · · Score: 1

    I find the whole fixation on "cyberbulling" to be stupid and offensive.

    No one's forcing these kids to commit suicide. No one is killing them. But more importantly, no one is helping them deal with the emotional/verbal abuse either.

    Being emotionally/verbally abused or bullied is a part of life. It's GOING to happen. It sucks, but that's how it is. The correct solution is for adults to help kids learn how to deal with it, not find ways to make it illegal.

    --
    There is no -1 Disagree mod. Slashdot.org/faq defines mod options. USE IT.
    1. Re:Ass-backwards "solution" by hazah · · Score: 1

      I'm constantly amused while thinking that just even a mere 300 years ago (not even, but that's not the point) we pretty much killed each other left right and centre just over stupid personal shit. Today, in comparison, we're a bunch of pussies.

    2. Re:Ass-backwards "solution" by SeximusMaximus · · Score: 2

      The correct solution is for adults to help kids learn how to deal with it, not find ways to make it illegal.

      And when the adults are part of the problem? http://abcnews.go.com/GMA/story?id=3882520&page=1 You could have just as easily said:

      Being abused/raped/assulted etc... is a part of life. It's GOING to happen. It sucks, but that's how it is.

      And it would have sounded just as stupid.

    3. Re:Ass-backwards "solution" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The correct solution is for adults to help kids learn how to deal with it, not find ways to make it illegal.

      Are you kidding? When do parents have time to teach their kids anything?! What, are they suppose to miss that new episode of CSI:LV?!

    4. Re:Ass-backwards "solution" by vux984 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Sexual assault is a part of life. It's GOING to happen. It sucks, but that's how it is. The correct solution is for adults to help people learn how to deal with it, not find ways to make it illegal.

      Right? Why not?

      Cyberbullying is not exercising your right to call Tommy a jerk online. Its systematic harassment bordering if not jumping off into full on psychological torture.

      It should be illegal along with all other forms of harassment, stalking, and so forth.

    5. Re:Ass-backwards "solution" by geekmux · · Score: 1

      I find the whole fixation on "cyberbulling" to be stupid and offensive.

      No one's forcing these kids to commit suicide. No one is killing them. But more importantly, no one is helping them deal with the emotional/verbal abuse either.

      Being emotionally/verbally abused or bullied is a part of life. It's GOING to happen. It sucks, but that's how it is. The correct solution is for adults to help kids learn how to deal with it, not find ways to make it illegal.

      Couldn't have said it better. What kills me is the irony regarding violence here. We'll bankrupt a country proving that our military is no match for anyone as we attempt to police the world and showcase our "legalized violence", and yet we do everything in our power these days to spare the rod(make it illegal) and spoil an entire generation. Kids watch violence on TV and rack up head shots all day long sniping on COD, but God forbid we ever lay a hand on them to instill real fear in them to knock that shit off...let's not learn from the previous dozen generations that saw value in spankings....oh, no, little Johnny's ego might be bruised. Today's answer to "stand back up and dust yourself off" when you get knocked down is a standing invite to the all-you-can-eat Prozac buffet. Nation full of (legal) drug addicts due to industry greed, no wonder we're so screwed up.

      And now, I, along with every other American, have to sit back and scrutinize every detail of this proposed law to ensure my Rights aren't trampled on even more, all for what will likely be very little reward (enforcement issue), and by cracking this legal door open, will likely lead to someone kicking the door off the hinges in the future, all under the guise of "protecting" us.

    6. Re:Ass-backwards "solution" by KingAlanI · · Score: 1

      Yeah, I'm also inclined to focus on why the abuse could drive certain people to suicide, rather than focusing on the existence of the abuse itself.
      You have a point, that it's not (necessarily?) a problem with the targeted individual.

      --
      I listen to both RIAA and non-RIAA stuff if I like the music, tangential business/politics nonwithstanding.
    7. Re:Ass-backwards "solution" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It should be illegal along with all other forms of harassment, stalking, and so forth.

      If its just another form then it already IS illegal. No need for a new, and poorly thought out, law.

    8. Re:Ass-backwards "solution" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No way silly!

      If they did that, they'd have to realize that most of the parents of bullies are bullies themselves,
      and would result in the parents taking responsibility for the messed up kids they created!

      This way, we can just lock the whole mess away in a juvenile detention closet and pretend like the
      parents of the bullies aren't the real problem, and that the bullies aren't victims of messed up parents
      themselves!

    9. Re:Ass-backwards "solution" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Its systematic harassment

      Then it is already illegal and there are laws to use to prosecute it. WHY make another law when you can't even be bothered to enforce the existing ones?

    10. Re:Ass-backwards "solution" by misexistentialist · · Score: 1

      Except the aim here is stop bullying from happening instead of punishing it after the fact when it has reached the threshold of harassment. So communicating in general has to be criminalized. Just like heterosexual sex in general has mostly been criminalized, as the threshold for sexual assault has been lowered to achieve ideal vaginal air-tightness (e.g. Julian Assange). Human nature doesn't change: the government just enables the weak to bully and terrorize the strong.

    11. Re:Ass-backwards "solution" by RazorSharp · · Score: 1

      Being bullied and being raped aren't comparable. They may both be negative things that happen to a person, but one can't expect the government to shelter them from all negative things. Not only is it unreasonable to mandate being nice, it's probably unethical.

      --
      "From the depths of my skeptical and rationalist soul, I ask the Lord to protect me from California touchie-feeliedom."
    12. Re:Ass-backwards "solution" by RazorSharp · · Score: 0

      mod this up!

      --
      "From the depths of my skeptical and rationalist soul, I ask the Lord to protect me from California touchie-feeliedom."
    13. Re:Ass-backwards "solution" by vux984 · · Score: 1

      If it is harassment or stalking, etc, it already is illegal. It doesn't mysteriously become legal because a computer was involved.

      Or does it? Legal terms have legal definitions. And just because you are comfortable extending the metaphor of harrassment or bullying from face to face intimidation at school to messages on a web site forum... that doesn't mean the legal definitions are so flexible.

      That said, I agree we don't need new laws. I never said otherwise. But perhaps existing laws need to be updated to ensure the definitions are current and that they apply to modern situations.

      YOU ARE PART OF THE PROBLEM

      Am I really? And how are YOU part of the solution?

    14. Re:Ass-backwards "solution" by Endo13 · · Score: 1

      First, you're comparing bullying with rape. Need I say more?

      Second, not nearly everyone in the world gets physically abused, raped, or assaulted. I've never had the misfortune of experiencing any of those, and nor have most of the people I know.

      But everyone experiences bullying in one form or another during their life, unless they die as a baby. Some cases are more severe. But it always hurts. Most of the time it's not intentional, and many times the perpetrator doesn't even realize he (or she) is doing it. And that's exactly why you can't outlaw it.

      --
      There is no -1 Disagree mod. Slashdot.org/faq defines mod options. USE IT.
  26. except by unity100 · · Score: 1

    these people are not ordinary citizens, and they intend to make this into a law.

  27. No story here by DNS-and-BIND · · Score: 1, Informative

    There's no story here. Here's the original report, from the Volokh Conspiracy, a card-carrying rightwing blog. That enough should discredit the story. Second, the entire point of this blog posting is to point out that the politicians involved were all Democrats, something the Techdirt article (correctly) discards from the narrative as irrelevant. So, this is just a hit piece, no story other than "scary Demoncrats", everybody can go on to the next article.

    --
    Shutting down free speech with violence isn't fighting fascism. It IS fascism!
  28. Ignorant Dumbasses by pdfsmail · · Score: 1

    This never works.. just try it and watch what the rest of the country does to them. If anyone in office is ignorant or dumb enough to try this they should be immediately thrown out of office for violating the 1st and attempting to corrupt laws that we have in place they should not lay fingers on... They should be lucky to consider themselves in office... etc... If a party doesnt like the Bill or constitution, they should be reconstructed.

  29. A zen question for you by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Does proposing trolling be outlawed count as trolling?

  30. Who would have guessed? by readin · · Score: 2

    Senators Want To Make Free Speech A Privilege 52

    Why does it not surprise me that the senators are all Democrats?

    --
    I often don't like the choices people make, but I like the fact that people make choices. That's why I'm a conservative.
    1. Re:Who would have guessed? by Endo13 · · Score: 2

      Does it really matter what party they affiliate with? They're politicians.

      --
      There is no -1 Disagree mod. Slashdot.org/faq defines mod options. USE IT.
    2. Re:Who would have guessed? by readin · · Score: 1

      It's just that when it comes to restricting free speech rights it seems like it's usually the Democrats who are doing it. (Before you bring up flag burning, skin on TV, etc note that those aren't actual speech - Republicans are objecting to the behaviors, Republicans aren't objecting to the use of words to communicate ideas the way Democrats do.)

      --
      I often don't like the choices people make, but I like the fact that people make choices. That's why I'm a conservative.
    3. Re:Who would have guessed? by Mr.+Shotgun · · Score: 1

      Oh, you're right. They don't object to people being allowed to say anything, just to them being heard. Not the the democrats are any better.

      --
      Of all tyrannies, a tyranny sincerely exercised for the (supposed) good of its victims may be the most oppressive
    4. Re:Who would have guessed? by RazorSharp · · Score: 1

      Trust me, these guys are almost as embarrassing to most Democrats as the Tea Party is to most Republicans. They're probably the same jackasses that want to ban dodgeball and give every team, win or lose, a trophy.

      I'm not surprised they're Democrats either, but that doesn't make me want to vote Republican.

      --
      "From the depths of my skeptical and rationalist soul, I ask the Lord to protect me from California touchie-feeliedom."
    5. Re:Who would have guessed? by readin · · Score: 1

      Good post.

      --
      I often don't like the choices people make, but I like the fact that people make choices. That's why I'm a conservative.
    6. Re:Who would have guessed? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, it does somewhat. I notice that my friends on the left, and people who tend left always somehow think the right is out to control or stifle their freedom. When I see what happens when they get in charge, I often think it is just them projecting their own tendencies.

    7. Re:Who would have guessed? by rocket+rancher · · Score: 1

      It's just that when it comes to restricting free speech rights it seems like it's usually the Democrats who are doing it. (Before you bring up flag burning, skin on TV, etc note that those aren't actual speech - Republicans are objecting to the behaviors, Republicans aren't objecting to the use of words to communicate ideas the way Democrats do.)

      Hardly. The Republicans are the ones who got seriously whiny about the equal time doctrine promulgated by the FCC, and cheered en mass when it was finally revoked under Reagan. It is the Republicans that are constantly trying to defund PBS. It is the Republicans that are trying to defund the National Endowment for the Arts. It is the Republicans that want to end net neutrality. Why are they doing this? Simple -- The Republicans are afraid to give the opposition equal time to rebut Republican lies and myths, because they know that an informed electorate would never let another Republican get near a public office.

  31. Buisness as usual by currently_awake · · Score: 3, Insightful

    They (the US) spent HALF the second world war fighting the Nazis, the other half selling them computers to help round up the jews. The gov of the US has a long history of helping bad men rule innocent people with an iron fist. The only thing new here is that they're doing it to YOU.

    1. Re:Buisness as usual by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The US government did not sell computers to The Nazis. IBM Sweden sold the computers to The Nazis. Also, IBM American told IBM Sweden that it was a violation of US export laws to sell the computers. But you think that stop the swedes, no it did not. As I understand it IBM Sweden already had the computers and so it wasn't like there was much for IBM American to do about it. Another thing to remember is that The Nazis had fouled a lot of people, "we laugh today when we hear of the Jews being sent to concentration camps for their own protection."

    2. Re:Buisness as usual by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Tell it to UK which was the only major power at war with Germany in 1940 and managed to defend against occupation.

      Also, USSR got half of Germany to occupy because USSR neutralized more German troops than all the other countries.

    3. Re:Buisness as usual by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Let's pretend all the rest of the people that got rounded up didn't exist, ok? Ah, I see you've got that covered.

    4. Re:Buisness as usual by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      US wouldn't be such powerful if they didn't have *enemies*.
      Look what they have got now, so called *terrorists* and what *their own people* ?

    5. Re:Buisness as usual by unitron · · Score: 1

      What evidence do you have to back up that claim. If it was not for the US involvement most of the world would be speaking German today. It is the US that the rest of the free world calls on when they get their ass in a sling.

      Soviet Russia lost 20 million people fighting Nazi Germany.

      I think they deserve more than a little of the credit for you and I not growing up as Hitler Youth members.

      --

      I see even classic Slashdot is now pretty much unusable on dial up anymore.

    6. Re:Buisness as usual by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Of course! Inner consumer is much more important, even if exporting your goods and services (helping bad men rule innocent people with an iron fist) is more profitable.

    7. Re:Buisness as usual by ShakaUVM · · Score: 1

      >>They (the US) spent HALF the second world war fighting the Nazis, the other half selling them computers to help round up the jews

      You didn't pay much attention in history class, did you?

      America never sold a computer to the Nazis, as far as I'm aware. ENIAC wasn't finished until 1946, and by that point we certainly weren't selling them anything useful.

      Also, fun fact, before computers were made out of silicon, the term was used to refer to women to calculated math problems (artillery trajectory calculations and the like). So it's very, very, very unlikely we "sold them computers" during the first half of WWII.

      But don't let me interrupt a good anti-American rant.

    8. Re:Buisness as usual by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Except for the fact that computers didn't exist in WWII.

    9. Re:Buisness as usual by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And because of this I have no problems watching Yankland go to hell and the Yanks with it.

      Burn in hell all of you. I hope you have to start wearing stars and be given tattoos with numbers.

    10. Re:Buisness as usual by Ash+Vince · · Score: 1

      They (the US) spent HALF the second world war fighting the Nazis, the other half selling them computers to help round up the jews. The gov of the US has a long history of helping bad men rule innocent people with an iron fist. The only thing new here is that they're doing it to YOU.

      Actually for the first part of the war when the US was remaining neutral Hitler was still concentrating on killing off as many communists, disabled people and gypsies as he could. He only turned on the Jews later as he had already exterminated or at the very least imprisoned in concentration camps all the other groups he had a dislike for. He actually killed about 11 million in total, about 6 million of them Jewish.

      The first concentration camp in Dachau was founded in March 1933 and was initially just for political prisoners, mostly of the left wing, pro-communist persuasion. Since most of Europe was scared shitless about Marx's ideas taking hold amongst the poor nobody made too much of a fuss about it then. These camps were initially only for internment of prisoners though, not actual extermination although they did still have a high mortality rate simply by working people to death.

      The Jews were only rounded up into Ghettos in 1939, by this point god knows how many others had died. Not saying you are wrong in your sentiment but the full extent of Hitlers murder is often left unsaid.

      --
      I dont read /. to RTFA, I read /. to offend people in ignorance.
    11. Re:Buisness as usual by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Either that, or the way the US politicians have evolved nowadays leads to the inescapable conclusion that the Nazis and Communists were way ahead of their time. Oh, no wait...

    12. Re:Buisness as usual by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's correct and the name "Watson" deserves no honor after selling computers to Hitler.

    13. Re:Buisness as usual by ArsonSmith · · Score: 1

      do computers round up Jews? I thought Nazi solders did that.

      --
      Paying taxes to buy civilization is like paying a hooker to buy love.
    14. Re:Buisness as usual by thoromyr · · Score: 1

      uhm. selling computers to the nazis? Right... IBM America made what computers prior to the conclusion of WWII?

    15. Re:Buisness as usual by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Bullshit. Computers weren't even invented yet in World War II. The first general-purpose electronic computer in the world, ENIAC, was commissioned by the U.S. Army in 1943 for the purpose of calculating rocket trajectories to enable us to bomb the Nazis. It took three years to build and wasn't completed until just after the war was over.

    16. Re:Buisness as usual by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, that's exactly how it happened, genius. Grow up.

    17. Re:Buisness as usual by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They (the US) spent HALF the second world war fighting the Nazis, the other half selling them computers to help round up the jews. The gov of the US has a long history of helping bad men rule innocent people with an iron fist. The only thing new here is that they're doing it to YOU.

      What computers would those be? In 1939? REALLY?! What was it, an abacus?

    18. Re:Buisness as usual by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      " selling them computers to help round up the jews"

      Hmmmm.....

      IBM sold punch card systems.

      Are you going to blame pen & paper sellers for war crimes also?

    19. Re:Buisness as usual by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Cite please on the computers sold to Nazis to help round up the Jews.
      "Helping bad men rule innocent people with an iron fist"? If the bad men were leftists and the policy was called Realpolitik, you'd no doubt be in complete favour.

  32. They should be locked up for saying that. by istartedi · · Score: 1

    Dear Senators, you should be locked up for saying that. Now how do you feel? Sincerely, somebody who didn't get an F in high school civics and who would like very much to see your transcripts.

    --
    For all intensive purposes, "whom" is no longer a word. That begs the question, "who cares"?
    1. Re:They should be locked up for saying that. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Lock them up for what they say, that will teach them to respect freedom of speech!

    2. Re:They should be locked up for saying that. by istartedi · · Score: 1

      I'm being facetious whereas the senators aren't. I thought everyone would see that.

      --
      For all intensive purposes, "whom" is no longer a word. That begs the question, "who cares"?
  33. Just remember folks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The Second Amendment exists to ensure the government does not trample over the rest.

    That's the theory anyway. If you look at what our government has done over the past decade, it seems as though most people don't give a shit and will put up with almost any infringement of their rights as long as they can post on Facebook.

    1. Re:Just remember folks by Endo13 · · Score: 1

      If you look at what our government has done over the past decade, it seems as though most people don't give a shit and will put up with almost any infringement of their rights as long as they can post on Facebook.

      I think I'm going to use that as my next status update.

      --
      There is no -1 Disagree mod. Slashdot.org/faq defines mod options. USE IT.
  34. How can they not see the problem here? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's beyond my understanding how our elected representatives are totally unable to understand the implications of what they're proposing.
    Have they never read the multitude of books about censorship? Never seen any movies? Never heard of communism?

    Things like this make me truly fear for the future of our species.

    It's time that people in the US (and around the world) wake up and do something about this, but unfortunately I'm not sure how to make that happen. The average citizen seems to have little control over what the government does- yes, we can elect new idiots, but that won't do us much good.

    Furthermore, people need to grow up and learn that not everyone is going to say things they like. That's part of life.

  35. Technological fear and power. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I'd say this is just the regular mouth-pieces 'thinking of the children' again, but this takes it to a new level. Essentially, any 'negative remark, post, and upload' against an online profile becomes 'dangerous' and subject to being stifled, by law? So much for /., or every other forum moderating itself.

    Couple this with the Free Speech Zones, currently being used outside Political rallies, and you have a very real retraction of both the boundaries of the physical right to express free speech, and your free speech in the digital realm. It's quite obvious that restriction of opposing ideas is what this is really about. Call it what you want, anti-cyber-bullying law, or profile protection online, but you and I both know this kind of thinking doesn't restrict itself to the well-defined addages it is put forth under. We all know this will be used for the general speech, online and off, that elected officials, law enforcement bodies, and anyone with money, don't want to hear about.

    Now take it one step further to the 'Occupy Wall Street' camp. Putting the whole purpose of it aside for a moment, does a law like the proposed put organizing camps like them in the cross-hairs? Why would they be exempt?

    How much content online 'really is' what this targetted legislation is about? How many forums are public, at will acceptance, yet run by Corporations, non-profits, or private individuals?

    To me, all of this strikes as fear of technology and communication. Is it as recognizable to you as it is to me that the public, albeit probably a bit misguided in content, is getting acces to more information than ever before? Do those running the country really want a 'well-informed' public to be at the voting booth? Like most legislation, this is about power. Who has it, how is it controlled, and who has more to lose.

    The only real question you should be asking is, 'is this a small step forward for America in general, or a step backward'?

    Though I try to avoid quoting movies, one does feel appropriate here:

    People should not be afraid of their governments. Governments should be afraid of their people

    It seems fear really is turning on those who have the power to wield the kind of control they wish. Hopefully, this absurdity will stop before it gains momentum, and more forums than this one will show the adequate light to the insanity that is being proposed once again, upon a once great nation.

  36. not sure if idiocracy is coming true... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yeah, I got a solution, you're a dick! South Carolina, what's up!

  37. Stalking & Bullying: As long as people exist. by jaskelling · · Score: 1

    Making a law to tell people what they can and can't say online will not solve the problem. They'll just go back to doing it in person. Writing letters, calling, stabbing, murdering, pushing people around. As long as different people continue to be born and exist, this is *not* a solvable problem. You can only mitigate it - and you don't do that by infringing the rights of everyone else. And if we're going to go by this route, the government (at least for now and on paper) is still of, by, and for the people. Thusly, I grant myself the right to free speech and do the same for my fellow citizens and government members...and heartily say "FUCK you, NY Senators." And have a nice day.

  38. I don't want to ban Holocaust denial either by KingAlanI · · Score: 1

    The solution to Holocaust deniers is not to stifle everyone's freedom of speech. Let them say their piece, then let the rest of us refute, rebuke, and roundly mock.

    Agreed.
    Better to address it out in the open rather than try to sweep it under the rug.
    Also, I suspect that trying to censor conspiracy theorists helps fuel their paranoia/persecution complex, and helps bring them undue sympathy.

    I suspect there are a few actual conspiracies amongst all the crazy BS such as Holocaust denial.

    --
    I listen to both RIAA and non-RIAA stuff if I like the music, tangential business/politics nonwithstanding.
  39. then by unity100 · · Score: 1

    there is no relevance of declaration of independence to the basis of your culture or nation ?

    1. Re:then by Bucky24 · · Score: 1

      Not to most people. Most people don't even read the Constitution. We're really an apathetic bloody country over here, which makes it very easy for those in charge to take our rights away. Really, if you tell people you've read the Declaration of Independence, generally their response will be "oh so you're a history buff?"

      --
      All the world's a CPU, and all the men and women merely AI agents
    2. Re:then by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, there is relevance. But not legal weight. The one does not imply the other.

  40. Ending Democracy by Jodka · · Score: 4, Informative

    The culprits are:

      Jeffrey Klein

      Diane Savino

      David Carlucci

      David Valesky

    They of a growing movement to end democracy. See, for example, North Carolina Governor Beverly Purdue's suggestion that federal elections be suspended. James Taranto provides other examples.

    --
    Ceci n'est pas une signature.
    1. Re:Ending Democracy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, we shouldn't be surprised at any move in this direction. The climate change front says that the world can't survive if we keep leaving things to be argued over by democracies. James Lovelock, the fellow who formulated the Gaia hypothesis, has said that we'll have to put democracy aside if we're going to save the planet.

      In fact, the whole process is leading to people living in quarters assigned to them and doing jobs assigned to them by the new world order and not being paid on money but in calorie credits, redeemable for food, transportation or other goods depending on the amount of energy needed to produce them.

      The only hope I have in all this is that at some point someone will finally rebel against this and create a new new world order. May take centuries but it will happen.

    2. Re:Ending Democracy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Meh. Politicians have been trying to end democracy in the US since before the ink on the constitution was dry. Welcome to eternal vigilance.

    3. Re:Ending Democracy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Your sampling seems to suggest that ending democracy is only a problem on the Democratic side. How about the several state legislatures that are trying to eliminate early voting, decrease the time you can register, and increase the amount of ID you need to have to vote? That's what I call Jim Crow style poll taxes, version 2.0. And it's designed to elect more Republicans.

    4. Re:Ending Democracy by osgeek · · Score: 1

      The amazing thing isn't really that there are people who believes things like this. The amazing thing is that there are enough voters out there to put these lunatics into positions of power over all of us instead of just cock/cunt punching them into oblivion.

    5. Re:Ending Democracy by swj719 · · Score: 1

      See also: Rep. Jesse Jackson Jr.'s support of the idea of a President doing an end run around Congress. http://dailycaller.com/2011/10/12/jackson-obama-should-declare-a-national-emergency-add-jobs-with-extra-constitutional-action/#ixzz1ahHUc4r6

  41. The full report is NOT what techdirt claims. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Did anyone read the actual source, i.e. the full report linked to in the linked article?

    The techdirt article is sensationalizing the issue and does not appear to convey the spirit of the laws outlined in the original report.

    1. Re:The full report is NOT what techdirt claims. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Um, does it really matter what the "spirit" of the law is, if the text on the paper says one thing and you feel the "spirit" of it is another?

    2. Re:The full report is NOT what techdirt claims. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes. Because I've seen distortions of anything from the Ten Commandments to the Magna Carta to the US Constitution.

    3. Re:The full report is NOT what techdirt claims. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Seems to me that all that matters then is the text, not the "spirit", like I said.
      There's a huge difference between someone's intention and their actual action.

  42. Headline is bullshit. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    That is all.

  43. Cyber = new? by shish · · Score: 1

    They're specifically concerned about cyberstalking and cyberbullying, and are introducing legislation to make both of those against the law.

    Aren't stalking and (large-scale-) bullying illegal in any context already? How does "cyber" make them any different?

    --
    I mod down anyone who says "I will be modded down for this", regardless of the rest of their comment
  44. So wait... by aztektum · · Score: 1

    A private citizen excluding someone they don't want to deal with from their groups is bullshit "cyber-bullying".

    Excluding your constituents from the right of free speech is fucking fascism.

    --
    :: aztek ::
    No sig for you!!
  45. They ran out of people to go after by future+assassin · · Score: 1

    They can't possibly go into Africa claiming there some danger there to poor innocent wesatern souls. China is too big so the next enemy is the citizen. After all a free citizen is a danger to a closed society,

    --
    by TheSpoom (715771) Uncaring Linux user here. I have nothing to add to this but please continue. *munches popcorn*
    1. Re:They ran out of people to go after by I+Read+Good · · Score: 1

      I totally agree with that last sentence. No idea what you're saying in the first bit, though.

  46. Definition of Free Speech by Hentes · · Score: 1

    The problem is that free speech is not defined clearly anywhere and so it's easy for some to come up with a definition that would allow harm thus indirectly proving that free speech is bad.

    My definition of free speech might not match most of the currewnt legal implemenations but i think the intuitive way would be this:

    When two parties, each willingly, exchange information than that exchange is protected by free speech.

    Wich means that the only basis that can make communication illegal is the lack of consent from a party, not the content of communication. So stalking and spamming is illegal, but simply writing bad things about someone is not, for by visiting the page with said comment the other party implied consent. They were in no way forced to view it.

    And yes, I do think that libel and similar laws are stupid. And as a big supporter of free speech, I despise anyone attacking it. It's sad that Anonymous reverted back to trolling, they could be useful now.

    1. Re:Definition of Free Speech by betterunixthanunix · · Score: 1

      When two parties, each willingly, exchange information than that exchange is protected by free speech.

      That excludes large categories of speech that even the Supreme Court recognizes are protected. It has been found that outlawing all unsolicited email is unconstitutional because legitimate political or religious messages would be made illegal.

      by visiting the page with said comment the other party implied consent. They were in no way forced to view it.

      What if I create a page that automatically redirects you to the offending page?

      --
      Palm trees and 8
    2. Re:Definition of Free Speech by Hentes · · Score: 1

      That excludes large categories of speech that even the Supreme Court recognizes are protected. It has been found that outlawing all unsolicited email is unconstitutional because legitimate political or religious messages would be made illegal.

      Spam with good intentions is still spam in my opinion.

      What if I create a page that automatically redirects you to the offending page?

      First you could achieve the same effect by copying the contents of the other page, so redirection plays no role here. Of course, you won't be able to tell what a site contains before viewing it at least once, but this is the same for newspapers and TV channels. It's impossible to avoid viewing stuff you don't like at least once, but I don't see it as a big problem. It's not like information can harm you.

  47. No Homers Club Still Allowed in Proposal by Digicrat · · Score: 1

    Bullying has been around since time immemorial, and will be so for the foreseeable future - it's part of the darker side of human nature. The only difference today is that now its "cyber", utilizing digital tools that have a potentially greater reach. There are other options here besides curtailing free speech - cyberbullying is one of those things that should be handled internally by the school. (And if parents are involved in said matter, then refer it to the police under existing laws: wouldn't some of the child endangerment laws imply under the category of verbal/emotional harm?).

    What's next, are they going to ban the kids on the block from forming the "No Homers" club, or equivalent.

    Homer: But you let in Homer Glumplich.
    Homer G.: [pops head out window] Hyuck hyuck!
    Boy: It says no Homer_s_. We're allowed to have one.
    Homer: Oh...

  48. Kids these days. by Capt.DrumkenBum · · Score: 1, Insightful

    They don't even know what bullying is! Cyber bullying, BooFuckingHoo. Grow up, and stand up for yourself. What ever happened to words can never hurt me?
    For the record I was bullied constantly through Junior high, and it only stopped when I decided I had had enough, and beat the shit out of my chief tormenter in front of the entire school. (At an assembly.)

    --
    If I were God, wouldn't I protect my churches from acts of me?
    1. Re:Kids these days. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I wonder what would have happened if your chief tormenter had been much stronger and/or a better fighter than you, and you were the one who got the shit beaten out of? I think it's totally wrong to think that a sizable portion of the bullied population are capable of clobbering the bullies and are simply not standing up for themselves.

    2. Re:Kids these days. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In today's "zero tolerance policy" school system, you'd get expelled and possibly sent to jail for such a heinous, violent act. I mean, you're one step away from Columbine there.

      Once bullies know that society will protect them from any real retaliation, their conduct becomes easier, safer, and with modern technology it can be relentless. We were more civilized when you could put someone's lights out when they truly stepped over the line.

    3. Re:Kids these days. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I tried the same thing. Then the psychotic bastard came over to my house and raped and murdered my little brother.

    4. Re:Kids these days. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I tried the same thing. Then the psychotic bastard came over to my house and raped and murdered my little brother.

      Just so you know, I murdered him first.

  49. FUCK THE HELL YOU. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If anyone deserved a killing it's these treasonous bastards... after a trial, of course.

  50. first restriction by Tom · · Score: 1

    If you are serious about putting restrictions on Free Speech, the very first one should be jailing anyone who speaks about wanting to mess with the 1st.

    --
    Assorted stuff I do sometimes: Lemuria.org
  51. Now you HAVE to mod me up... by Maltheus · · Score: 1

    ...or risk going to jail for excluding me from the insightful.

  52. This goes way back... by jedidiah · · Score: 1

    This goes way back...

            They were one of the colonies that resisted the vote for independence.

    --
    A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
  53. People seem to forget by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Our right of "free speech" refers directly to our right to criticize our government without the fear of being put in a Guantanamo bay like secret prison for the rest of our lives. It has NOTHING to do with a PERCEIVED "right" to spew hate speech or advertisers having the PERCEIVED "right" to continually call us at 10:00 pm at night to try and sell us stuff we don't want. Politicians and judges that do not understand our Constitution should not remain in office.

  54. The Supreme Court Would Overturn It by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    They can pass whatever law they want. It'll be successfully overturned by the Supreme Court. Freedom of Speech wins every time with the current court. To the point where it's actually ultimately detrimental. See the Citizens United decision for a shining example of that. No way this law stands if it even gets passed in the first place.

  55. If you believe that... by Shivetya · · Score: 2

    Because what usually results from rules like this is the indirect results are more likely to be what people fall victim too. There will be a good chance of prosecutions versus people who did not know the audience was a protected age range and there will be ambushers using this law. Throw in adults hit with the law by protected age people claiming offense when none was directed towards the affected group, yet the affected group claims offense.

    So your basically stating that certain age groups should feel its okay that government tells them when they make exercise their first amendment rights? Because that is a very wrong path to start going down. Hell, we have seen this age group recently expanded to 26 for health care considerations, do you truly expect that once one foot is in the door that you can close it?

    --
    * Winners compare their achievements to their goals, losers compare theirs to that of others.
  56. TREASON by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    uphold the fucking constitution

  57. Impeach these evil monsters by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    before it is too late (mere introduction of this bill in the House) and before anyone else thinks of such extreme crimes against constitution.

    CAPTCHA: degrade

  58. I wish... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I wish there were some way to pass a law that said that any lawmaker or public official (police as well) at any level who attempts to pass or passes (or for the cops oversteps their bounds) a law which turns out to be unconstitutional is forced from office and stripped of all benefits immediately. I would like to see the Constitution treated like a poorly-labelled minefield, and not as a line that politicians and others see how close they can get to it and how much they can blur that line. I know, I know, wishful thinking.

  59. Attention Fellow New Yorkers by electron+sponge · · Score: 1

    These are the fascist assholes who want to restrict your natural rights:

    Jeffrey D. Klein, 34th District (Bronx) jdklein@senate.state.ny.us

    Diane J. Savino, 23rd District (Staten Island) savino@senate.state.ny.us

    David Carlucci, 38th District (Nanuet) carlucci@nysenate.gov

    David J. Valesky, 49th District (Syracuse) valesky@senate.state.ny.us

    Let them hear from you.

  60. Hypocritical by xdor · · Score: 3, Insightful

    In so far as they would consider abolishing freedom of association: they are going against their oath to uphold The Constitution of the United States.
    It suggests they don't consider their promise to the public when discussing or possibly deciding legislation. It suggests they think of themselves as rulers instead of public servants.

    For example, if a corporation were to discuss defrauding the public as a way to solve a particular problem; people would generally be upset on finding out.
    With a company you might have a choice whether to do business with them. But with government, since they have a monopoly on force (fines, prison, etc), everyone is subject and there is no other (safe) choice. People who don't have a choice about something they disagree with: well, they sometimes resort to more physical methods of argument

    I don't advocating violence over something that's just being discussed: but it's perfectly reasonable why threats of violence would be a reaction in this instance.

    1. Re:Hypocritical by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      It wouldn't be going against their oath to the constitution as the constitution specifically provides for this type of discourse. The very amendment they are trying to get around specifically allows them to discuss it. The problem is, if they act, then the proper way is to get a constitutional amendment allowing their actions to be exempted from the first amendment before creating a law. But they appear to be attempting to find ways around the constitution which may or may not be constitutional depending on your views (IE living document that can be interpreted anyway you feel is appropriate with the times).

      I agree in sentiment with what you are saying though.

      Now, with your corporation example, Suppose the defrauding the public was over billing insurance companies and medicare to create a charity that provides advanced treatment for children who have terminal illnesses successfully extending many of their lives for decades in an attempt to market their treatments to patients covered by insurance companies.

      Do you feel the same in that situation? I only pose it because this is seemingly devised to "think of the children" which I don't think changes much.

    2. Re:Hypocritical by NeutronCowboy · · Score: 2

      Wow. I didn't realize that voting the idiots out was not an option anymore.

      Holy fuck this place has become violent. And by this, I mean Slashdot as a microcosm of the US.

      --
      Those who can, do. Those who can't, sue.
    3. Re:Hypocritical by epyT-R · · Score: 2

      can't vote the idiots out of a system that only allows idiots to be voted in.

    4. Re:Hypocritical by xdor · · Score: 1

      Voting the idiots out is the only option (unless the day dreams of Bev Perdue become reality)

      As I poorly stated previously, I don't advocate violence over a discussion. Much less over a law imposing a certain view of how one ought to behave on the Inter-webs.

      But you must admit its a disturbing precedence for the government at the higher levels deciding formally (with the threat of fines, guns, prison, and all the force government entails) what really only needs informal discussion between neighbors and parents.

    5. Re:Hypocritical by NeutronCowboy · · Score: 1

      Absolutely. I find it very disturbing that this idea went beyond "that's just stupid". But we have the power to change it without resorting to violence. If people get elected who keep advancing the same nonsense, I think that no amount of guns is going to change the problem, because the problem is with the voting public then.

      --
      Those who can, do. Those who can't, sue.
    6. Re:Hypocritical by Joey+Vegetables · · Score: 1

      Well, first of all, it isn't possible. We have a one-party-masquerading-as-two system. Voting one bastard out means you get an only slightly different and very possibly worse one. Ask anyone who voted for Obama.

      But, leaving that aside, you vote someone out when they do a crappy job, not when they seriously attempt to violate your inalienable human rights, you know, the ones they took an oath to DEFEND, and leave you with no other recourse.

      I believe that the requirement of due process is satisfied when a public figure openly admits to committing a crime, in this case, conspiracy to defraud American citizens of their Constitutionally-protected rights under color of law (18 USC 1842 I believe). There is no question of either fact or law for due process to resolve. They deserve summary judgment and the prescribed legal penalty for their offense.

      Note that here the crime is not their speech; it is that, *through* their speech, they are committing a different crime (conspiracy to defraud); just as existing law covers all of the legitimate cases they are arguing should be changed. Telling a hit man you'll pay him 50 bucks to whack someone is not a crime because of it being speech; it's a crime because through your speech you are commissioning a different crime (murder).

      Now, I do not like violence, nor do I ever condone it except when all other options have been ruled out. But does ANYONE see any completely non-coercive way to prevent thugs like this from trampling not only our inalienable human rights, but the rights of countless generations not even born? Or to deter future thugs from doing similar or even worse things? I don't, which poses an ethical dilemma I won't pretend to know how to solve. I don't want the current level of violence in our society, which is already way too high, to be escalated. I don't want the blowback that will surely result if legislators and other government thugs start getting openly whacked.

      But I will say this much . . it is probably just short of being enough to get arrested, but sooner or later I will be anyway, so here goes: I won't lose any sleep if some of them woke up in the morning with the proverbial horse's head lying next to them, with an anonymous note saying "DON'T TREAD ON ME," and implying that something worse might happen if they ignore that warning. Perhaps they might be just a little bit less aggressive next time they decide that the rights of our children and all future children need to be curtailed "for their own good." Politicians pursue their own good, not ours. I only wish more people understood that.

      Freedom isn't free. It must be defended, not by murdering random people overseas, but by being willing to use all available means, including force if (and only if) necessary, to prevent government thugs, or anyone else including the corporations and other institutions they create, from trampling it.

  61. I dislike what these senators have to say... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...but I'll defend to the death their right to say it. As long as they keep it within the NY Senate chamber's free-speech zone, which is out back by the dumpsters.

  62. Think of the Children by subanark · · Score: 1

    Just another case of think of the children. Try to get your law passed because our children are in danger otherwise.

  63. Legality != Morality by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yet again we find our government trying to legislate morality. I'm sorry, but I don't think it can be done.

    What we really need to do is to teach our kids how to act responsibly. Computers and the internet are not gee gaws to drool over and where everything is loltacular. Actions have consequences and decency is a beneficial quality in any society (digital or not). Curtailing speech rights will not solve the problem. It will just make it that much easier for the next regime to cinch the rope a little tighter.

  64. So does this mean that... by lavagolemking · · Score: 1

    The Citizens United decision will be overturned? No? Didn't think so. Free speech is a corporation's right, but only a privilege for citizens. I always wondered why Oprah got sued for talking about beef, so I guess this explains a few things...

  65. With great power comes great responsibility by cowwoc2001 · · Score: 1

    No rights, no matter how precious, are without responsibilities. You can't hold up a white flag, then shoot soldiers as they lower their fire-arms. The more people we allow to abuse these rights, the sooner they will cease to exist.

    We need to fight to protect Democracy. It might shock certain people, but fighting abuse is part of that fight. I leave it up to the smart people of Slashdot to propose ways of combating said abuse without eroding the rights of people who act in good faith.

    1. Re:With great power comes great responsibility by rocket+rancher · · Score: 1

      No rights, no matter how precious, are without responsibilities. You can't hold up a white flag, then shoot soldiers as they lower their fire-arms. The more people we allow to abuse these rights, the sooner they will cease to exist.

      We need to fight to protect Democracy. It might shock certain people, but fighting abuse is part of that fight. I leave it up to the smart people of Slashdot to propose ways of combating said abuse without eroding the rights of people who act in good faith.

      As far as white flags go, Sun Tzu and Miyamoto Mushashi would beg to differ, as would Niccolo Machiavelli. The Geneva Conventions agree with you, of course, but a nation that adheres to the Geneva Conventions is not going to be a nation for long if its opponent in war isn't subject to the same crippling handicaps. War is the art of deception -- your analogy is competely misplaced in a debate on politics, which is the art of the possible. As far as these rights your are talking about go, they exist if and only if the people with more power than you allow you to have them. Read John Stuart Mill, especially On Liberty to get a feel for just how complex this issue really is. While the people on Slashdot are pretty damn enlightened, the problem of the balance between social responsibility and individual liberty is not going to be resolved by them or anyone else. You can't have both -- you can only agree to how much one may preempt the other.

  66. Simpler solution by aXis100 · · Score: 1

    In Australia we dont have the same concept unilateral free speech. Our constitution gives us the right to free political speech, but not free personal speech. Personally I think it works very well.

    1. Re:Simpler solution by misexistentialist · · Score: 1

      Every country with weak speech laws ends up with obviously absurd and unjust convictions. The case Albert Langer, for example, shows that things are far from well Down Under.

    2. Re:Simpler solution by swj719 · · Score: 1

      It works well until such time that the side you don't agree with ends up in power and decides what is or isn't "political" speech has changed. How well do you think such a system would have worked here in America after Obama got elected (or how about while Bush was President)? Without a concrete and absolute freedom, the rules can be changed at will to mean whatever you need them to mean to protect your side.

  67. fixed that for you by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    hey, i'm an idiot, you insensitive clod!

  68. Throw them out! by p51d007 · · Score: 1

    First elected official that even TRIES to pass this, should be taken out and shot for treason! What these pinheads don't understand, because, they do not understand the Constitution, is that the bill of rights isn't rights "granted" by congress, but rights granted by god, and for which congress has NO RIGHT taking away. THIS is what happens when you water down the teaching of history, filling it with lies, distortions and other liberal and politically correct garbage. If you give these blowhards the leeway to "tinker" around with the Constitution, before you know it, the 1st & 2nd will be completely stripped away, and the others will follow.

    1. Re:Throw them out! by unitron · · Score: 1

      Actually that same Constitution very specifically defines treason, and this does not fit that definition.

      You don't get to have a cafeteria constitution, picking and choosing just the parts you like.

      --

      I see even classic Slashdot is now pretty much unusable on dial up anymore.

    2. Re:Throw them out! by Stone2065 · · Score: 1

      Yeh... I'm with you there. The Constitution has taken enough of a beating over the last 2+ centuries... no need in cutting off its goddamn head...

      --
      Stone
  69. Good intent.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    But a bad idea!

  70. Not a free speech issue by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Both harrassment and stalking are against the law. Neither has anything to do with free speech, or the "having too much" of it.

  71. What? by betterunixthanunix · · Score: 1

    The problem here is that these politicians are proposing that we further restrict what is considered free speech, and that they are advocating that free speech be viewed as a privilege rather than a right. What different does it make what the original blog said, considering what the politicians themselves said?

    --
    Palm trees and 8
  72. Conspiracy theory telephone game by goodmanj · · Score: 2

    Christ. To get to the original source article, you have to click links through two different intermediate sites, one of which is the Volokh Conspiracy, which while always interesting is not exactly an unbiased source.

    Remember kids, when you get your news from Slashdot, you're getting it fourth-hand. It's good to read the news, it protects your rights as a citizen. Kinda like a condom. But do you really want to protect yourself with a fourth-hand condom?

    Anyway, on to the meat of the matter: the original article doesn't clearly come down on the side of the scare-quote that's being passed around. It says, IN ALL CAPS FOR GOD'S SAKE, that some people think free speech rights should never be limited, while others think a less extreme approach, with exceptions for grievous harm to others, is needed. Its tone does seem to suggest it favors the latter, which is disturbing, but as an "oh my God these guys want to burn the Constitution" freakout document, it lacks a little punch.

    1. Re:Conspiracy theory telephone game by swj719 · · Score: 1

      The VC should be considered about as unbiased as it gets when it comes to First Amendment issues. The number of times it has ever sided with an effort to restrict speech could likely be counted on one hand.

  73. Suicide by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Rick Seidel is a prominent example. The high school basically kissed an Asian Student's ass who was a Dr's kid on facebook and were willing to exclude other students for him. The high school recently had a school fire as an example. The Asian student is not a celebrity and had a generic name and isn't like some of the other Asian men like the creator of LXD. He basically was a no name loser who they exclude people for and stand up for him at my expense. Rick Seidel who was a PHD student at Southern killed himself after an incident of cyber bullying on facebook 4 days later so I believe they were connected. An adventist minister felt that it was his priestly duty to ostracize someone on facebook. We can defriend you for him. The Asian guy though doesn't have published papers or a PHD. For Rick Siedel to commit suicide shows a strong correlation between the facebook incident and them making favors for that guy.

    To My Teacher Dr. Rick Seidel
    The first day of General Biology (GB) second semester. We all crowded into the Hickman 114 amphitheatre, anxious not only because the hard work was starting all over again but also because we had a new teacher. As he stood in front of our class, the overstuffed classroom tried to predict how this GB would compare with last semester. But before we had time to decide, the lecture notes and syllabus had been passed out. That day we set a record—we covered the syllabus and an entire 40+ page chapter in our book in the fifty minute class period. Our new teacher meant business. When we arrived back at the classroom the next day, I was surprised to see that our class fit more comfortably into the room. My teacher didn’t give me long to think about it though; I forgot everything else as we dove into another chapter of our book.
    He loved teaching, my teacher.
    Amidst the no-nonsense lectures, our teacher found ways to make us smile. He found a way to use the words “fauna” and “flora” in respect to the mammalian body at least twice every class period. His lectures were also punctuated with fun facts about everyday aspects of life, like how some places here in TN take the dead Christmas trees and tie them to the docks to provide homes for the little fish in the rivers or lakes. And in between the unique words and fun facts, no one ever questioned how much our teacher understood about any of our material. This might be his first time teaching GB, but he was more than prepared. Because my teacher was so revered, his praise was coveted. When we had our first lab of the semester, I desperately wanted to do well. The tricky fetal pig dissection made me think back to the one frog I had dissected in my sophomore year of high school. Carefully, my two lab partners and I cut through the skin and muscle, exposing the organs beneath. As our teacher walked around the room, he paused at each lab bench and evaluated each group’s work. When it was my team’s turn, he smiled at us. “Good work,” he said. The long lab suddenly had become worth it; we had done well. Elated, my group cleaned up the lab.
    He held his students’ deepest respect, my teacher.
    Our teacher centered our class on proving and knowing God. He started every class period with a word of prayer, and as we went through the chapters, our teacher pointed out the complexity of the systems within mammals’ bodies. There was no contest between Creation and evolution in his class. And during many of our lectures, my teacher would tell us simple stories about the family he loved dearly. He loved to spend time with them out in nature. Our teacher was confident in God, and he considered himself blessed.
    He had a personal relationship with our Creator, my teacher.
    And it is with the heaviest heart that I start to comprehend that my teacher Dr. Rick Seidel passed away this weekend. His death has left all of his students shocked; he was just in class on Wednesday. We had a teacher sub for our class on Friday because they said he wasn’t feeling well, and so we

  74. Pussification by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What's the matter, rudolph went crying to mommy because the other reindeer wouldn't let him join in their reindeer games?

  75. Super Senator! by Commontwist · · Score: 1

    Obviously these senators aren't superheroes because, well, common sense is a super power.

    Perhaps pass a resolution saying that senators must possess an IQ higher than before being considered for office?

  76. AU goes Coed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    AU goes Coed.

    Andrews University announced that the new building Demazo hall would be a womans dorm. They announced the Dorms sex change after the 5.6 million dollar building was completed
    =========
    University President / Dean of Mean Exit Interview - Resignation
    Dean of Men: I just heard the University was using Demazo as a womens Dorm. I can't believe the University would place a womens dorm next to those monsters! I quit.

    President: I can't justify using it as a women's dorm. ^ Just look at the comments above. We already built two for the men. There is no demand for new men's housing Even though it is reverse discrimination I can't justify spending 5.6 million on loser (suicide, stealing, vandalism) men. The board would never approve it. I can't get support from the constituency which is largely women. There is high demand for female students since the Meier misdesign.

    President: I was looking for a new dean anyway.

    University President / Dean of Mean Exit Interview - Termination

    Dean of Men: I just heard the University was using Demazo as a womens Dorm. How can you descriminate against the men? I quit. ^ Everything above is true.
    President: In that case your fired!!!! I was unhappy with the male enrollment anyway.
    ============

    David Iwasa, the new dean of University Towers, comes to Andrews University from Gem State Adventist Academy in Caldwell, Idaho. University Towers is comprised of Burman Hall, a men's residence, and Damazo Hall, a women's residence, which are connected by a shared lobby area.

    Prior to his arrival at Andrews, Iwasa worked as a residence hall dean at Gem State Adventist Academy since 2004. While there, he trained and managed staff in both the men's and women's residence halls, developed a worship program and taught a math class. Iwasa began his career as the treasurer at Thunderbird Adventist Academy in Scottsdale, Ariz., in 1990, and became dean of men two years later. He assumed the position of vice principal of Thunderbird Academy in 1994. He has also served as business manager and administrator at several assisted living facilities in Oregon and Washington. From 1995 to 1997, he worked as an accountant at Marketing One Securities in Portland, Ore. Of the many capacities he filled, he particularly enjoyed being a girls dean. Difficult but extremely rewarding and character building he says.

  77. Oppression, not erosion by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Erosion is a natural process. Human rights can be respected by other humans or oppressed by other humans, not "eroded" as if by nature. The correct term is oppression, not "erosion". Don't muddy the waters by dumbing it down for us.

  78. This is a troll of a submission. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Not sure it would be found illegal under the premises outlined in the letter. But the letter itself is a well-thought out essay describing different sides of the case and of suggesting adding cyberbullying to be treated as "stalking in the third degree". The "trolled" statement about privileges is simply 1 sentence in the essay stressing the importance of balance when considering the right to freedom of speech.

  79. Deal With It by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Bullying, teasing, etc as teen's is all par for the course. We all went through it from one perspective or another, and we all made it through -- probably a lot wiser as well.

    We don't need laws for this, we need to teach kids to deal with it, and understand it's all part of life. It toughens people up to deal with the real world.

    This kind of legislation is typical of the Democrats, always wanting us to be a nanny state and "look out" for us. It's backwards from what America stands for. Ridiculous.

  80. Time to vote these NY Senators OUT of office by itsybitsy · · Score: 1

    When the, ahem, elected representatives of the cult of government go wayward and want to impose more violations of our Natural rights by the State cult members it's time to vote them out of office. It would be better to toss em into jail for life for their criminal attempt to subvert the rights of free people, but getting them out of office would be an acceptable first step. Impeach them.

    I take a hard line against every cult member of the cult of government that violates the public trust by violating the rights of human beings in their jurisdiction. Toss them in prison with ten times the period of punishment that non-cult members would get.

  81. Constitutional? by Dthief · · Score: 1

    I think not

    --
    www.RacquetUp.org - Helping Detroit Youth
  82. Absurd by Karmashock · · Score: 1

    The degree to which congress takes the constitution lightly is frankly appalling. I mean, fine... you want to change the first amendment? See change the constitution. We have a process for that. Think you'll get enough people to agree with that idea? Of course not. Which means congress CANNOT F"ING TOUCH IT. They don't have that right, that power, or that authority. It is not in their purview to change the constitution without going through the proper process.

    The fact that they do this in various ways all the time is irrelevant. It's all illegal. Against the law. Invalid. Now maybe this makes me sound like some crazy radical living in a mobile home in the desert with stockpiles of spam waiting for the big one. But either the constitution means something or it doesn't. And if it doesn't then where exactly does congress get the power to pass laws in the first place. The constitution is where not only their power but the president's power flows from. Undermine it and basically everything becomes illegitimate. Now tell that to a the police or an unsympathetic judge or whatever and they'll laugh at you while violating those rules.

    There are governments that are based on force. It is just that the US is supposed to be a Republic. A government ruled by law. And every time the constitution is taken lightly and they get away with it we have instead a government not of law but of force. Where rather then ethics and rights the judgment of who can do what is simply whoever has the money and guns to make it happen.

    That is a type of tyranny. And while it might seem to be an exaggeration to go off on this tangent from some stupid opinion from some stupid legislators it's all related. Because if they gave a DAMN about the constitution they'd not suggest such an idea unless they were serious about amending the constitution. They're clearly not. They don't try to amend it anymore. They try to ignore it.

    --
    I've decided to stop wasting my time responding to AC trolls/sockpuppets... so if you want a response from me... login.
  83. slowly dying by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    you wankies are screwed - little by little your rights are being taken away - soon all your houses will be jail cells haha

  84. 1984 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    1984 anyone?

  85. Anti Constitutionalist should Hang by Patriot4u · · Score: 1

    Sick of these Liberals who want to destroy our Constitution, God gave us those rights,Not Men or Some piece of paper. I say, If you want it or think you can take it, Bring it on. I beleive you will be tried one day and swing from a noose for your Treasonist acts against this nation and all Americans.

  86. Smart People by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Ahh...smart people.

    The people that end up standing in their own shit because they don't understand how septic systems work.

    The people who have no idea where or how Arugula came to be on the supermarket shelf.

    The people who don't even know how to open the hood of their car let alone do anything one it's open.

    The ones who brought us credit default swaps and that wonderful multi-volume I.R.S. tax code.

    Yeah....smart people..don't have much use for them.

    1. Re:Smart People by epyT-R · · Score: 3, Insightful

      ah the intelligent people who make the same broad cultural insinuations about said 'anti-intellectuals' (people who don't agree with their selectively biased quackery), while wearing said quackery as chips on their shoulders and clamoring for 'hate speech' style laws to shield them from criticism.

      the left biased intelligentsia coming out of today's universities needs to learn that facts (all of them) and the resulting truth matters more than what they feel about it. true rapport doesn't come from shielding the truth whenever it hurts someone's feelings...whether it's a parent talking to a tweenager or a bunch of yale graduate politicians writing legislation. in fact, people who suffer selection bias based on feelings should not be considered especially intelligent or of good character.

    2. Re:Smart People by MaskedSlacker · · Score: 2

      Hey guys, look! There's a monkey jerking off in the corner which makes him more productive than either of you have been in this discussion!

    3. Re:Smart People by CraftyJack · · Score: 1

      Yeah....smart people..don't have much use for them.

      That's OK. We smart people have thought up some uses for you. It'll be great. We got all the bugs worked out this time. We promise.

    4. Re:Smart People by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Plato wouldn't think much of your intellectual abilities.

    5. Re:Smart People by sabt-pestnu · · Score: 1

      Unless you're a female monkey (or a primate reproduction researcher), your corner monkey is not creating a marketable product. That makes poor C.M. every bit the useless wanker as the two posters you were criticizing.

  87. Rediculous by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Cyberbullying... really? If you don't want to be made fun of online, get OFFLINE! Remember when computers were a way to build your OWN world? Well, just don't let those "thugs" into your own realm. There ARE other ways to be online then on facebook, and there ARE other ways to be tied to your computer than the internet.

    The "socially challenged" are no longer intelligent. Those who flock to computers to build themselves an identity are those who are now just as hapless on a computer as they are offline.

    These kids just need to grow up, get a backbone, or create their own world... one in which THEY regulate who joins, posts, and interacts. Those who "cannot" are allowing themselves to be "cyberbullied".

    Useless.

  88. It doesn't work this way... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    We can all probably agree that the intent of the bill is noble, in a "Let's protect everybody from everything" sort of way... I mean who hasn't heard about some poor kid being tormented and bullied to the point of committing suicide... Here's the problem though. Freedom means _free_. Free doesn't mean "ideal", it doesn't mean "Utopian". We cannot curb deviant behaviors in this way -- at least not without damaging the liberty we all take for granted. If it were that simple, we could just keep cranking out ever more specific laws and punishments, and eventually reach Nirvana, but in reality, that path leads toward tyranny and thought control. It is precisely BECAUSE of offensive speech that the first amendment exists.

    A more productive approach that the good senators could pursue would be establishing programs that help kids both learn how to deal with being "the odd one out", and also providing them with state sanctioned tools to turn the tables on bullies. For example, what would happen to the 'social economics of bullying' if any would-be bully knew that he/she was risking being forceably transferred to a new school if his/her victim could provide credible evidence of his/her wrongdoing?

  89. Yeaaah, about that by Gimbal · · Score: 1

    I'm afraid that the SCOTUS might innately disagree - as would be their natural place to, in addressing unconstitutional legislation, amiright?

    Nannystate, onwards! Until we are *all* the prisoners to the Nanny's great whim! Share that obsessive-compulsive behaviorism, people, that's just what the sovereign nation needs - not!

    / While listening to the Thomas Jefferson Hour. It may have affected my choice of vernacular.

  90. Not the state's responsibility by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    I was bullied too. His name was E_ B_ and he was one of those kids who'd been held over into eighth grade, for like five years or something. He was in choir, I suspect that was part of his M.O.

    Years later, I grew up. Sure, I might spend some short time in jail afterwards, if I ever saw his ugly mug, today, but that's another story. I grew up, and I don't blame the state for that it went that way, in the first place. I think I'd be grossly misplacing the real responsibility of the matter, if I would blame the state for what was absolutely no fault of the state, and what is not the state's responsibility to address - beyond the rudiments of basic criminal law, and it never went that way, on his part or mine ;)

    The state's real responsibilities do not include: Nanny-bullying me on health matters; nanny-bullying my parents on how to raise me; nanny-bullying the public about how to treat me, in any range beyond simply enforcing beyond the basic and socially mandatory matters of criminal law.

    So, now I'm like, all, "Hey state, buzz off!" Those legislators really need to get over their own agendas, I suspect - though they would certainly not have a monopoly on agendas, in the legislature.

    / Cracking a new can of Brawndo, glibly raising a toast to the rising Consumerocracy

  91. +5 by Gimbal · · Score: 1

    [o/t] Man, when's that magic mod hat arrive in the mail, already? >><<

  92. So it begins... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    subject says it all

  93. Welcome to Germany by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    In germany, holocaust denial is forbidden, which, honestly, is the a very stupid idea, as now all of the denialers can claim to work against a conspiracy to hide the truth. If it wasn't forbidden, it would simply be a stupid opinion, but now it's something "secret". Great job.

  94. It's mostly about gay kids. by Animats · · Score: 1

    The bullying they're concerned about mostly involves gay kids. From the paper: "Jamey Rodemeyer, a 14-year old boy from Williamsville, near Buffalo, NY, took his life after what his parents claim was yeas of bullying because of struggles with his sexuality." "Tyler Clementi, an 18-year-old Rutgers student, committed suicide by jumping off the George Washington Bridge after two classmates secretly taped him during a sexual encounter with a man and broadcast it over the web."

    One of the papers cited is "LGBT and Allied Youth Responses to Cyberbullying: Policy Implications" On page 128 (the paper starts at journal page 115), after discussing how big a problem this is for gay youth, they remark "This finding somewhat contradicts a study by Smith, et al. (2008) on cyber- bullying in secondary school, which did not factor the characteristics of sexual identity and gender identity into the equation. Instead, they found that secondary school students, in general, recommended as their best coping strategies in coun- tering cyberbullying both blocking and avoiding messages, and telling someone when they were being cyberbullied." The key point here is that relatively simple avoidance strategies work for hetrosexual kids, while gay kids have much worse problems. They often can't get help from their parents. "Family rejection is often more feared than victimization or harassment. ... a significant percent of LGBT youth are forced to leave home once their sexual or gender identity is questioned by family members, and approx- imately 20-40% of all homeless youth are lesbian, gay, bisexual, or transgender".

    So this really isn't a free speech problem at all. It's a parenting problem.

  95. Description... by Luckyo · · Score: 1

    As someone who actually studied human psychology, I'm in complete agreement with lawmakers in part where "exclusion from group is a form of bullying". This is a well studied area, and it's widely known and proven that younger boys tend to bully physically. Girls mainly bully by excluding from groups. The bullying factor in this type results in a much deeper trauma then physical assault, and often leaves significant mental issues for life. This is because humans are social and biologically tribal creatures which is especially true for young women who form small groups and punishing through exile from their group.

    You don't have to go far to see how this works. Every young girl will have her "circle of friends" who will on the surface have same tastes, same desires. In reality many of them are just conforming to peer pressure, but fear of exile from the group for being different is a very strong driving factor.

    Now I'm not a psychiatrist, but this stuff doesn't require a MD. This is highschool/general university psychology level material. To attempt to ridicule it is to show total ignorance of the subject at hand.

    1. Re:Description... by stdarg · · Score: 1

      I'm in complete agreement with lawmakers in part where "exclusion from group is a form of bullying".

      There have to be some qualifications put on that statement though. A boy being excluded from a group of girls going to the bathroom together is obviously not a form of bullying.

    2. Re:Description... by Luckyo · · Score: 1

      Let's not pretend to be utterly stupid just to strawman the argument please?

    3. Re:Description... by stdarg · · Score: 1

      Wow, I guess let's not pretend to be civil either. Turns out you don't need an MD to be an abrasive asshole.

    4. Re:Description... by Luckyo · · Score: 1

      Stating the fact can sometime be politically incorrect. That doesn't make it any less factual, and dancing around it doesn't make it any more or less civil then direct approach.

  96. I strained my sarcasm muscle... by Anarchduke · · Score: 1

    Absolutely! I have always thought that it was just wrong for the New York chapter of the KKK to exclude black people.

    --
    who prays for Satan? Who in 18 centuries has had the humanity to pray for the 1 sinner that needed it most? ~Mark Twain
  97. Statue of Liberty by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If that happens I hope they tear down the Statue of Liberty at the same time. No point having that up if this goes through.

  98. Like Al-Awlaki ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    the US Constitution is dead, just 'a piece of paper'.

    Oh wait, there's always the 2nd. Once that's done away with, the NRA will be out en masse defending the ?????

  99. Obligatory... by Pionar · · Score: 1

    Won't somebody please think of the children?

  100. Why not... by SeeSp0tRun · · Score: 1

    Instead of shielding our kids from all the world's baddies... expose them. Teach them how to cope.
    Back before the days of "cyber" bullying, we had... wait for it... regular bullying.
    We taught our kids how to stand up for themselves.

    Instead of protecting the children, why not focus on educating the parents on preparing their kids for real life?

    What's next, curtailing my right to flip you off in traffic? That'll go over great in Boston...

    --
    Something witty.
  101. Completely unbelievable by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Proponents of a more refined First Amendment argue that this freedom should be treated not as a right but as a privilege — a special entitlement granted by the state on a conditional basis that can be revoked if it is ever abused or maltreated." - Its not a freedom. Its a right claimed by our forefathers and laid out for all to see so the government would know that these first ten amendments were the inalienable rights that we HAVE just for being alive. What I find truly offensive about this is that any politician thinks so poorly of the BILL OF RIGHTS that they would even suggest something as callous and heinous as this. The government has no right nor privilege to adjust them in any way except by passing another amendment. Trying to dilute the First Amendment is at best stupid, but truthfully, simply implying that the first amendment is anything but a right is treasonous and in my opinion impeachable. This short cutting is deplorable and it shows that some of our politicians have no real knowledge of the very thing we elected them to uphold and protect. Their careers should be over for this.

  102. Jab at the ACLU and others by Quila · · Score: 1

    They believe that the right to keep and bear arms is, uniquely in the Bill of Rights, a collective right rather than an individual one.

    If they can have that interpretation for the 2nd, why not the 1st?

    1. Re:Jab at the ACLU and others by imric · · Score: 1

      I was going to mod you insightful but want to speak in this thread, I hope somebody else does.

      --
      Paranoia is a Survival Trait!
  103. Check the EULA by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So now we passively accept an End User Licence Agreement as part of our social contract. Your rights are not your own, the appearance of them is merely granted under license and may be suspended at any time by the authority of the governing body. Maybe it was always like that and I missed it.

    In other news: your money is not your money. You agree to a licence that permits you to call it your money until somebody richer than you decides they want it - in which case they reserve the right to take it^H^H^H^H^H^H^Htransfer the licence and you wave all rights to any further recourse.

    Agree .

  104. It matters for voting by Quila · · Score: 1

    The press generally has the populace believing the Democrats are the party that wants to protect your rights, and the Republicans are the party that wants to restrict your rights. This mistaken belief gets them votes.

    This shows the true nature of the beast. They BOTH want to restrict your rights, they just have different areas they want to do it in.

  105. Do what I did by Quila · · Score: 1

    I got fed up, snapped, and tried to kill a bully using classroom equipment at hand that could be quickly "weaponized."

    Fellow classmates stopped me just short of my target, but I was never picked on after that, not even a mean look.

    Oh, and do it when the teacher is out of the room.

    1. Re:Do what I did by Jason+Levine · · Score: 1

      Key word: A bully. As in one. I clotheslined one bully once and he stopped. How do you propose that a bullied kid handles a group of 6 bullies who could easily overpower him? If he tries fighting them all at once, he'll just get beaten to a pulp and I doubt that the bullies will stop because they just beat up their target. Plus, a bullied kid who crafts a weapon and fights back is likely to be arrested nowadays. (While the bullies might face a stern lecture.)

      There need to be resources for the bullied beyond "just punch back" advice and there needs to be consequences for the bullies beyond "well, the kid might snap and hit you" warnings.

      --
      My sci-fi novel, Ghost Thief, is now available from Amazon.com.
  106. Criminal vs. Civil by Quila · · Score: 1

    Defamation and false advertising are civil matters. Plus, corporations not being completely real people in law (yet), their speech is restricted.

    Copyright has constitutional basis, plus Fair Use considers where free speech encroaches on the constitutional monopoly of copyright.

    What we're talking about here is criminalization of speech, of opinions. We have very specific tests for attempts to restrict freedom of speech, such as the "imminent lawless action" test, and what these people are talking about fit none of them.

  107. Free speech is still a right... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...but public office isn't.

    And with all NY state senators on two-year terms, the opportunity to emphasize this point is conveniently imminent.

  108. Two way street by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So the senators can see just how great is their idea, extend this priviledge so that elected state officials may speak only in the capital building itself, and not to any news reporter.
    It is jaw dropping just how incompetent our political class has grown.

  109. Sounds fair... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Hey, if the 2nd amendment doesn't give you a right to bear arms, I can't see how the 1st amendment gives you a right to free speech. You stand by while they try to take one right away, you can't complain when they take the others. Now, witness the power of this fully operational socialist system.

  110. Here We Go by b4upoo · · Score: 1

    There was this girl back in high school that excluded me from carnal relations. I know she was having relations with several guys. Can I sue? She discriminated against me.

  111. It looks like by shoehornjob · · Score: 1

    A group of New York senators just made themselves the next target of anonymous. Think of the childrenz... I don't need the nanny state thinking of my child. The state can concentrate on it's own affairs thank you. This is just bullshit and I hope they all lose their jobs.

    --
    "We are just a war away from Amerikastan. When god vs god the undoing of man." Dave Mustaine
  112. Exactly! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    They don't even list the party affiliations in the article, but of course you know anytime free speech is being limited, it's likely liberals.

  113. The tree of Liberty ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    is overdue for some fertilizing.

  114. Treason by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Those senators should be deported for treason against the Constitution. They should also fall under their own law's definition of "excluding" reasonable and sane people from their club of crazy.

  115. I knew they were Democrats when ... by Alan+R+Light · · Score: 1

    ... they asserted that fundamental rights are "privileges" granted by government.

    Getting the relationship between government and citizen inverted is a Democrat specialty.

    Republicans and Democrats are evil in different ways.

  116. Obscene: definition by Alan+R+Light · · Score: 1

    "Offensive to accepted standards of decency or modesty."

    That's the first definition I came across. There were a few others, but I think this puts it in perspective.

    The obscenity exception means "You can say anything you like - anything at all. It's no holds barred! Unless we don't like it."

    Which is to say, the obscenity exception makes a mockery of free speech, in ways that laws against fraud or incitement to violence do not.

  117. You can't... by Methos137 · · Score: 1

    When will these morons figure out you can't legislate out bullying. There's only one solution to bullying and that is standing up for ones self in some way. Making a law for every little thing doesn't solve anything. One would think they would have learned that with everything from speed limits and graffiti to prohibition and the war on drugs. Then again, this is NY senators who thing that simply having more gun laws will stop gun crime, and we see how well that has worked out for them as well.

  118. you gotta be fucking kidding me by spidercoz · · Score: 1

    these assholes should not only be fired, but publicly rebuked for even bringing this anti-American bullshit up in an open session

    --
    "I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it." - Evelyn Beatrice Hall, re Voltaire
  119. Privileged speech by zelda43 · · Score: 1

    The truly humorous part of all this banter is that any of it is taken seriously.

  120. In response to your date rape hypothetical... by Oxford_Comma_Lover · · Score: 1

    This would be true if the definition of date rape were to continue to shift the way you suggest; but it won't, because the problem with date rape is mostly an epistemological one: many, perhaps even most, date-rape and date-rape-like scenarios include a girl who has been raped and a guy who hasn't raped anyone, because they have different definitions of what constitutes rape.

    The scenario you posit, "her feeling uncomfortable," is not a position advocated by anyone who I am aware of across the entire field of rape jurisprudence or literature. You are taking a position far beyond that being advocated for and saying that the policy shift will necessarily consider to that extreme, which is a very weak argument.

    Your idea that it is "about time the girls started taking some of the responsibility for the outcome of the evening" is also a misplaced concern. Historically, women take almost all of the responsibility for the outcome of the evening. It is only with some of the newer definitions of rape to include Date Rape (which is one of the most common kinds, to be fair) that men have been asked to take responsibility for the outcome of the evening. They may have been prosecuted before, but any rape prosecution used to be, and to some extent still is, about whether the victim deserved it. It's not supposed to be about that, but most of the case is about trying to make the woman seem to be not the victim, but someone who somehow invited rape.

    The problem is how far the pendulum should swing, and the problem is how do we deal with a divide where, under the same circumstances, women believe that an event constitutes rape and that there was no consent whereas men believe that there was consent and therefore no rape?

    You have to decide, as a policy matter, what standards you want there. For centuries the pendulum has been in favor of the alleged rapist's version of events. Now it's shifting the other way. Sometimes it will clearly shift too far. But that doesn't justify keeping it where it is forever.

    I realize this is a very touchy subject, where many men innocently believe they're not guilty and many women are as certain that they are, and where people are legitimately concerned about women (or men) being unable to come forward because of fear that society will hold the victim responsible for the rape. But it's not a simple question.

    --
    -- IANAL, this isn't legal advice, and definitely isn't legal advice for you. Also, Squee!
  121. Excellent Applications by Mordocai · · Score: 1

    If the law literally says that exclusion from a group is bullying (As in it doesn't say just cyber) and, therefore, illegal then I can think of a few fun applications. You can't keep me from voting as a congressman in congress, because that is exclusion from a group! You can't not hire me at that job because I'm unqualified, because that is exclusion from a group! You can't keep confidential government documents confidential... etc. If it does say just cyber, still some interesting implications. Web sites that require you to pay before being able to post, betas that require invites, etc. could all be considered bullying. Very unlikely suing about any of these things would bear any fruit, of course. Still fun to think about.

  122. Where's your mosque? by Quila · · Score: 1

    The size of a rally is irrelevant when public opinion polling shows that the vast majority of Muslims condemn terrorism and support coexistence.

    Links, please. Of course we have an issue of level of coexistence. I take it you mean absolutely equal, all considerations for one given to the other? All rights respected? Remember, Rauf does not believe in American freedom of speech.

    I'm not Arab, and the Saudi king doesn't speak for me

    It's not the Saudi king who decides, but the Muslim religious leaders.The king is not all powerful, and must bow to their decisions on many issues or risk a revolt. If you believe a church, synagogue and temple should be able to stand in Mecca, you will be the first Muslim I've met with that opinion.

    I go to a mosque in New York that's in the basement of a Catholic church.

    Very considerate of those Christians. Ever heard of a church in the basement of a mosque? Even Rauf doesn't believe in reciprocating in that manner.

    1. Re:Where's your mosque? by mr100percent · · Score: 1

      Here's one good link about American Muslims, but you can find similar elsewhere: Pew Research polling on American Muslims

      I get the distinct impression you're hearing about Rauf from a less-than-objective source. Rauf believes in American freedom of speech and is patriotic, I don't know where you thought otherwise. If you're ever in New York City, I can take you to his mosque downtown at Masjid Farah. His congregation is sufi; very wonderful and loving people.

      I've heard of churches using space inside a mosque, both 1400 years ago and more recently when a church burned down in the South. Clearly the Pope doesn't agree with the church letting Muslims use the space, but heck.

    2. Re:Where's your mosque? by Quila · · Score: 1

      Here's one good link about American Muslims, but you can find similar elsewhere: Pew Research polling on American Muslims

      Interesting. The more Muslim a state is, the more likely its people are to support terrorism and Al Qaeda. If they're living in a state where they are a small minority, they are not willing to speak out for violence against that state. It makes sense.

      get the distinct impression you're hearing about Rauf from a less-than-objective source. Rauf believes in American freedom of speech and is patriotic,

      "I believe that the insulting or mocking of others' religious symbols, icons, prophets, etc. should not fall within the realm of free speech." -- Rauf

      Free speech, as long as it doesn't criticize Islam. That's not how we roll in America. He can take that point of view back to Kuwait.

      His congregation is sufi; very wonderful and loving people.

      You do realize that Sufism is not mainline Islam, right? Not one Islamic state is Sufi. Sufis are persecuted even today in Muslim countries.

      It's like the old lawyer joke, the majority make the minority look bad.

      Feel free to write when a church is in Mecca, or even when it's legal for infidel tourists to travel there. Or I'll just be happy to hear when religious freedom is protected in most Muslim states.

    3. Re:Where's your mosque? by mr100percent · · Score: 1

      You're drawing false conclusions from incomplete data. The more Sikh a state is, the greater the odds that some will support the terrorist group Babar Khalsa, or the more Christian a state is, the more likely they'll support Christian supremacist groups like the BNP or White Pride. The reason American Muslims reject terrorism more than Muslims in a place like Pakistan could more likely be because American Muslims have nearly 100% literacy rate while Pakistan is around 50%.

      Heck, the ADL believes that swastikas and anti-semitism shouldn't fall under free speech either. Rauf didn't call for an abandonment of the first amendment, he said that people shouldn't hide hate speech behind it and pretend its benign.

      Sufism is not a sect, you can be Sunni and Sufi, it's a philosophy that's found all over the Muslim world. Arguably, Pakistan is a sufi country.

      Like I said, Saudi doesn't represent islam, it represents a dictatorship. The king controls it; he appoints and fires religious scholars who agree with him, despite the fact that nearly zero scholars outside Saudi agree with his warped ideas. The other 95% of the 1.5 Billion Muslims who don't live under his rule are nothing like him, which is why you see Jordanian Muslims planting flowers at churches or Indonesian Muslim leaders protecting churches of minorities. The majority of Muslims support religious freedom, look at places like Senegal for an example of how most get along. Cooperation and tolerance isn't newsworthy despite being the norm, so it's ignored.

    4. Re:Where's your mosque? by Quila · · Score: 1

      or the more Christian a state is, the more likely they'll support Christian supremacist groups like the BNP or White Pride.

      Oh yes, we see the governments of majority Christian nations supporting those groups all the time! You posted the data as authoritative, now you denigrate it because unflattering conclusions can be drawn. You don't get to have it both ways.

      The reason American Muslims reject terrorism more than Muslims in a place like Pakistan could more likely be because American Muslims have nearly 100% literacy rate while Pakistan is around 50%.

      Or, logically, because they'll suffer backlash.

      Rauf didn't call for an abandonment of the first amendment, he said that people shouldn't hide hate speech behind it and pretend its benign.

      You don't hide "hate speech" behind the First Amendment. The First Amendment is what guarantees the right to "hate speech." Note the quotes, since that can be defined as "anything I don't like." The UN Muslim voting bloc has been trying to push a "defamation of religions" resolution through the UN for years, the goal being to criminalize criticism of Islam.

      Sufism is not a sect, you can be Sunni and Sufi, it's a philosophy that's found all over the Muslim world. Arguably, Pakistan is a sufi country.

      Very arguably. Sufism is still a small minority, persecuted in places. The Wahabis even want you dead. It would be good if your view dominated Muslim thought in the world, but it doesn't.

      , which is why you see Jordanian Muslims planting flowers at churches or Indonesian Muslim leaders protecting churches of minorities

      Funny, your Muslim leader was protecting curches against -- Muslims who had bombed a church! So would you say the number of churches saved by Muslims is greater than the number of churches burned and bombed by Muslims?

      The majority of Muslims support religious freedom

      Indonesia, Pakistan, Bangladesh, Egypt, Iran and the other countries at the bottom of the religious freedoms list contain the majority of Muslims.

      But they do support Henry Ford religious freedom, "You can have any religion you want, as long as it's Islam."

    5. Re:Where's your mosque? by mr100percent · · Score: 1

      Who's talking about government, we're talking about public opinion. All my data posted is talking about the populations.

      You think American Muslims only reject terrorism because of backlash fears? What a cynical view. Look, I live not too far from Ground Zero. I remember smelling it. The Muslims in NYC are not supportive of terrorism. It's not because of a backlash or fear of arrest, but because we are truly horrified by the thought of it. I'm actually offended by that remark.

      For some reason you seem to treat the extremist minority as more representative than the vast majority who are fighting it. The Muslims who protect churches, as the Quran commands, are more numerous and more supported than the ones who burn them down. Second, you're going to have to cite your sources on religious freedom; Indonesia has more than 200 religions despite being a Muslim country.

  123. The container is protected, not the contents. by rocket+rancher · · Score: 1

    ALTHOUGH SPEECH IS GENERALLY PROTECTED UNDER THE FIRST AMENDMENT, THERE ARE INSTANCES IN WHICH RESTRICTIONS ARE WARRANTED.

    HOLY SHIT, THEYRE CONSIDERING THE LAW AS IT'S WRITTEN AND APPLIED IN THE REAL WORLD

    There is no "general protection" for speech in the first amendment, there is absolute protection:

    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.

    How are they considering the law as it is written?

    The first amendment guarantees the right to say anything you want to say in whatever forum you choose. What it does not guarantee is freedom from the consequences of that speech. Nobody is going to defend a person who yells "Fire!" in a crowded theater with an appeal to the first amendment; ditto people who slander, libel, mislead, deceive, harrass, or intimidate other people with their speech. As my constitutional law professor suggested, think of the amendment as protecting a bucket, and think of speech as the contents being carried in the bucket. The bucket is sacrosanct -- you can put whatever you want in it, and it can be taken anywhere and dumped, but once the contents spill out, they no longer have the protection provided by the bucket. If you take a bucket full of lies and threats to a tea party rally, and spill it out there, where nobody has a problem with it, you are golden. But if you take the same bucket and spill it on the web, expect to be challenged in court.