Yes. Totally agree. But I'm not arguing those people aren't horrible. I'm saying the Constitution gives every citizen a right to protest peacefully, and having a hateful message isn't the same thing as wanting to incite a race war.
The people who want to incite violence shouldn't be allowed to protest their hateful message. But as difficult as it is to accept, if somebody wants to peacefully protest racism, awful ideals it is their lawful right. Taking that right away doesn't solve the problem of racism, it would just rile up even more hate filled people to speak out and it would weaken the entirety of our Constitution. If we stay stripping away rights from people we don't like - and any decent person should adamantly abhor Nazi's and White Supremacists - where does it stop?
That seems like a fair statement, but also doesn't seem to be related to free speech policy.
Didn't you say there's nothing wrong with "simply being a nazi" in the Charlottesville thread
Think it's pretty clear where you stand
Oh come the fuck on.
I get this is an emotional conversation, but calling those that are arguing for free speech Nazi sympathizers is just fucking ridiculous.
Actually I said I don't agree with going up and beating the shit out of someone simply for being a Nazi. I don't think violence helps or solves anything.
That, or the people arguing for free speech, doesn't make us a Nazi sympathizer.
If you want to debate the limits of speech and protest by all means lets have it, but we're on the same side at the end of the day. We just have different ideas of how we want to accomplish our goals.
Actually I said I don't agree with going up and beating the shit out of someone simply for being a Nazi. I don't think violence helps or solves anything.
That, or the people arguing for free speech, doesn't make us a Nazi sympathizer.
you are a nazi sympathizerBecause every single person there is a nazi? Because every single person there specifically want to incitie violence and get into a race war?
I vehemently disagree with every single person who was protesting (re:not including the brave counter protesters) in Charlottesville, but not all of them were Nazi's. Many of them were stupidly protesting the taking down of a monument. Now, what they were protesting is racist, full stop, but they weren't literally there hoping a huge fight would break out.
Besides, a person self identifying as a Nazi, Neo-Nazi, Nazi sympathizer, doesn't automatically mean their goal as an individual is to incite violence. This is why we can't just generalize these protest. We can all agree these people are hateful, horrible people, but we can't assume some idiot 20 something year old ignorantly protesting some vague idea of keeping America white is the same as somebody who is there trying to start a riot.
People are individuals. We have to treat them as such.
That seems like a fair statement, but also doesn't seem to be related to free speech policy.
That seems like a fair statement, but also doesn't seem to be related to free speech policy.
There's all sorts of room for debate about how hate speech laws can be implemented and whether a city should be the one leading the charge to tackle your constitution and whether supporting a Nazi's right to gather and speak makes that supporter a Nazi.
But the moment you criticize somebody for humanizing a human, as some posters have done regarding a post about Nazis being persons, you have lost the damn plot. While they have atrocious beliefs, they are still a person. They are deserving of all the inherent human rights and civil rights granted to persons under international and national law. Persons are not any less persons for having hateful or stupid beliefs.
There's all sorts of room for debate about how hate speech laws can be implemented and whether a city should be the one leading the charge to tackle your constitution and whether supporting a Nazi's right to gather and speak makes that supporter a Nazi.
But the moment you criticize somebody for humanizing a human, as some posters have done regarding a post about Nazis being persons, you have lost the damn plot. While they have atrocious beliefs, they are still a person. They are deserving of all the inherent human rights and civil rights granted to persons under international and national law. Persons are not any less persons for having hateful or stupid beliefs.
There's all sorts of room for debate about how hate speech laws can be implemented and whether a city should be the one leading the charge to tackle your constitution and whether supporting a Nazi's right to gather and speak makes that supporter a Nazi.
But the moment you criticize somebody for humanizing a human, as some posters have done regarding a post about Nazis being persons, you have lost the damn plot. While they have atrocious beliefs, they are still a person. They are deserving of all the inherent human rights and civil rights granted to persons under international and national law. Persons are not any less persons for having hateful or stupid beliefs.
doesn't? When face with clear and present evil, try to protect it because actually acknowledging the equality of marginalized people would be such a disruption to so many people.
"These people want to kill minorities"
"But free speech"
There's all sorts of room for debate about how hate speech laws can be implemented and whether a city should be the one leading the charge to tackle your constitution and whether supporting a Nazi's right to gather and speak makes that supporter a Nazi.
But the moment you criticize somebody for humanizing a human, as some posters have done regarding a post about Nazis being persons, you have lost the damn plot. While they have atrocious beliefs, they are still a person. They are deserving of all the inherent human rights and civil rights granted to persons under international and national law. Persons are not any less persons for having hateful or stupid beliefs.
There's all sorts of room for debate about how hate speech laws can be implemented and whether a city should be the one leading the charge to tackle your constitution and whether supporting a Nazi's right to gather and speak makes that supporter a Nazi.
But the moment you criticize somebody for humanizing a human, as some posters have done regarding a post about Nazis being persons, you have lost the damn plot. While they have atrocious beliefs, they are still a person. They are deserving of all the inherent human rights and civil rights granted to persons under international and national law. Persons are not any less persons for having hateful or stupid beliefs.
Well yeah, I wouldn't consider myself a free speech absolutist. It just gets annoying when we have thread after thread where people post "hate speech isn't free speech" and getting pissed off at universities and shit issuing permits to people who swear they're coming to give a non-violent speech as if the university had a lot of choice in the matter. Acting as if the speech alone (and not, you know, the violence that accompanies bad actors at these rallies) is already prohibited clouds the discussion over why these rallies are allowed to happen and what it would take for them to be banned.Let me stop you right there. I don't give a shit that these are legal. Being an open nazi or a nazi sympathizer is legal. And it just got people injured and killed. So obviously it's a huge issue that it's legal AND it's an issue that we have people who care more about the law then the people white supremacists are actively hurting.
Because every single person there is a nazi? Because every single person there specifically want to incitie violence and get into a race war?
I vehemently disagree with every single person who was protesting (re:not including the brave counter protesters) in Charlottesville, but not all of them were Nazi's. Many of them were stupidly protesting the taking down of a monument. Now, what they were protesting is racist, full stop, but they weren't literally there hoping a huge fight would break out.
Besides, a person self identifying as a Nazi, Neo-Nazi, Nazi sympathizer, doesn't automatically mean their goal as an individual is to incite violence. This is why we can't just generalize these protest. We can all agree these people are hateful, horrible people, but we can't assume some idiot 20 something year old ignorantly protesting some vague idea of keeping America white is the same as somebody who is there trying to start a riot.
People are individuals. We have to treat them as such.
There's all sorts of room for debate about how hate speech laws can be implemented and whether a city should be the one leading the charge to tackle your constitution and whether supporting a Nazi's right to gather and speak makes that supporter a Nazi.
But the moment you criticize somebody for humanizing a human, as some posters have done regarding a post about Nazis being persons, you have lost the damn plot. While they have atrocious beliefs, they are still a person. They are deserving of all the inherent human rights and civil rights granted to persons under international and national law. Persons are not any less persons for having hateful or stupid beliefs.
Actually I said I don't agree with going up and beating the shit out of someone simply for being a Nazi. I don't think violence helps or solves anything.
That, or the people arguing for free speech, doesn't make us a Nazi sympathizer.
If you want to debate the limits of speech and protest by all means lets have it, but we're on the same side at the end of the day. We just have different ideas of how we want to accomplish our goals.
Then demonstrate it. Because letting someone like say the President, or Congress, or local mayors decide this is ripe for corruption. Refusing permits and then citing people for violations was used heavily to round up Black protesters during the Civil Rights movement.
Because every single person there is a nazi? Because every single person there specifically want to incitie violence and get into a race war?
I vehemently disagree with every single person who was protesting (re:not including the brave counter protesters) in Charlottesville, but not all of them were Nazi's. Many of them were stupidly protesting the taking down of a monument. Now, what they were protesting is racist, full stop, but they weren't literally there hoping a huge fight would break out.
Besides, a person self identifying as a Nazi, Neo-Nazi, Nazi sympathizer, doesn't automatically mean their goal as an individual is to incite violence. This is why we can't just generalize these protest. We can all agree these people are hateful, horrible people, but we can't assume some idiot 20 something year old ignorantly protesting some vague idea of keeping America white is the same as somebody who is there trying to start a riot.
People are individuals. We have to treat them as such.
Yes. Totally agree. But I'm not arguing those people aren't horrible. I'm saying the Constitution gives every citizen a right to protest peacefully, and having a hateful message isn't the same thing as wanting to incite a race war.
The people who want to incite violence shouldn't be allowed to protest their hateful message. But as difficult as it is to accept, if somebody wants to peacefully protest racism, awful ideals it is their lawful right. Taking that right away doesn't solve the problem of racism, it would just rile up even more hate filled people to speak out and it would weaken the entirety of our Constitution. If we stay stripping away rights from people we don't like - and any decent person should adamantly abhor Nazi's and White Supremacists - where does it stop?
Cantwell: Im not even saying were non-violent, Im fucking saying we didnt aggress, we did not innitiate force against anybodywe will fucking kill these people if we have to.
118 posts.
Ah, one of those.
"Someone on NeoGAF" would probably have been better terminology. I would never call a racist with a burner a Gaffer.
From the Vice video on the rally:
Yes, these people do not want to incite a race war. These people are non violent.
Fuck outta here with this bullshit
If you sincerely feel the need to let everyone know that Nazis are people too... you've lost the damn plot
Not sure what you're trying to say here. What you quoted wasn't about free speech and the quote was fairly unambiguous.doesn't? When face with clear and present evil, try to protect it because actually acknowledging the equality of marginalized people would be such a disruption to so many people.
"These people want to kill minorities"
"But free speech"
Canada, Germany.
Look if you want to argue the USA is so extra fucked up that unlike everywhere else stopping Nazis from being public is worse for y'all that's fine but then don't start acting like the US Constitution is some great document that fights fascism because you're the only place in the West that lets them march. Not to mention also celebrates how great the law is that lets them.
We need to do this:
Actually I said I don't agree with going up and beating the shit out of someone simply for being a Nazi. I don't think violence helps or solves anything.
That, or the people arguing for free speech, doesn't make us a Nazi sympathizer.
Non-violent hunger strike for white supremacy 2017 is going to be one for the ages.
But the moment you criticize somebody for humanizing a human, as some posters have done regarding a post about Nazis being persons, you have lost the damn plot. While they have atrocious beliefs, they are still a person. They are deserving of all the inherent human rights and civil rights granted to persons under international and national law. Persons are not any less persons for having hateful or stupid beliefs.
Can people stop arguing for restrictions to our freedom of speech? It's a really easy fucking argument to understand how not allowing a group to peaceably assemble because one dumb fuck with a car murders somebody in another city representing a different group than the Boston one (remember, the Boston people say they aren't Nazis) is unconstitutional. And if you don't agree, then understand that your argument will lead to groups like BLM not being allowed to protest or even organize since they have been blamed for the murder of several cops - which I'm not saying is right, but our current justice department would definitely argue that (the president already has!!).
This isn't hard to understand and it's extremely disheartening to see people call others Nazi sympathizer for pointing out something which should be obvious.
Are you trying to argue Canada and Germany don't have Neo Nazis because that's certainly not true. If not publically seeing the face of it let's us pretend it doesn't exist, then maybe that's not a good course of action. Germany actually has the historical context of being Nazi and then losing everything over it, so you'd expect especially high dislike for it over privileged Americans but the Neo Nazi movement started there. Realistically, these people exist whether you see them or not and we want to deal with them in sensible ways that do not trade rights away. Trump, as you may have heard, literally called out the "alt-left" and pumped up a "both sides" argument. He frequently talks up enhancing libel laws because the free press is dishonest. How could any rational person ask for more ability to interpret such a law in this environment? This is literally what it was designed to protect.
Because every single person there is a nazi? Because every single person there specifically want to incitie violence and get into a race war?
I vehemently disagree with every single person who was protesting (re:not including the brave counter protesters) in Charlottesville, but not all of them were Nazi's. Many of them were stupidly protesting the taking down of a monument. Now, what they were protesting is racist, full stop, but they weren't literally there hoping a huge fight would break out.
Besides, a person self identifying as a Nazi, Neo-Nazi, Nazi sympathizer, doesn't automatically mean their goal as an individual is to incite violence. This is why we can't just generalize these protest. We can all agree these people are hateful, horrible people, but we can't assume some idiot 20 something year old ignorantly protesting some vague idea of keeping America white is the same as somebody who is there trying to start a riot.
People are individuals. We have to treat them as such.
.. How does this not end up being selectively enforced against progressive causes in the many areas of this country where the political establishment is conservative?
Didn't know we had Nazi sympathizers here too tbh
Didn't know we had Nazi sympathizers here too tbh