BobG
Science Advisor
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drankin said:But I started the thread to see where people stood on free speech and why. I don't believe we have laws against speaking out against anything. Especially from ones own property behind closed doors. Even if the offending party is provoked to violence. Nor should there be IMO.
Except actually we do - specifically in instances where the offended party would be provoked to violence (See Chaplinsky v New Hampshire).
None the less, those limitations have been progressively narrowed ever since, to the point that the Ku Klux Klan advocating violence against racial minorities and the national government (Brandenburg v Ohio) and burning crosses (R.A.V. v City of St Paul) are considered speech protected under the First Amendment.
I think the crucial difference between today and even 1992 (when RAV v St Paul was heard) is that the distance between the speaker and his audience has been significantly reduced. You don't simply read about Jones burning a Koran a month or two after the fact - you get to personally witness it even when you're located halfway around the globe and even when the communicator is located on his own property behind closed doors.
In fact, you can personally witness a person being beheaded from your own home.
I'm not sure exactly how I stand on this, since my opinion on free speech has been mostly formed before the internet was created, but I think it is something that has to be considered.
DevilsAvocado said:Agree. Karzai has BIG part in this.
(What was he thinking? He’s the first one the Taliban’s would kill if the west would leave in a hurry??)
Did you see https://www.physicsforums.com/showpost.php?p=3233042&postcount=112"?
Yes, but I can't view the video until I get home.
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