Sorry Waldo, but I find your faux-libertarian & oh-so-reasonable apologia for Tamar Iveri’s published expressions of anti-gay incitement to be tendentious hogwash. I don’t know if you’ve noticed, or deliberately ignored the earlier posts pointing it out, but in many legal jurisdictions there are statutes limiting what masquerades in your argument as “freedom of expression”. These laws are not there by accident or a conspiracy of the powerful against the weak, but in the UK and many other countries to balance the rights versus the responsibilities of citizens in civil society. Nowhere is there a universal law guaranteeing freedom to say what you like or urge violence against those of whom you disapprove, not even in the US which boasts the enviable First Amendment.
You assert that “Resorting to a "commonsense" or "community" standard just doesn't do the job”. Well, what else would, then ? We live in communities and under the rule of law. Tamar Iveri may have the freedom to publicly approve of violence towards certain members of society in Tbilisi or Kampala, but not necessarily in London or Sydney.
Curious that your defence of Iveri extends to presuming what she might now say in exculpation, rather than what she did say.
You assert that “Resorting to a "commonsense" or "community" standard just doesn't do the job”. Well, what else would, then ? We live in communities and under the rule of law. Tamar Iveri may have the freedom to publicly approve of violence towards certain members of society in Tbilisi or Kampala, but not necessarily in London or Sydney.
Curious that your defence of Iveri extends to presuming what she might now say in exculpation, rather than what she did say.
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