Originally posted by french frank
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Sack this revolting specimen
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amateur51
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Originally posted by french frank View PostBut, on what basis is encouraging violence 'wrong'? (I'm trying to work out the answer, not defending the action!).[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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Originally posted by amateur51 View PostI'd make the distinction between the violence of the dispossessed and the violence of the powerful. The former is a function of their powelessness; the latter is a function of their powerlfulnessIt isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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amateur51
Originally posted by french frank View PostSame question: if you say to a powerful person in some way mistreating a weaker person, 'You have no right to do that'. Or 'It's wrong', what is the basis for saying it's wrong if, as waldo seemed to imply, there is no transient, unstable element to rights (like evolving social attitudes)?
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Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View PostBut she (or her husband in her name) does support those who have actually physically and violently attacked others
often, in certain cases, it is necessary to break jaws in order to be appreciated as a nation
I am proud of the fact how Georgian society spat at the parade
those who attacked the parade were Georgian youth of pure blood, still unspoiled by the "Westernized" tolerant reforms initiated by the Georgian President, who had condemned the violence against the Parade.
Giving support to those who use violence against unarmed, peaceful demonstrators is encouraging, supporting (or "inciting") further such acts, isn't it?
"Freedom of speech" means that she is entitled to voice her opinions about the sensitivity of holding the Parade on such a day in such a vicinity - because this view can be publicly discussed and views to the contrary put forward; positions explained, and some sort of tolerance of conflicting opinions reached on both sides.
She is even entitled to describe LGBTs as "deviant faecal matter" - that merely reflects on her own abominable, petty mindset, and works against her foetid opinions.
But calling out "go on, stick the boot in" isn't an exercise of "free speech" - it's encouraging violence.
The question then is whether this is allowed or not. Do we silence people who approve of violence against certain people or groups, simply because that approval can be said to constitute a form of encouragement? Do we silence people who verbally support animal rights groups which commit violence? Or who support violent protesters in a dictatorship? Can we verbally support the rebels in Syria? What if someone says that don't think the UK government should be in Northern Ireland. Does that encourage violence against them? (In a loose way, it does, no doubt.)
Personally, I think that the concept of "encouragement", insofar as it is used to police opinions, throws too wide a net; too much is fished up in the process. Too many important discussions would be closed down before they started. The concept of causation, which underpins the criminal justice system and the very notion of personal responsibility, would be stretched to breaking point. Just about any act of violence could be connected to any form of words. (Precisely what tyrannical regimes do all the time, of course.)
In the final analysis, the question is about what we decide for ourselves and what the government decides on our behalf. It is, of course, the government which does the banning here. They decide, in advance, what we are not allowed to hear for ourselves. If the government was allowed to ban this or that statement on the grounds that it offered encouragement to the "wrong" causes or contributed to violence "somewhere down the line" - God help us all.
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amateur51
Originally posted by waldo View PostTo be clear: Tamar Iveri is not inciting violence in this article. She needs to say a lot more than she does to meet that standard, and to involve herself in a much more intimate chain of causation than she does.
These things have certainly happened recently in Russia.
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Originally posted by amateur51 View PostWell that's the problem with religious belief, isn't it. I don't/can't subscribe to it and yet my world is required to be proscribed by her promoting her religious belief.
Bonkers.I keep hitting the Escape key, but I'm still here!
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Originally posted by amateur51 View PostWell I hope that you're right. What happens if a crowd of thugs, crudely chanting the sort of invective that she included in her letter to the Georgian President, were to attack a LGBT Pride event resulting in numerous injuries and two hospitalisations. Is she innocent of inciting violence?
These things have certainly happened recently in Russia.
The bottom line is surely that you cannot be guilty of a crime simply because you have (possibly) contributed to an attitude or an outlook in some way or another. It's just too loose. Are any of us innocent by that standard?
Now, if she gathered some people at her house and said, "Remember! Show no mercy to these perverted monsters! Make sure you bring your baseball bats and good luck!", we are beginning to get to the point where we can connect the violence with her words.
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amateur51
Originally posted by LeMartinPecheur View PostI agree that, sadly, religious beliefs can have bonkers results, but that doesn't mean she's 'bonkers'. Not at any level above mere 'trading insults' anyway. It will probably stay that way till all jurisdictions have reached the conclusion that holding any sort of religious belief is sufficient evidence of insanity. I'm not holding my breath on that one!
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Originally posted by waldo View PostThe bottom line is surely that you cannot be guilty of a crime simply because you have (possibly) contributed to an attitude or an outlook in some way or another. It's just too loose..
(a) he intends thereby to stir up racial hatred, or
(b) [B]having regard to all the circumstances racial hatred is likely to be stirred up thereby[/B]."
CJ&POA 1994It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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amateur51
Originally posted by waldo View PostYes, she is innocent. They are the ones who committed the actions - not her. If we extend the line of responsibility out from them (the people who committed the actions) to her (someone who didn't), we could extend the line to quite a lot of other people, too. (Have you heard what many of the Tories have said about gay marriage in parliament in the UK?)
The bottom line is surely that you cannot be guilty of a crime simply because you have (possibly) contributed to an attitude or an outlook in some way or another. It's just too loose. Are any of us innocent by that standard?
Now, if she gathered some people at her house and said, "Remember! Show no mercy to these perverted monsters! Make sure you bring your baseball bats and good luck!", we are beginning to get to the point where we can connect the violence with her words.
They'd both agree with you I'm sure, which may give the lie :biggrin:
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Originally posted by amateur51 View PostMy bad - I meant that the elevation of religious beliefs about any other value system is bonkers.LGBT people seek equality within society; Ms Iveri seeks supremacy of her belief system at the diadvantage of others.
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Originally posted by waldo View PostYes, she is innocent. They are the ones who committed the actions - not her. If we extend the line of responsibility out from them (the people who committed the actions) to her (someone who didn't), we could extend the line to quite a lot of other people, too. (Have you heard what many of the Tories have said about gay marriage in parliament in the UK?)
The bottom line is surely that you cannot be guilty of a crime simply because you have (possibly) contributed to an attitude or an outlook in some way or another. It's just too loose. Are any of us innocent by that standard?
Now, if she gathered some people at her house and said, "Remember! Show no mercy to these perverted monsters! Make sure you bring your baseball bats and good luck!", we are beginning to get to the point where we can connect the violence with her words.
Edit: french frank's citing of the Race Relations Act (?) would seem to bear me out.
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View Postbut I would consider it within the remit of the law to arrest me for saying I wanted them gone, or would not regret their passing, because a "wish" could be taken as open season for somebody to carry out my wish by proxy.
But so much for being innocent if you don't commit the violence yourself. (Not an uncontroversial decision, however).It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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