Short answer - No.interspark said:does anyone else believe that there are certain things that LEGALLY, we should and shouldn't be allowed to say? Discuss-
Not even that, it's a bastard child of selfishness and ignorance with a sidedish of "I like to hurt things".bahumat42 said:Which is selfish as hell.
In the US, Yes and No:rje5 said:So if someone says your girlfriend banged a bunch of guys she didn't, that's not hurting someone? It may not be true, but she'll get looked at and treated differently because of it if anyone believes it. There's a reason lying in court is illegal, because words have consequences. Someone screams "fire!", people freak out and run, a young kid gets hurt. That doesn't have consequences?ZorroFonzarelli said:With freedom comes responsibility, of course, but to those who are offended by the words of others, remember "Sticks and Stones"? Freedom of speech has never pulled a trigger, nor has it lynched anyone. Murderers and racists have, but Speech is speech - not action.
These are extreme cases but it proves words can hurt, even if they aren't intended to. Keep in mind, some people are extreme and will act on words, regardless if they were meant to be acted on or not. I can't tell someone that a guy is a terrorist. Because if he believes me and hurts him, it's because of something I said.
well, same here I supposebahumat42 said:im pleasantly suprised it wasn't somebody jumping on me for being anti american dream.
And your entirely right.
And a good chunk of people use the term wrong. There are bullying laws in a lot of places and we're pushing for more. These have been upheld as Constitutional thus far, and while it's not universal, neither is free speech.interspark said:Ok, here's a thought, a lot of people think that they can say whatever they want, regardless of how racist, hurtful or upsetting it might be, simply by waving "freedom of speech" in people's faces.
Yes, I remember a lot of trite little rhymes that mean nothing in the real world.ZorroFonzarelli said:remember "Sticks and Stones"?
wut, it means a lot in the real world. It means derogatory names can just fly by your ears if you want them too, but a rock can't. Seriously, if anything it saves energy to just ignore the people being cruel to you than to prosecute them. For people who can't ignore it, well I guess that's why there's parental figures or therapy. The sticks and stones thing is something we all learn at some point in life and no amount of government regulations is going to change that. You can't change human nature and some humans are just cruel, you gotta be strong and teach others to be strong.Zachary Amaranth said:Yes, I remember a lot of trite little rhymes that mean nothing in the real world.ZorroFonzarelli said:remember "Sticks and Stones"?
I can't speak for how it is outside the US, but honestly, this is true. One can't take legal action against another for calling you a jerk, no matter how fragile an ego might be.Zachary Amaranth said:Yes, I remember a lot of trite little rhymes that mean nothing in the real world.ZorroFonzarelli said:remember "Sticks and Stones"?
But in England the government can silence the media if they so desire. And in Australia they lock you up for speaking out against the government. Or so I'm told.bahumat42 said:well thats why we don't have full freedom of speech, it stops with "hate speech" or some such silly term.Dandark said:No freedom of speech is not all America cracks it up to be. I'd say it works well here in Britain except for the part where muslims are treated as an exception since nobody wants to be "Racist".
But it works.
Oh and i agree, its one of the many silly things americans harp on about and i honestly think the "american dream" is harmful as it prizes the one above the many. Which is selfish as hell.
Sure. Here's the problem as I see it: People are complete idiots sometimes, some of them much worse than others.interspark said:-Discuss-