Rooster Cogburn said:
Treblaine said:
Rooster Cogburn said:
Why did they arrest him and not the mob that attacked him?
I read in The Times they initially "took him into custody for his own protection" and when the mob continued to be a threat they promptly decided he was the criminal and charged him after they lured him to the station saying they were taking him there to protect him.
Thanks for the explanation of the events. But this is the part I don't get. Charged him with what? That's a very odd thing to leave out. But as far as I can tell, the article does not say.
British Police, supposedly the best in the world, though this reminds me of history class where we learned about racism in America's deep south how an angry mob would demand revenge on one individual who offended them.
That was prejudiced cruelty on a different scale but the comparison is apt. I'm from Florida. Most of it is pretty cosmopolitan now, so people forget it was the lynching capital of the South at one time. Maybe that's why seeing this guy charged with a crime doesn't sit well with me at all. The dangers are within my cultural memory.
As offensive as any comments are, I'd say threatening someone so much that they have to be protected by the police is far more offensive. It is the definition of "offence" not the nebulous one of "I hear someone somewhere in the world wasn't duly deferential to the depressing issue".
This is why I like how freedom of speech is done here in the States. It creates our own set of problems but in theory American free speech is aggressively and intentionally anti-democratic. It means if the KKK wants to hold a rally, we can't stop them. But I think it's worth it.
I don't think the KKK can be cited as an example against freedom of speech.
For example KKK gatherings are forced to NOT incite violence or else they will be charged with conspiracy to commit a crime.
You don't need special exceptions to freedom of speech, you just need to enforce other laws that protect people from being victimised by another. It doesn't matter how a mob boss orders an assassin to murder an informant, he's just as guilty whether he uses speech, gestures, written message, as long as his orders are made clear HE is as responsible for the murder as the assassin he got the do the job for him.
The thing is silencing groups by force doesn't remove them, only forces them underground. But on the surface prevented from doing direct harm, that's better. There is an issue of obscenity, but obscenity is entirely and issue of public or private, an elderly married couple don't have to worry about whether someone watching would like to see them bump uglies, it doesn't matter. The match with obscenity and Freedom of Speech is you cannot force people to watch obscene things and I don't mean "well just don't look or don't use public facilities that are supposed to be available for all". But obscene things are not banned outright, they are only banned in so much as you can't broadcast them everywhere, that they need to be sought out. And have no doubt KKK is a special type of obscenity, morally obscene rather than graphically obscene as old people sex might be.
I think Freedom Of Speech is a perfect example of how democratic it is BY THE VERY EXAMPLE of allowing KKK rallies: the system is not prejudiced.
Democracy ultimately trusts in the people to do the right thing, that even if you allow KKK rallies that alone will not turn the entire population to evil. That if both the KKK and the Civil Rights movement get their fair opportunity to say then the people will make the right choice... not by forcing their hand, not by censoring opinions.
And that HAS happened in America's south, After the Civil Rights movement were able to exercise their Freedom of Speech and make their case the PEOPLE drove the KKK out of power with their votes.
That is the happy ending the long and often tragic story of America's deep south, it didn't end with a totalitarian regime forcing change on an unwilling a heartless population, the Civil Rights movement won the moral argument and it won over evil not with more evil.
The fact that the KKK can assemble in America yet are not in power is something for Americans to be proud of: Freedom, Democracy and Morality prevailed - in the end - over oppression and evil.
I'm not saying there aren't any racist in America, but they were defeated in the best way they could be.