thedoclc said:
brainless_fps_player said:
thedoclc said:
brainless_fps_player said:
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Okay, I think you misunderstood me. I don't believe in freedom of speech either (which I think was your point, but it is late and you use big words)
I believe morality should be separate from state, and don't believe that state should prohibit any speech, apart from copyright stuff.
As for the tyranny of the majority, classic fallacy which Mill himself counter argued by distinguishing between types of pleasure. Eg, even if a woman was gang raped by 100 men, the pleasure of the men could never outweigh the trauma suffered by the woman.
If I have misunderstood you, it is only because you are using latin to describe the fallacies, which makes it real hard to argue against you if the guy you're arguing against doesn't read latin.
Mill argued that the desires of the majority cannot and do not trump the rights of the individual, going so far as to state that if one person believes something, and all the world is against him, the world has no more right to silence him than the individual has to silence the world. His idea was pretty much unlimited free speech, which I can't support. It's -too- loose. An example of "tyranny of the majority," in the US would be something like how many people would vote to make Christianity the official religion of the US. They may even get 51% of the vote. If they did, then "tyranny of the majority," certainly applies as the majority would choose to vote out the rights of the minority. Or, imagine a vote to make simply being gay illegal. I'm sure in quite a few states it would be voted up by a majority of the population.
It's pretty easy to take Mill to task on his "types of pleasure," argument. Who is Mill to say he knows what high and low pleasures are and that man should progress in such and such a way?
For the most part, I agree with almost unlimited free speech, and the limits the US places are pretty reasonable. No speech designed to incite immediate violence, no speech which presents a clear danger to national security, etc. I'd rather have a market solution to the obscenity issue, like a (working) v-chip for parents to use to make their own decisions, but that's just my opinion and I'm not a legal expert.
If you say a certain type of speech (let's make it concrete: a Klansman's anti-Semitic Holocaust denial) is morally wrong, I agree. However, the second you say the government should -not- regulate the Klansman's speech, you've necessarily said he has the -right- to say it. It's still morally -wrong-, but at the same time, it's legally protected speech (in the US; some countries ban Holocaust denials.) To the extent you believe government should not prohibit speech, you are endorsing free speech. To say you think it's wrong of some people to say what they mean to say (a point you made) is not the same thing as saying it should be illegal for them to say it. I think that's where the confusion lies. Free speech doesn't protect just your right to be nice; it protects your right to be controversial, even to be a downright offensive douchebag, from government interference. It protects someone's right to be a racist, ignorant moron just as much as it does your right to call your leaders out on their errors, to champion good causes, and to publish art as you see fit.