No, censorship is never a good thing regardless of how much you hate or disagree with an opinion it has a right to exist and be heard, case closed
I think the answer depends on the specifics of the situation. Sometimes yes, sometimes no.Drathnoxis said:In many controversial subjects there are opinions which may offend certain individuals. Opinions that, while offensive, are substantially represented and can serve as opposition to the general consensus.
Opinions including, but not limited to:
-Gay is a choice
-Transwomen are just boys pretending to be girls (and vice versa)
-Christians believe in fairy tails
-Gamers are hateful misogynist neckbeards
-etc.
Opinions that may offend people, but are still held with conviction by their owners.
*Note: Please do not use this thread to specifically discuss any of the opinions mentioned above, I claim no ownership to such opinions, and use them purely as examples of opinions that could be found offensive.*
So let's say that in my town, I have a club that meets to discuss and argue about various issues. Should my club disallow statements of opinions that people find offensive, and after so many warning bar them from access to the discussions? Or, should everybody be entitled to state their opinions, no matter how foul they may seem to others, as long as they aren't meant as attacks upon a specific individual or group that attends the club?
EDIT: If you believe offensiveness should be censored, who do you think should be determining offensiveness? Should it be the owners of the establishment, the guards that work to keep discussions civil, should it be a majority vote type thing, or something else entirely?
And nobody is advocating for that discussion so stop implying that "Free Speech" (Your spellchecker seems to be set to PZ Myers just FYI) want to have precisely that discussion.Secondhand Revenant said:I think the answer depends on the specifics of the situation. Sometimes yes, sometimes no.Drathnoxis said:In many controversial subjects there are opinions which may offend certain individuals. Opinions that, while offensive, are substantially represented and can serve as opposition to the general consensus.
Opinions including, but not limited to:
-Gay is a choice
-Transwomen are just boys pretending to be girls (and vice versa)
-Christians believe in fairy tails
-Gamers are hateful misogynist neckbeards
-etc.
Opinions that may offend people, but are still held with conviction by their owners.
*Note: Please do not use this thread to specifically discuss any of the opinions mentioned above, I claim no ownership to such opinions, and use them purely as examples of opinions that could be found offensive.*
So let's say that in my town, I have a club that meets to discuss and argue about various issues. Should my club disallow statements of opinions that people find offensive, and after so many warning bar them from access to the discussions? Or, should everybody be entitled to state their opinions, no matter how foul they may seem to others, as long as they aren't meant as attacks upon a specific individual or group that attends the club?
EDIT: If you believe offensiveness should be censored, who do you think should be determining offensiveness? Should it be the owners of the establishment, the guards that work to keep discussions civil, should it be a majority vote type thing, or something else entirely?
Sorry to the pure frozen peach people, but I don't think having a debate on whether black humans are people, for example, would be very productive or useful and productivity and usefulness are bigger concerns for a discussion group, I imagine, than pure free speech on principle just because.
I imagine the anti abolitionists would have said something very similar to this. They believed their points were moral and unchangeable to the point where it should never be put forwards in polite society that black people were anything other than animals. They were utterly and completely wrong of course, but they also wanted to shut down any kind of conversation around the issue.Sorry to the pure constitutional rights people, but I don't think having a debate on whether black humans are people, for example, would be very productive or useful and productivity and usefulness are bigger concerns for a productive society, I imagine, than pure free speech on principle just because.
Well, I mean, if we're never allowed to discuss such things, how could it ever have come about that it was an incorrect standpoint? I mean, go back not even a hundred years and likely the argument of "Are Actually People" and you'd likely have had plenty of people saying "Obviously not, we don't need to discuss this".Secondhand Revenant said:I think the answer depends on the specifics of the situation. Sometimes yes, sometimes no.
Sorry to the pure frozen peach people, but I don't think having a debate on whether black humans are people, for example, would be very productive or useful and productivity and usefulness are bigger concerns for a discussion group, I imagine, than pure free speech on principle just because.
This guy, this guy get's it. My unusual hats off to you good sir for putting the point so wonderfully.Random Gamer said:To elaborate a little bit on that, I've been known (well, on other forums at least) to take seriously posts that could be kind of trolls, and refute them. Not because I was dead sure the guy was serious and wanted to show him why he was wrong, but because, usually, there's a 5 or even 10 to 1 ratio between readers and posters on most forums, and when someone states something asinine or totally wrong, it needs to be debunked, for the sake of the silent majority of readers. Even if every single poster thinks the guy's a troll and is full of it, it might be a good thing to actually explain why, just in case some lurker/reader might actually think the troll has a point.vallorn said:Now, the reason why, even racist ideas, should be debated in practice. When you leave them alone and make it impossible to discuss them, you protect them from logical arguments. You ensconce the alkali metal of a racist, sexist or homophobic argument within an oil of outrage that means it sits there, undamaged by the oxygen of debate.
Spot1990 said:No of course not. But don't get all uppity when everyone says you're an asshole. Freedom of speech includes "you're a piece of shit." and "go fuck yourself".
Sure, but sometimes quality or intention of the free speech matters. Social scientists, for instance, might debate on whether being gay is a matter of nature or nurture, and they might have very strong opinions, but the instant phrases like "go fuck yourself" start flying around, the conversation has ceased to be productive and the person behaving that way needs to be removed from the conversation to keep things productive. It's also just not very respectful, and in some environments people do have the right to ask you to leave.Spot1990 said:No of course not. But don't get all uppity when everyone says you're an asshole. Freedom of speech includes "you're a piece of shit." and "go fuck yourself".
If what you're interested in is open debate, then you do have to be prepared to encounter opinions you may find disagreeable or objectionable. That does not mean that anyone may say whatever they like, but rather that people should be polite, neutral, and objective in how they approach controversial subjects and articulate disagreeable opinions. Requiring politeness and civility in how opinions are articulated is the first towards enforcing the most important requirement for productive debate, namely the expectation that opinions be defensible. That is, you must be able to argue your opinion rationally and within some logical framework, without resorting to conspiracy theories, name-calling, and hostility.Drathnoxis said:So let's say that in my town, I have a club that meets to discuss and argue about various issues. Should my club disallow statements of opinions that people find offensive, and after so many warning bar them from access to the discussions? Or, should everybody be entitled to state their opinions, no matter how foul they may seem to others, as long as they aren't meant as attacks upon a specific individual or group that attends the club?
...exactly this.vallorn said:This guy, this guy get's it. My unusual hats off to you good sir for putting the point so wonderfully.Random Gamer said:To elaborate a little bit on that, I've been known (well, on other forums at least) to take seriously posts that could be kind of trolls, and refute them. Not because I was dead sure the guy was serious and wanted to show him why he was wrong, but because, usually, there's a 5 or even 10 to 1 ratio between readers and posters on most forums, and when someone states something asinine or totally wrong, it needs to be debunked, for the sake of the silent majority of readers. Even if every single poster thinks the guy's a troll and is full of it, it might be a good thing to actually explain why, just in case some lurker/reader might actually think the troll has a point.vallorn said:Now, the reason why, even racist ideas, should be debated in practice. When you leave them alone and make it impossible to discuss them, you protect them from logical arguments. You ensconce the alkali metal of a racist, sexist or homophobic argument within an oil of outrage that means it sits there, undamaged by the oxygen of debate.
It's the same argument that Atheists like myself use to remind ourselves to debate Creationists. "You will never convince the Creationist, their mind is already made up, your purpose in the debate is to persuade the one observer, who might otherwise come to believe that the earth is a few thousand years old, otherwise."
I agree with this 100%. And this is exactly the reason why "just ignore the trolls" is not always a viable strategy. Even moreso if the trolls are numerous in number.Random Gamer said:To elaborate a little bit on that, I've been known (well, on other forums at least) to take seriously posts that could be kind of trolls, and refute them. Not because I was dead sure the guy was serious and wanted to show him why he was wrong, but because, usually, there's a 5 or even 10 to 1 ratio between readers and posters on most forums, and when someone states something asinine or totally wrong, it needs to be debunked, for the sake of the silent majority of readers. Even if every single poster thinks the guy's a troll and is full of it, it might be a good thing to actually explain why, just in case some lurker/reader might actually think the troll has a point.vallorn said:Now, the reason why, even racist ideas, should be debated in practice. When you leave them alone and make it impossible to discuss them, you protect them from logical arguments. You ensconce the alkali metal of a racist, sexist or homophobic argument within an oil of outrage that means it sits there, undamaged by the oxygen of debate.
I would say that would not count as a personal attack. It is offensive to gamers in general, sure, but it isn't singling out an individual or individuals.Something Amyss said:This also sort of brings something up to me.
OP asks:
Or, should everybody be entitled to state their opinions, no matter how foul they may seem to others, as long as they aren't meant as attacks upon a specific individual or group that attends the club?
So, in this hypothetical scenario, when someone says "Gamers are hateful misogynist neckbeards," does it matter whether there are members of the group who consider themselves gamers? If it does, I'm having trouble seeing how this isn't censorship under the definition that you seem to be working with (wherein a private club agrees to certain rules of conduct).
That said, my comment was a general one about what Vallorn said, it isn't directly linked to the OP. It's just that if it's a board I visit frequently and if it's a topic that matters to me, if there aren't rules against it, I'll have a tendency to tell apparently trollish opinions that they aren't correct, for the following reasons. If the forum's rules are to totally ignore anything resembling trolling, it'll be a bit difficult for me to always do it but I'll conform as much as I can - even though my tendency would be to debate and debunk.SolidState said:I agree with this 100%. And this is exactly the reason why "just ignore the trolls" is not always a viable strategy. Even moreso if the trolls are numerous in number.
Exactly. People are allowed to voice their opinions and others are allowed to voice their dislike of them and/or their opinions.Spot1990 said:No of course not. But don't get all uppity when everyone says you're an asshole. Freedom of speech includes "you're a piece of shit." and "go fuck yourself".
I don't want to derail, but I've had gay people tell me that they consider being gay a choice, and that they dislike the argument that it's genetic because then it looks like it's some kind of disease or flaw. Their opinion is that they are grown adults and can stick their dick wherever they want, thank you very much.Vigormortis said:In open discussions, no, of course not. Not if we're to hold to the principles of free speech.
That said, the great thing about free speech is, while someone has the right to say something as monumentally stupid and demonstrably false as "gay is a choice", you have the same right to call them an idiot and explain why they're an idiot.
'Tis the boon and the bane of free speech.
I'm not sure 'demonstrably false' means what you think it means.Vigormortis said:In open discussions, no, of course not. Not if we're to hold to the principles of free speech.
That said, the great thing about free speech is, while someone has the right to say something as monumentally stupid and demonstrably false as "gay is a choice", you have the same right to call them an idiot and explain why they're an idiot.
'Tis the boon and the bane of free speech.