Well just because a law somewhere says something doesn't make it correct. You can't just point to laws in a philosophical argument about principles. Principles are supposed to be what establish laws, not the other way around. Otherwise we ultimately fall into a kind of 'argument by convention' pattern that goes nowhere (i.e "this is right because people currently say it's right")Pluvia said:That's not the case, owning various other things, like porn for example, videos of murder, or hell even signs that say horrible or stuff (God Hates Fags, etc) or even flags representing various things are all protected under free speech laws. Nothing was said about making it, just owning it.
So the analogy is fine. Otherwise owning those things wouldn't be protected under free speech either.
If that counts as free speech in some country's laws, that's interesting. I don't think it makes much sense classifying it as speech though and private possessions have never been mentioned as part of the long tradition of arguments for free speech (e.g Milton, Mills, Jefferson etc)
One pretty massive difference is that private possessions often need no protection because unless you actively inform other people about them, no-one even knows you have them! Whereas speech, almost by definition, impacts other people (and therefore needs protection because a lot of those other people tend not to like it)