I was pointing out the prior poster's flaw in their statement. If I said, "I'm all for protecting people's property, but there are certain people that should be allowed to take anyone's property," then my second statement negates what I said initially. To your second point, I am not seeing where you are going. By stating the same message over and over again it becomes assault?Callate said:Only if one has an extremely black-and-white view. As I believe I mentioned, one can make a case that a point is reached when words cease to be speech, i.e. the communication of ideas and becomes assault, that is, an act whose principal purpose is to inflict injury.Fleischer said:You completely countermand yourself there. You can't be "all for free speech," and then turn around and say you want some speech limited
Yes, they would be.Callate said:I'm aware of that. The common example is "you can't yell 'Fire!' in a crowded theater." Would you suggest that someone who favored such a thing also "completely countermanded themselves" if they said they were all for free speech?
And if so, is there any point to such an assertion?
you mean the WBC or the regular church?Hero in a half shell said:Haha, well done Rankin County. Apart from the guy that got assaulted, this was a pretty smart, non violent way of dealing with these guys. Unfortunately the Church will just view it as persecution against them.
That people attending a funeral do not have the right to keep these people from interfering with their private activity because doing so would violate the rights of the protesters is the silliest thing here. That one has to go to such lengths to achieve the end that ought to be allowable by a simple injunction is asinine.NerfRIder said:Am I the only one who thinks this is funny? One, or many, committed assault by beating that one protester, others lied about not seeing said assault and thus helped the criminal(s), others committed a crime by purposely blocking the protesters vehicles. All of this was done to deny a group their first amendment right, the same right Sgt. Rogers was entrusted to protect and died for, so that they couldn't protest at Sgt. Rogers funeral?
A funeral does not simply serve to honor the dead; its most useful function is to allow some measure of closure for the living. This process of private grief ought to have some measure of protection, even if it is simply in the form of a restraining order. Yet because this is a political protest (in the loosest sense), such a restraining order is impossible to acquire.NerfRIder said:I can't think of many better ways to disrespect someone who died for their country then to deny a group of people their rights, once again the rights the dead man died for, in some kind of twisted way to honor said dead person.
Because you enjoy solving problems in the worst possible way? This solution would include problems like reduced law enforcement presence (getting rid of police officers), dramatically increased costs (finding and training new ones), and would introduce a large number of rookie police officers presumably lowering overall force readiness. That's a great solution.NerfRIder said:Ever police officer involved with this should be put on leave without pay and investigated, if they are found to have actively helped to deny this group their right to protest and to have like other people get away with criminal activity then they should be fired on the spot.
Yes, they are within their right to protest. But, as has been pointed out a great many times by courts across the land, that ones right to speak is limited when it unjustly infringes upon the rights of others.NerfRIder said:As much as I disagree with this church's illogical, irrational, ignorant beliefs, they are well within their right to protest and just because you don't like what they have to say doesn't give you he right, nor the justification, to break the law. If one actually believed that it does give them that right, or justification, then that belief would just be as ignorant and illogical as the church's beliefs that they so despise.
This is not free speech; it's a hate speech. That this is protected by the constitution is a serious flaw in the system, not something making America great. That the WBC is able to exploit loopholes in the law is indicative of something seriously wrong.Fred Phelps said:Whatever righteous cause the Jewish victims of the 1930s?40s Nazi Holocaust had, (probably minuscule, compared to the Jewish Holocausts against Middle Passage Blacks, African Americans and Christians?including the bloody persecution of Westboro Baptist Church by Topeka Jews in the 1990s), has been drowned in sodomite semen. American taxpayers are financing this unholy monument to Jewish mendacity and greed and to filthy fag lust. Homosexuals and Jews dominated Nazi Germany ... The Jews now wander the earth despised, smitten with moral and spiritual blindness by a divine judicial stroke ... And God has smitten Jews with a certain unique madness ... Jews, thus perverted, out of all proportion to their numbers energize the militant sodomite agenda... Jews are the real Nazis.
I know right? i can't even imagine what life in my neighbourhood would be like if i weren't allowed walk into old mrs hankins garage and yell at her to drop the fuck dead.joshuaayt said:I don't know... I mean, I'm not really sure being a total dickhead deserves a beating- I usually only support vigilantism for stuff like murder and whatnot. Aren't these people legally allowed to protest? Isn't freedom of speech a Big Thing in America? If the people show intolerance for what some guy is saying, how can you expect the government to act differently?
I don't agree that these people should be allowed to protest in such a manner, but I do fear the implications that stopping them would bring to light.
It does matter. Us talking about this only keeps these issues alive. They need to be ignored. They don't actually do anything - their whole functionality is based on causing an uproar and spurring discussion. This is what they want.sheic99 said:It doesn't matter one way or the other if we talk about them. The churches like this one tend to fairly short lived, relatively speaking. Fred Phelps is the sole leader of his congregation that when he dies, the church will fall apart without his leadership.
Your arguments are stupid. You either are taking things wayy out of proportion or not even thinking logically. Also you are now correcting grammar, losing pretty much any credibility in my eyes. The police beating your kid is not the same at all as PEOPLE beating some guy everyone hates, you're making straw men.Iron Lightning said:Right, because clearly traffic violations are on the same level as assault. There's a classification of laws known as "petty offenses" which all consist of minor things such as speeding or stealing a candy bar that are mostly just there so that the police department can better fund itself by issuing minor fines. Forgive me if I was being overly axiomatic, it was not my intention to say that all minor and victimless laws need to be obeyed at all times. However, it was my intention to say that all of the more serious laws ought to be obeyed at all times, such as the law against assault.smallthemouse said:Well if thats the case then you must go and tell the police about every single traffic violation you've ever committed and pay your five million dollars in speeding tickets.
I have seen it and I maintain that I believe I have the ethical strength to avoid being a hypocrite. That, and I know that the best way to deal with this brand of complete wankers is to ignore them.See my previous post about if it was your family member who died.
You wrote: "obvious oppression." This implies that those oppressed we're obviously seen as oppressed back in the day. If I misinterpreted you and your point was really about how we can only see that women and blacks we're oppressed with hindsight then I'm glad that we agree that the majority opinion can not be trusted since it only sees clearly with hindsight. By that logic, there is no reason to oppress anyone on the basis of majority opinion since it is so often incorrect. Also, if you wish to change the law so that it does not offer freedom of speech to the WBC then you are setting a very dangerous precedent. If that meaning was not your intention, then please write carefully.Hindsight was exactly what i was talking about, we are NEVER going to look back and think, that WBC and their 72 members were right. Please read carefully.
So... you think the founding fathers were murderous hypocrites that wouldn't hesitate to discard the ideals that they fought so hard for the instant someone made them angry?The first amendment's *****PRIMARY***** purpose was that we can speak out against the government. Remember who wrote this stuff, people who just got out of a monarchy where they might be killed for speaking against the king. You think they would hesitate to murder people like WBC if they protested the dead colonist soldiers in General Washington's army (a massive celebrity at the time) during the American Revolution?
If we assume that the amendment's "primary" purpose was to allow people to speak out against the government then why does that mean that we should discount the first amendment's "secondary" purposes? The first amendment says nothing about only protecting speech against the government. You have no grounds for saying that we should ignore any part of the first amendment.
Oh, so now it's okay because he survived the beating, clearly. I'm sorry, but in the adult world we generally don't beat each other up just because one party said some nasty words. Why are you drawing an analogy with capital punishment of children? Do you wish to live in a world where the police beat you for saying a dirty word? For not going to bed on time? For yelling at someone? Because clearly everyone needs to be treated as a child their whole lives. Legally, people have the right to beat up another party only in self-defense. Self-defense does not mean defending your feelings. Also, I don't think it's unreasonable of me to expect more civilized behavior from my fellow man than a grizzly bear.As for the beating, yes it is ok, he did not die. Tell me, were you ever punished when you were a kid, or were you sent to your room to think about what youve done? Grow up, there is violence in the world, and this is hardly the situation to be defending this guy. And it is not like being beaten during a store robbery or a mugging, there you are within your rights to be defended, as you did nothing wrong. Don't poke a grizzly bear and cry for pity when it mauls your ass.
One more thing, please learn to use apostrophes.