I can understand why you would think there would be an exception, after all, common sense says that if there is to be any exception, the holocaust would surely be it.
However, that starts begging the question of what constitutes exceptions and of course that'll spark cries of "me too" from all quarters and it'll all be very messy.
However, that starts begging the question of what constitutes exceptions and of course that'll spark cries of "me too" from all quarters and it'll all be very messy.
Originally posted by DinoDoc
Isn't it a bit dangerous to start declaring "exceptions" to the right of free speech? Especially with the zealous defense of the cartoons coming from Europe, isn't it time to review those laws in this new light? After all to quote C0ckney some things are worth fighting for.
Isn't it a bit dangerous to start declaring "exceptions" to the right of free speech? Especially with the zealous defense of the cartoons coming from Europe, isn't it time to review those laws in this new light? After all to quote C0ckney some things are worth fighting for.
I've pulled out this quote before, but here it is again: I reject the slippery slope argument because all politics is a slippery slope. Whether free speech should be extended to Holocaust denial should be handled on a specific basis, not dismissed out of hand because it conflicts with a view of a complete and total right to free speech - which, as already noted, is fictitious.
Personally, I support America's stance, allowing these people to protest and deny as much as they want, as long as they don't hurt anyone. But if Europeans find Nazism so dangerous to their society today that it must be regulated against, is that really hypocrisy? It seems like an appropriate concern to me.
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