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| quote: | Originally posted by NYCTrancefan
Renegade have you ever heard the discourse that openly takes place by some of these individuals in reference to Western society, while they live in the midst of it mind you. |
Oh yes. Believe me, we have our fair-share of idiotic Muslim fundamentalists in Australia as well...
| quote: | | Freedom of speech has always entailed responsibility in our actions, sadly until something happens, after the fact usually then people speak up. |
The right to free speech and the need to be responsible for our actions are essentially two different things. Our right to speak freely extends to the point at which the speech incites direct physical harm to individuals (to use the old example, this would mean shouting "Fire!" in a crowded theatre or, to use the more topical example, encouraging the faithful to slaughter "infidels") and so, providing that these boundaries are not crossed, this is the extent to which our responsibilities lie with regards to speech so as far as I'm concerned. Anything else - regardless of how abhorrent, distasteful or stupid the topic of the speech may seem - is fair game.
| quote: | | Protesting the war and presenting differing political viewpoints are one thing, standing in front of the Finsbury Park Mosque and calling for jihad, cut them down limb by limb and we side with the terrorists are all statements that leaves one dumbfounded. |
If these men are saying "It is your categorical duty as a Muslim to kill the unfaithful" then, as I said above, this would constitute a direct call to inflict physical harm and this goes well beyond the right one has to speak as one wishes. If, however, the extent of their "hate-speech" consists of platitudes like "Osama bin Laden is a good Muslim" or "These terrorist attacks were a justifiable response to Western policy in the middle-east" (which, let's face it, are the sorts of things that the Muslim clerics targetted by this new legislation are saying - I have not heard of one of these clerics here, in the UK, or anywhere else in the western world directly calling for violence against their fellow civilians) then this is, as I see it, well within their fundamental right they have to speak freely. Can you deport / imprison someone for calling Stalin or Hitler good men, despite the large number of people they killed? Could you deport them for supporting the Vietnam war, in which tens of thousands of innocent civilians were indiscriminantly killed in the name of an ideology? If not then what, exactly, is the difference?
| quote: | | In a democracy there are ways to express one's opinions, advocating violence tacitly or directly through such filth, while under the guise of religous freedoms does not hold sway. |
You're going to have to distinguish between "advocating" violence and "inciting" violence, though. The invasion of Iraq was inherently violent, for instance, and resulted in the deaths of nearly 500 times as many civilians as the London train bombings, but is Blair likely to imprison / deport the people who supported it?
Like I said, the direct call to violence is inherently wrong and no society need tolerate those who attempt to do so. However, there is a big difference between what these Muslim clerics are saying (or at least what I've read about them saying) and the sort of extremities of speech that would justify them being outlawed.
| quote: | | All of a sudden the freedom of speech of these hatemongers becomes more important than the words they preach to spread hatred of others. |
But that's the thing: freedom of speech is central to the idea of democracy. You can't justify the invasion of a sovereign state under the guise of support for democracy and then follow it up by undermining the fundamental tennets of democracy at home, as Blair and Howard are doing right now. What sort of logic is that?
As an atheist, I find most religious speech distasteful, especially the sort of fundamentalist drivel coming from the mouths of these immams. However, as I recognise the right of these views to be aired publicly (and summarily exposed, publicly, for the idiotic tripe that they are) I will also gladly stand up for their right to say it.
| quote: | | What is freedom of speech without responsibility when others use that right to threaten the broader society as a whole. |
Precisely, but right to free speech != right to incite harm upon society.
| quote: | | If you are in Britain, respect Britain. |
Define respect? I am a British national and an Australian citizen and I don't particularly respect either government at the moment. Do I have an obligation to respect these administrations or the culture / laws they supposedly represent?
| quote: | | I am an immigrant myself and would never preach or endorse the deaths of other people in America no matter that I disagreed with the war in Iraq. |
Yep, obviously agreed.
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