• xxce2AAb@feddit.dk
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    21 days ago

    As a Dane, I’d like to take this opportunity to encourage the pasty prick with the faux Viking shield to crawl back up the wrong hole his mother accidentally shat him out of while giving birth to the good twin.

      • xxce2AAb@feddit.dk
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        21 days ago

        Thank you. Like Churchill, I’m a firm believer in the fine art of lovingly hand-crafted insults.

        And slights, of course - but such delicate subtlety is wasted on Nazis. Then again, oxygen is wasted on Nazis, and they should really cease using any. To be fair to them, given their demonstrated cognitive capabilities, they’re evidently already half-way there.

        • ThePyroPython@lemmy.world
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          21 days ago

          As a Brit, I salute your efforts in keeping the art of insult alive.

          Unfortunately, sharp whit is wasted on these evolutionary deadends. The only thing fitting for them is being on the receiving end of “creative” activities that will make the writing hand tremble of the poor Swiss who is now compelled to add several new lines to the Geneva Convention.

          • xxce2AAb@feddit.dk
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            21 days ago

            That’s incredibly flattering coming from the foremost modern practitioners of the mighty slight. Especially since I used to live and work in the UK - back when that was still possible, pre-Brexit - and indeed honed my craft on your fair isles.

            Well, you know what the Canadian Colonies have to say about it: “It’s never a war crime the first time”. Or my personal addendum: “As per the Golden Rule, it’s never a war crime when you do it to Nazis”.

            …Or fucking Russians. But I repeat myself.

  • TallonMetroid@lemmy.world
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    21 days ago

    Tolerance is a social contract in which people agree to not give each other shit over perceived differences. To be intolerant is to choose to opt out of that contract, in which case expecting to still enjoy its protections is fucking stupid. Which is to be expected from pedocons and their ilk, who are always acting in bad faith.

    • elbiter@lemmy.world
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      21 days ago

      That’s right. People must be treated according to how they treat others.

      There’s nothing more ridiculous and incongruent than a nazi beggin for the love and tolerance they deny to others.

    • k0e3@lemmy.ca
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      19 days ago

      And they always use this, “it’s a difference in opinions,” defense like it makes any God damn sense, right? Bitch, basing your actions on said shitty opinions means you opt out of our tolerance so fuck off.

  • Shanmugha@lemmy.world
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    21 days ago

    If this needs to be explained, then well… things are fucked up

    /looks around/

    Things are actually fucked up

    • ILikeBoobies@lemmy.ca
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      21 days ago

      Intolerance for intolerance has led to this. They just hide in their safe spaces spreading their hate unopposed.

      • Shanmugha@lemmy.world
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        21 days ago

        Guess you wanted to say that lack of intolerance for intolerance has led to this. Even I remember this idiotic tactic of “do something bad --> pretend it was a joke” and it was fucking working. Still is. Hate per se is not what has made societies ugly

        • ILikeBoobies@lemmy.ca
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          21 days ago

          No the lack of tolerance allows it to grow. If they were able to do it in public where it’s called out then it wouldn’t grow.

          Instead it exists in echo chambers that cannot be countered.

      • WoodScientist@lemmy.world
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        20 days ago

        We’ve had super-abundant tolerance for intolerance. We literally hanged people like Charlie Kirk at Nuremberg on charges of crimes against humanity and incitement to genocide.

        • ILikeBoobies@lemmy.ca
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          20 days ago

          I feel like you’re missing some pretext to Nuremberg and should look at what was going on in Germany in the years leading up to it.

  • hector@lemmy.today
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    20 days ago

    Outlawed is wrong. Because we cannot trust those doing the outlawing and should be fucking clear. Do I even need to bring up the elephant in the room? You want to Outlaw disagreements with US foreign policy?

    • WoodScientist@lemmy.world
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      20 days ago

      We hanged people at Nuremberg for incitement to genocide. Genocide is a crime with a very specific meaning. Yes, bad-faith actors can abuse a law prohibiting incitement to genocide, but the same can be done with any law.

      Advocating for genocide is not free speech - it’s attempted mass murder. Two people talking with each other and conspiring to kill someone else isn’t protected speech - it’s just conspiracy to commit murder. And if plotting to kill one person isn’t protected, plotting to kill thousands or millions shouldn’t be protected either. These people are plotting to commit genocide, and their intention is to use the power of the state as their murder weapon.

      We need to prosecute attempted genocide and conspiracy to commit genocide as vigorously as we would any plot to kill any individual. But we have this weird blind spot where if someone plans to commit murder on a large scale using the state as the murder weapon, that somehow we don’t recognize it as the same fundamental crime. Murder is murder. Killing is killing. Conspiracy to commit murder is conspiracy to commit murder. Whether the weapon is your own bare hands or the apparatus of a nation state. Advocating for genocide is nothing less than conspiracy to commit genocide.

      • Gorilladrums@lemmy.world
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        20 days ago

        I disagree with this take. The Nazis that were hanged at Nuremberg trails weren’t killed because of speech or beliefs, they were killed because of their actions. They actually carried out a genocide, that’s what they were guilty of.

        I actually disagree with this relatively new movement that pushes for hate speech laws because they’re something that’s inherently arbitrary and subjective, and they can and will be weaponized to serve nefarious agendas. Principles like freedom of speech MUST be applied universally and fairly in order for them to mean anything. Freedom of speech exists to protect offensive, controversial, and unpopular opinions against censorship because what can be considered any of those things can change at any time.

        For example, 60 years ago being racial equality was viewed as seemed very controversial and unpopular, but today? The opposite. However, in 60 years, public opinion on these views could flip again. If we pass laws that outlaw racist views as hateful, then it’s very possible that these laws could be changed at any point in the future to outlaw anti-racist views as hateful. I don’t want to ever live in a society where I’m being legally punished for arguing against segregation. Establishing such precedents is very dangerous and history has shown us that the consequences of these laws aren’t always what they were intended.

        I think the US freedom of speech laws as they are federally defined are the golden standard. They take into account all the reasonable exceptions, while maintaining a universally applied standard for everyone. If any individual turned their words into actions or clearly had the intent to take action then they’ll be persecuted for their actions. That’s the way it should be.

        • WoodScientist@lemmy.world
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          20 days ago

          The Nazis that were hanged at Nuremberg trails weren’t killed because of speech or beliefs, they were killed because of their actions.

          You are simply wrong in this case. We hanged Nazi propagandists, as we recognized that they were committing conspiracy to commit genocide.

          https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Julius_Streicher

          Most of the evidence against Streicher came from his numerous speeches and articles over the years.[72] In essence, prosecutors contended that Streicher’s articles and speeches were so incendiary that he was an accessory to murder, and therefore as culpable as those who actually ordered the mass extermination of Jews. They further argued that he kept up his antisemitic propaganda even after he was aware that Jews were being slaughtered.[73]

          Streicher was acquitted of crimes against peace, but found guilty of crimes against humanity, and sentenced to death on 1 October 1946.

          • Gorilladrums@lemmy.world
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            20 days ago

            But these are two different things though. In this case Streicher was taking action. He was directly working for the Nazi party, and his job was to convince people that the Nazi crimes were not only okay, but they should be celebrated and expanded. His actions actively aided the genocide, he was a part of the Nazi machine. That’s not a private citizen with personal opinions and beliefs.

            That’s very a big difference between him and some modern neo nazi who spends all day picking his nose, scratching his ass, and posting on 8chan about the world is controlled by the “joos”. As long dickheads like this keep their vile views to themselves, then I don’t think they should be legally persecuted simply for holding vile opinions. However, the moment their words turn into actions or the clear intention to implement neo nazi bullshit, then that’s when they should get persecuted by the law.

            • prole
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              20 days ago

              Charlie Kirk gave material support (a significant amount, to the point where Trump himself admitted he wouldn’t have won without him) to fascists. I think he himself would have balked at you suggesting that he wasn’t active in getting the current regime to where it is.

              • Narauko@lemmy.world
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                20 days ago

                And if the Trump administration were exterminating people in death camps and had been convicted in international criminal court then you would have a point.

                As it is the administration is obviously ignoring its own laws and being disgusting with racial profiling when deporting immigrants in the country illegally, and grabbing legal immigrants and citizens through this overzealousness and rule/law breaking.

                The US is not committing a holocaust against Hispanics. It is not committing one against the LGBTQ community either. Even if you believe that the US is capable of committing one here and that it is coming, it is not happening yet and so Charlie Kirk cannot be an execution for propaganda supporting mass murder/genocide that has already taken place.

                Execution for crimes that will be committed in the future is execution for thought crime or execution for free speech.

                • prole
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                  20 days ago

                  Ah OK, so we have to let them systematically murder countless people before we can do anything. Got it.

                  It’s not like we should ever learn from history, and try to do things differently this time.

                  And by the way, I’m not talking about extrajudicial killing. We were talking about Nazi trials.

              • Gorilladrums@lemmy.world
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                19 days ago

                There’s two issues with your take here. First, I never even implied that Kirk wasn’t a big Trump supporter, that was his whole shtick as a grifter. That’s just obvious, and nobody is arguing otherwise. Second, is being a Trump supporter now enough grounds to justify killing people? I agree that Trump and MAGA are pretty Fascist in nature, however the fact remains that Kirk was a private citizen at the end of the day. He was not an elected official and he did not hold any public office. He was just an activist/grifter who made a career simping for Trump. Hate him all you want, I certainly did, but killing him or anybody over this sort thing is a huge red line that should never be crossed. There’s a reason why societies throughout history that resorted to using violence for political discourse out of convenience rather than necessity are the ones always ended up being lead by a depraved tyrannical regime. There are many more lessons to learn from history than just acknowledging that Nazis are bad.

            • WoodScientist@lemmy.world
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              20 days ago

              Kirk was directly tied into the Trump administration. He himself sent busloads of followers to help storm the capital. Kirk’s jobs was to convince people that the genocidal plans of the Christian Nationalists are OK and should be celebrated and expanded. By the time you get to the level of power and influence of Kirk, you’re not really a private citizen anymore. He was instrumental in getting Trump elected. Yes, he doesn’t have a formal position in the government, but most of the charges against Streicher were for things that had nothing to do with the little bit of power he briefly had.

              • Narauko@lemmy.world
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                20 days ago

                And the Trump administration has not yet committed any Holocausts or genocide yet. At this point in time it is still “future crime”. The Trump admin hasn’t been convicted in the Hague of genocide.

                Once Trump opens death camps and starts exterminating LGBTQ people, only then does Kirk rises to the level of Streicher. Until that point, it is execution for political disagreement and free speech. You don’t have to like the guy in any way for that to be wrong.

                We don’t want to set a precedent that the best way to change someone’s political ideology is to kill them to eliminate that ideology.

                • petrol_sniff_king
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                  20 days ago

                  I feel like you’re reading to me a yugioh trap card that only activates when our opponent summons a big monster. God, the waiting must be agony.

                  You don’t have to like the guy in any way for that to be wrong.

                  I think death just makes you feel icky. Like, in general.

                  I don’t care that Kirk died. I’m not saying it’s a good omen for things to come, exactly, but I can’t even pretend to give a shit. The world does not need him.

              • Gorilladrums@lemmy.world
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                19 days ago

                Kirk was a piece of shit, you’re not going to find me defending him for what he did or stood for. My point is that the way he got killed is not acceptable. He shouldn’t get honored or anything like because fuck him, but cheering the way he got killed is not okay either. He wasn’t killed under the death penalty by the state, there was no due process, and there wasn’t even a valid reason for his death. He was gunned down in broad daylight in the middle of a public crowd by some random guy who didn’t like his political views… how is that not fucking crazy to you? Y

                ou’re trying very hard to justify it because you don’t like him, but you don’t seem to understand that this isn’t about him specifically. I don’t like Kirk either, but you’re not going to find me trying justify this type of political violence because it sets a dangerous precedent that violence is an acceptable part of political discourse. Political violence is always a two way street. Just as you’re trying to justify and cheer on this guy’s death and how he was killed, you’re making it more normalized and more likely that some conservative whacko isn’t to shoot down some left wing figurehead, and they’ll use the very same arguments and justifications that you’re using now. If you can’t accept someone like Hasan Piker or Nina Turner getting gunned down, then why would you cheer this on? If you condemn their deaths, but not Kirk’s death or others like him, then you don’t have any principles to stand on.

                • WoodScientist@lemmy.world
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                  19 days ago

                  Sorry. Don’t lecture to me about the dangers of political violence when we’re talking about someone that actively championed literal genocide. In a just world he would have been tried and hanged for crimes against humanity.

                  Kirk already engaged in political violence. He encouraged his followers to countless acts of violence. You’re just mad when people dare to fight back against their oppressors. You call it a two way street, but it was already a one-way street. Right wingers are allowed to plot literal genocide, and the rest of us are supposed to just sit back and pretend it’s just fine and normal.

                  No, sorry. Fuck everything about that. The world is a better place with Charlie Kirk firmly in the ground. He was a mass murderer.

              • Gorilladrums@lemmy.world
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                19 days ago

                How so? I think there’s a very clear distinction between the example he gave and what I was talking about. Streicher was a full blown Nazi party member and he held public office under their rule. His position in government is to actively enable a genocide through propaganda. That’s not a private citizens with vile opinions, that’s a public official acting on his beliefs directly. If Streicher was a private individual who held Nazi beliefs, he would have not been hanged for them because those are just his opinions, as vile as they may be.

                • grindemup@lemmy.world
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                  19 days ago

                  In your original comment, the distinction you made was between speech and action, nothing to do with whether they were a private citizen or member of the government. Now in this comment you are claiming that speech (“propaganda”, from your perspective) constitutes action. Are you trying to claim that hate speech & propaganda are “actions” if they come from an individual working for the state, but not from a private individual. As I said, your comments contradict each other in that sense.

      • prole
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        20 days ago

        When I went to public school, we were taught this shit and it was drilled into us that it’s very important to never forget any of it.

        It’s insane to see just how far our education system has fallen. American kids know nothing about any of this.

      • Sidhean@piefed.social
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        20 days ago

        Ah fuck, this makes sense. I was against the “outlaw” bit but (as a US citizen) I think I’m seeing things a little skewed. I cede its an important step to preventing this kind of thing (a little late lmao) :(

      • hector@lemmy.today
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        20 days ago

        You say that as our politicians at this you say that as our politicians at this very moment are claiming that those opposing genocide are advocating for genocide.

        • petrol_sniff_king
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          20 days ago

          A call to outlaw the far right is not a call to outlaw the left as well. You don’t have to pretend that it is.

          • hector@lemmy.today
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            20 days ago

            How do you not know it is not that way it is the other way. The right will get a pass unless they’re in opposition to the ruling party, the left would be surppressed.

            It is already like that, giving the administration the power to illegalize speech is beyond recklessly ignorant of the situation even before this shit show we have seen in the modern era from the end of Obama until now. Or we could say even from bush until now.

            • petrol_sniff_king
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              20 days ago

              giving the administration the power to illegalize speech

              Why would we give trump that power?

              I mean, we could give him the power to illegalize nazi speech specifically. That would be fine. I bet he wouldn’t use it.

              I don’t think you’re thinking about this strategically. If you were playing magic the gathering, does hurting your opponent’s life points mean they get to hurt yours now? Do you have to lower all your defenses so they can get a turn? No. We don’t have to illegalize leftist speech either.

              If they ever try to, be very angry.

              • hector@lemmy.today
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                20 days ago

                The administration already accuses non-fascists of being fascist, bad faith anti-Semitism allegations to a much higher degree than everyone else, and Biden was pretty bad himself. The man endorsed near blood libel against Hamas claiming he saw the evidence of 40 beheaded babies, that was not true and disprovable in real time, and he never corrected himself.

                I do not play Magic the gathering, but I do follow current events enough to know that our politicians would accuse non Nazis of being Nazis while they are nazis or refuse to oppose nazis.

                • petrol_sniff_king
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                  20 days ago

                  Yeah, and they were wrong. So, oppose Biden’s, propose the other.

                  What you’re describing is a logistics problem.

            • Doug Holland@lemmy.worldOPM
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              20 days ago

              I’m a tad uncomfy with it myself, and eager to hear a better idea, but outlawing fascism is preferable to fascism.

    • ronl2k@lemmy.world
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      20 days ago

      Outlawed is wrong. Because we cannot trust those doing the outlawing

      People who hold that view are NEVER the target of extremist hate groups. Hate groups are always merely a talking point to them.

    • hector@lemmy.today
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      20 days ago

      That they are disposable tools of the Rich and Powerful that will discard them and deny their rights as well if they achieve their goal. Which by all indications they are.

  • Taleya@aussie.zone
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    19 days ago

    Paradox goes right the fuck away when you look at it in the context of social contract

    • Bahnd Rollard@lemmy.world
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      20 days ago

      Its the lone exception to itself. Thats why it gets a fancy name “The paradox of tolerance”. To abide by the intolerant is to validate them, thus contradicting your own tolerance of others.

      Its circular logic, and the only solution is it carve out one exception, intolerance of those who are intolerant of others

  • Seth Taylor@lemmy.world
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    20 days ago

    In this day and age, someone will lose their job over posting this on their Facebook while the nazis get to roam free

    • hector@lemmy.today
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      20 days ago

      Which is why we should not support outlawing views as in the post. Everything else yes, illegalizing no, even in good times we should think that we can’t trust those doing the outawing.

      • prole
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        20 days ago

        Germany felt the need to do it after WW2, and they thrived for ~80 years since.

        • hector@lemmy.today
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          20 days ago

          In Germany it is in effect illegal to protest Israel and they unreservedly support them while they do the same thing to the Palestinians that were done to the victims of the Nazis. Gaza is literally a large ghetto Ala Warsaw. Starvation and all.

          And Germany is a much smaller less diverse country than the United States, which has led to more divisive Politics as groups are played off of each other here.

          I should not need to tell you that none of our politicians could be trusted with this power, not the least our current government. The most dishonest ever.

          • prole
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            20 days ago

            I just think it’s wrong to disregard the entire concept when it has proven, in the real world, to work better than the alternative.

            • hector@lemmy.today
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              20 days ago

              It absolutely has not been proven, I just gave you proof that it does not work. They are literally supporting fascists pursuing a final solution against their others as we speak and have been that entire 70 years. They also are on the cusp of losing the country to their far right back by Russia and now the US that will try to fix elections so they never leave power. That is not working, that is failing. On both counts.

              • prole
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                20 days ago

                They are literally supporting fascists pursuing a final solution against their others as we speak and have been that entire 70 years.

                Not really. Maybe a marginal amount of them hiding in the shadows, but they’ve only become emboldened recently. Germany thrived for decades while having laws against flying flags with swastikas on them.

                And I never said it was a perfect solution, just that it’s better than the alternative. Which is to do nothing and allow the fascists to infect the politics of your nation.

                • hector@lemmy.today
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                  20 days ago

                  You seriously think allowing the American politicians, our current Administration at that, decree what is hate speech and disallowed? You can’t be serious. You think it would lead to better outcomes allowing the US president and his appointees to dishonor the First Amendment and decree what is hate speech?

                • hector@lemmy.today
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                  20 days ago

                  Also, Israel has been like this since the start, Germany knew it, I knew it, there was never a secret to those in reality.

      • petrol_sniff_king
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        20 days ago

        Which is why we should not support outlawing views as in the post.

        Hector, the Trump admin was doing this yesterday. They don’t care what lows you’re willing to sink to, they’re already thirteen levels deeper.

  • odelik@lemmy.today
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    20 days ago

    To quote something I said to a transphobe asking about where they can safely question “transgenderism”

    And before you go off with, “So much for being tolerant of my beliefs!”.

    Tolerance is about preventing harm being committed onto others. Tolerance can not condone intolerance being committed against others. Intolerance always leads to harm being committed against others. Tolerance, by definition, cannot be tolerant of intolerance without becoming intolerant itself.

    For example:

    Me allowing you to openly critize my friends in the trans community without stepping in and telling you, “You’re a bigot and your behavior is not welcome here.” will lead to your behavior harming them by implicit acceptance of your behavior.

    So, with kindest regards.

    #You’re a bigot and your behavior is not welcome here.

  • eletes@sh.itjust.works
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    21 days ago

    I think I fall more in the free speech absolutist camp on this one. Look at the UK and how they made saying “Support Palestine Action” a terrorism charge.

    I get that it’s a group that does protests and sometimes vandalism but imagine in the US if saying “Support Antifa” got you terrorism charges

    • WoodScientist@lemmy.world
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      20 days ago

      The key is you have a well-crafted law that actually makes specific things illegal. You don’t create a shitty law that makes it easy to abuse. The law that the UK government is using isn’t a well-crafted law that the government is abusing - the law was written to be deliberately vague to allow just this sort of abuse. The key is to write laws that can’t be so easily abused.

      Yes, you can whine that any law can be abused. But that’s the same for ANY law. A particularly craven judge could rule that even a crime as straightforward as murder could apply to something completely nonviolent. But that doesn’t mean we don’t outlaw murder. There is no law that cannot be twisted by depraved individuals to apply to any situation whatsoever. But if you have a functioning court system, you prevent such abuses.

      Or look at a crime like conspiracy to commit murder. That crime is mostly about speech - you’re punishing someone for using their speech to plot the death of someone else. And yet we don’t see governments vastly abusing prohibitions on conspiracy to commit murder to silence their political opposition. We don’t see that because those laws were well written.

      One obvious solution is to make conspiracy to commit genocide a harshly enforced crime. Are you running a political movement that intends to seize power and kill a bunch of innocent people? That’s just conspiracy to commit murder on a massive scale. You’re just choosing to use the state as your murder weapon.

      Remember, we literally hanged people at Nuremberg for crimes against humanity and incitement to genocide - mostly for the things they said. We hanged people for their words, when those words were just parts of a plot to commit mass murder.

      Conspiracy to commit murder is not protected speech, and neither should be conspiracy to commit genocide.

    • dustyData@lemmy.world
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      20 days ago

      Freedom of speech is not freedom from consequences. You can call for the genocide of a minority group all you want. Still a hate crime, and you should face charges because you are a threat to the peace of a healthy society.

      • Coleslaw4145@lemmy.world
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        20 days ago

        What if you’re calling for group A to stop genociding group B and then your own government tries to spin that as you calling for the genocide of group A and then labels you a terrorist?

  • Creat@discuss.tchncs.de
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    21 days ago

    No, they still get human rights. Because that’s how that works. They are universal. If they believe in them or support them is irrelevant. I don’t like it either, but that’s literally the foundation of the whole thing.

    • dustyData@lemmy.world
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      20 days ago

      Human rights don’t include the right to be an asshat and kill or call for the death of other people. They can keep their human rights intact while rotting in a prison cell for hate speech and hate crimes.

      • Creat@discuss.tchncs.de
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        20 days ago

        Yup. All correct. There’s laws that deal with so that. The point is just that no matter what you do, no matter how horrible a person you are, you still have your human rights.

        This is actually essential. Stripping people of their fundamental rights is in their playbook.

  • merc@sh.itjust.works
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    21 days ago

    That is a very intolerant position. Therefore, by the logic of this post, people who say things like “They must be ridiculed, ostracized, outlawed and if they still won’t shut up, they must be beaten senseless” must be ridiculed, ostracized, outlawed and if they still won’t shut up, they must be beaten senseless.

    • bss03@infosec.pub
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      21 days ago

      Yes, the resolution to the “paradox” of tolerance is that (a) “the intolerant” is anyone that would deny human rights to any other human (b) the intolerant must be denied political power since they will use it to create an intolerant society.

      Tolerance doesn’t justify political violence.

      However, defense of self or others CAN justify violence against the intolerant. The threat of increased stochastic violence due to inflammatory rhetoric is not as clear as a person stating their intent to kill and then brandishing a firearm, but both can be mortal threats. At the very least acts of political violence CAN be justified by the actor to a jury of their peers. Denying a political violence can ever be justified (I’m looking at you Bernie) ignores history and supports every authoritarian regime.

      I’m not saying that the Kirk murder was justified, but … I’d be willing to hear a defendant out as a jurist or jury member.

      • merc@sh.itjust.works
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        21 days ago

        There is no resolution to the paradox of intolerance.

        What you’re providing is an excuse to be intolerant. You say “I’m allowed to be intolerant to this guy because this guy is intolerant”, but whatever excuse you use, you’re now intolerant, and you deserve whatever punishment you think intolerant people deserve.

        There’s no special category for “people who are intolerant, but only intolerant to those they view as intolerant”. There’s the tolerant, and the intolerant. If you are intolerant, no matter how good your reasons, you’re still intolerant. Thus, the paradox.

        • bufalo1973@piefed.social
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          21 days ago

          The resolution comes when you understand that tolerance is a contract. If you don’t sign that contract you are not protected by it. Is that simple.

          • merc@sh.itjust.works
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            21 days ago

            There’s no contract, there’s a social norm to be tolerant. And if you’re intolerant you’ve violated that social norm. That includes if you’re intolerant of the intolerant.

              • merc@sh.itjust.works
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                20 days ago

                Right, so if you’re intolerant of anybody, including intolerant people, you’re not following that norm.

                • bufalo1973@piefed.social
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                  20 days ago

                  Wrong.

                  You tolerate the tolerants, I tolerate you. You don’t tolerate tolerants, I don’t tolerate you.

                  And by default, everyone is tolerant until proven intolerant.

        • Olhonestjim@lemmy.world
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          21 days ago

          There is no paradox. Tolerance is a contract. Be respectful and be respected. Be kind and receive kindness. Be tolerant if you want to be tolerated.

          Opt out of that contract and you will no longer be covered by it. You will reap what you sew.

          If you attack someone, they get to defend themselves. You don’t get to whine about them being violent against you. You earned that shit. And the rest of us get to laugh at you and applaud.

          I know. I know. It’s just so HARD to understand. For you.

          • merc@sh.itjust.works
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            21 days ago

            Tolerance is not a contract. You’re never required to sign anything and agree to the terms.

            But, if it were a contract and not just a social norm, anybody who is intolerant breaks those terms, correct? That includes people who are intolerant of the intolerant?

              • merc@sh.itjust.works
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                20 days ago

                You know someone has a great and logical argument when they say “Incorrect. Fuck off.” It’s definitely not a sign that they have no argument at all and are attempting to avoid admitting that.

                • Olhonestjim@lemmy.world
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                  20 days ago

                  This isn’t an argument. You deny the most basic foundation of human interaction in a functioning society, so you deserve no part in one. Fuck off.

        • bss03@infosec.pub
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          20 days ago

          No, I am tolerant of the intolerant. I believe they should receive all the same rights as I do: food, water, shelter, basic healthcare, UBI, etc. Political power is NOT a human right, it is a privilege and a responsibility. If you are intolerant, you don’t get to use political power for any purpose. This resolves the paradox, preventing the intolerant from creating a intolerant society from a tolerant one.

          Justification of (political) violence is really separate from the paradox of tolerance. Ideally, no violence would be required because none would be intent on and capable of denying someone else their bodily autonomy. Failing that, violence in defense (of self or others) is justified.

          • merc@sh.itjust.works
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            20 days ago

            So you vehemently disagree with the meme because there’s no escaping the paradox of intolerance?

            • bss03@infosec.pub
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              20 days ago

              I disagree with the “meme” but not for that “reason”. Also, that “reason” is an untrue statement.

        • WoodScientist@lemmy.world
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          20 days ago

          Whatever happened to the right of self defense? For example, Charlie Kirk was literally trying to kill me. He was actively attempting to do so. That isn’t hypothetical or allegorical. Charlie Kirk literally wanted me dead, and he was taking active material material steps to advance that goal.

          If someone busts into my house and tries to kill me with a gun, I’m allowed to shoot them to defend myself. But suddenly when someone like Kirk wants to kill me and thousands like me, it’s sacred protected speech just because he’s chosen to use the state as a murder weapon.

          • merc@sh.itjust.works
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            20 days ago

            “Literally”? Did he shoot at you? Or did he try to stab you?

            “That isn’t hypothetical or allegorical”? No? Did he try to run you over with his car?

            “Charlie Kirk literally wanted me dead” I’m sure he had absolutely no idea who you were. He may have wanted a whole category of people that includes you dead, but he wasn’t actually trying to kill you himself, and didn’t know you personally.

            “it’s sacred protected speech just because he’s chosen to use <speech>” Yes, when someone uses speech it’s different from when they aim a gun at you and pull the trigger. Is that surprising to you?

            • WoodScientist@lemmy.world
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              19 days ago

              “I didn’t plot to kill you, I just plotted to kill your entire family. You have no business complaining.”

              • merc@sh.itjust.works
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                19 days ago

                So, you think he literally knows your name and plotted to kill your specific family? Are you really that deluded?

                • WoodScientist@lemmy.world
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                  19 days ago

                  Sorry. Maybe you’re just too comfortable as the member of a majority group, I don’t know. But for those who are targeted, they can understand that a threat to wipe out a group you are a member of is no different than a threat to kill you personally. You’re just engaging in sophistry.

          • Narauko@lemmy.world
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            20 days ago

            I am not sure what you wouldn’t get about immediacy of threat in relation to self defense. There are very clear reasons that self defense involving lethal force is restricted to the immediate act, and that some of those restrictions are loosened only within your home.

            Killing someone because you believe they will kill you or cause your death at some point in the future is not an acceptable way for a society to function.

            • WoodScientist@lemmy.world
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              19 days ago

              You’re right. It’s a different crime. It’s not self-defense in the immediate criminal sense. But Charlie was absolutely guilty of incitement to genocide and crimes against humanity. We’ve literally hanged people at tribunals like Nuremberg for doing the exact same thing that Charlie spent his whole career doing. In just world, Charlie would be indicted on crimes against humanity, convicted, and hanged for his crimes.

              • Narauko@lemmy.world
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                19 days ago

                If those crimes had actually taken place you would most likely have my agreement, but right now it is a preemptive strike because some people believe a genocide it is coming and inevitable.

    • elbiter@lemmy.world
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      21 days ago

      Bullshit. You are putting the attacker and the defendant in the same position.

      Tolerance is a contract: if you break it, you’re not covered by it.

          • merc@sh.itjust.works
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            20 days ago

            Ah, so you agree I’m right. If you break the contract you’re intolerant. Therefore, if you’re intolerant towards intolerant people, you’re breaking the contract and are not covered by it.

    • WoodScientist@lemmy.world
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      20 days ago

      It’s not about tolerance. It’s about conspiracy to commit genocide.

      We all recognize that plotting and conspiring to kill one person is wrong. But somehow when someone starts plotting to kill a million people all at once, people like you come out of the woodwork and start hand wringing about freedom of speech. Conspiracy to commit a crime is not protected speech. Conspiracy to commit mass murder is not protected speech. Murder is murder whether you use a knife or the apparatus of the state. People who advocate for genocidal political policies should be treated no differently than those that plot to murder a single individual.

      • merc@sh.itjust.works
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        20 days ago

        People like me who understand logic? This is about tolerance, and the paradox of tolerance.

        People like you bringing your own bullshit baggage into the discussion and trying to derail it are the problem.

    • Sidhean@piefed.social
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      20 days ago

      “Suck it. If you wanna be a facist pos i’ll fight you over it.”

      see? like that. you don’t have to actually be a nazi, or advocate for them. If you think its reasonable to fight only against peaceful people, and that violent people should always get their way (lest we ourselves resort to violence (egads!)). I’m not sure I agree.

      • merc@sh.itjust.works
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        20 days ago

        “Suck it. If you wanna be a facist pos i’ll fight you over it.”

        That sounds like a very intolerant position. According to the meme, I must now ridicule, ostracize and outlaw you. If that doesn’t work, I’m supposed to beat you senseless, because that’s what intolerant people deserve. Unfortunately, this would make me intolerant so someone is free to do the same to me.

        • Sidhean@piefed.social
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          20 days ago

          That’s how wars work, yeah. Someone attacks someone else, that person fights back, everyone condemns the defender and decries “both sides! Wah wah! Their defending themselves, how violent!”

  • HazardousBanjo@lemmy.world
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    19 days ago

    Don’t tell this to all these popular fake leftist commentators.

    They were all crying like their own fathers were just killed when Kirk got Kirk’d.