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I thought this was interesting
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/wales/north_east/7373639.stm
--
Regards
Stephen
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> I thought this was interesting
>
> http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/wales/north_east/7373639.stm
Hehe, I think the interesting part is whether his blog posting amounts to a
threat in the eyes of the law or not. If it does, then no "freedom of
speech" card can get you off, that's irrelevant. Without seeing the whole
posting it's impossible to tell just from that one line quoted whether it is
a threat or not.
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On Wed, 30 Apr 2008 10:04:40 +0200, "scott" <sco### [at] scottcom> wrote:
>> I thought this was interesting
>>
>> http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/wales/north_east/7373639.stm
>
>Hehe, I think the interesting part is whether his blog posting amounts to a
>threat in the eyes of the law or not. If it does, then no "freedom of
>speech" card can get you off, that's irrelevant. Without seeing the whole
>posting it's impossible to tell just from that one line quoted whether it is
>a threat or not.
>
I agree, It is good to see that RL can apply to this world too :)
--
Regards
Stephen
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scott <sco### [at] scottcom> wrote:
> Hehe, I think the interesting part is whether his blog posting amounts to a
> threat in the eyes of the law or not. If it does, then no "freedom of
> speech" card can get you off, that's irrelevant.
Overall, "freedom of speech" is irrelevant. There's no such thing.
There is "freedom of speech" even in dictatorial police states: You are
allowed to say whatever you want and have any opinion you want, as long as
it's the correct opinion. If it's the wrong opinion, to jail you go.
How is that different from the "freedom of speech" in so-called "free
countries"?
And don't answer with the bullcrap about the difference being that the
punishment cannot be applied arbitrarily in democratic countries, because
that's not true. It has been seen countless times how they arbitrarily
punish people for having the wrong opinion. They will always find some
law which they can use as an excuse. The law book is very thick.
--
- Warp
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> Overall, "freedom of speech" is irrelevant. There's no such thing.
>
> There is "freedom of speech" even in dictatorial police states: You are
> allowed to say whatever you want and have any opinion you want, as long as
> it's the correct opinion. If it's the wrong opinion, to jail you go.
>
> How is that different from the "freedom of speech" in so-called "free
> countries"?
In free countries you get *very* specific laws about exactly what is illegal
to say/write when and where. For example, giving false details to a police
officer, defamation, etc. In non-free countries there is just some general
law that if you say something the government/police don't like you will be
arrested.
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scott <sco### [at] scottcom> wrote:
> In free countries you get *very* specific laws about exactly what is illegal
> to say/write when and where.
Which, at the same time, are so vague and generic that they can be used
for almost anything.
--
- Warp
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From: John VanSickle
Subject: Re: Blogger fined for 'menacing' rant
Date: 30 Apr 2008 08:30:03
Message: <4818664b@news.povray.org>
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scott wrote:
>> Overall, "freedom of speech" is irrelevant. There's no such thing.
>>
>> There is "freedom of speech" even in dictatorial police states: You are
>> allowed to say whatever you want and have any opinion you want, as
>> long as
>> it's the correct opinion. If it's the wrong opinion, to jail you go.
>>
>> How is that different from the "freedom of speech" in so-called "free
>> countries"?
>
> In free countries you get *very* specific laws about exactly what is
> illegal to say/write when and where. For example, giving false details
> to a police officer, defamation, etc. In non-free countries there is
> just some general law that if you say something the government/police
> don't like you will be arrested.
In non-free countries, the law is against "agitating speech," or
"counter-revolutionary speech," or "seditious speech," or something
quite non-specific, and something that can be interpreted however the
oligarchy orders the court to interpret it. And many dictatorships
won't declare that the speech in question is the reason for the arrest
(although everyone with first-hand knowledge will know it), but either
quietly off the offender, or arrest him on an entirely different and
entirely fictitious charge.
Canada is presently toying with the idea that speech critical of certain
groups is a violation of that groups civil rights; one of their Human
Rights Commissions is presently pursuing a case against a colunist for
writing an article which the Muslim plaintiffs found offensive.
The real problem with speech rights in the U.S. is that a lot of the
legal action is in civil court, where the rules of evidence have been
rewritten for the comfort and convenience of the legal profession.
Regards,
John
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>> In free countries you get *very* specific laws about exactly what is
>> illegal
>> to say/write when and where.
>
> Which, at the same time, are so vague and generic that they can be used
> for almost anything.
IANAL, but the laws I know seem very precise and specific, and no way can
they be applied to things like criticising the government in general. Do
you know any different?
For example, to be prosecuted for some sort of defamation, it must be proved
that what you wrote/said is false, which of course is impossible if what you
have said is your opinion (eg "I think everyone in government should resign
because they are really bad at their jobs"). In some non-free country
though, you would be punished for saying that.
Again, to be prosecuted for perjury, it must be proved that what you have
said is false, and it only applies in very certain official situations (eg
in a court). There is no way this law can be so "vague and generic" that
you could use it to punish someone outside of these situations.
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scott <sco### [at] scottcom> wrote:
> IANAL, but the laws I know seem very precise and specific, and no way can
> they be applied to things like criticising the government in general. Do
> you know any different?
For example in Finland there's a law about incitement against certain
groups of people (such as ethnic groups).
What the letter of the law means is that it's illegal to incite people
to commit crimes against people based, for example, on their ethnicity
or nationality.
In practice, however, this is an "umbrella law" which can and *is* used
to sue anyone who offends, and sometimes even criticizes certain religious
or ethnic groups, even when there's no incitement. The law is stretched to
conventiently cover these cases too.
This is applied rather hypocritically here too. For example extremely
and outrageously offensive public displays of Jesus go completely
unpunished, but even mild parodies of Mohammed can cause and have caused
police investigations.
--
- Warp
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> What the letter of the law means is that it's illegal to incite people
> to commit crimes against people based, for example, on their ethnicity
> or nationality.
Why just on ethnicity or nationality, why is it not just illegal to incite
people to commit crimes against anyone or group? IMO law should not get
mixed up with ethnicity, nationality and religion, the laws should be equal
for and against everyone.
> In practice, however, this is an "umbrella law" which can and *is* used
> to sue anyone who offends, and sometimes even criticizes certain religious
> or ethnic groups, even when there's no incitement. The law is stretched to
> conventiently cover these cases too.
Well then I guess it's a problem with the wording of the law, or the justice
system in Finland, if such a specific law can be "bent" to be used for cases
which clearly have no incitement. If you had a jury system, then maybe they
would prevent such stupid applications of the law ;-)
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