Behold the face of American Free Speech/Anti-Islam

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luan78zao
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31 May 2015, 4:06 am

Kraichgauer wrote:
No, it's the positive or negative intent that separates those calling for civil rights from bigots out to snuff out someone else' rights.


Defiance of irrationality is defiance of irrationality. I see no evidence for this "negative intent" you're divining somehow. You do know that the civil rights protestors often marched where they knew they would provoke a violent response (in their case, from local authorities)?

There is only one group here seeking to "snuff out someone else's rights": radical Islamists.

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As for those Muslim fanatics who kill over cartoons, they are cut from the same cloth as the bigots harassing peaceful American Muslims.


I thought I read that the last pair of would-be mass murderers frequented that very mosque. Maybe I was mistaken. Anyway, why aren't "peaceful Muslims" demonstrating against the violence of the fanatics? Every now and then Christianity is confronted with another "PissChrist" or the like and controversy ensues – but if some radical sect actually tried to kill those responsible, I believe "peaceful Christians" of all stripes would unite in denouncing the radicals. You wouldn't be able to turn on the TV without seeing another bishop or whatever making it clear that the radicals did not represent his religion. Has there been a huge moderate Muslim anti-violence backlash which I've missed somehow?


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31 May 2015, 4:55 am

luan78zao wrote:
Kraichgauer wrote:
No, it's the positive or negative intent that separates those calling for civil rights from bigots out to snuff out someone else' rights.


Defiance of irrationality is defiance of irrationality. I see no evidence for this "negative intent" you're divining somehow. You do know that the civil rights protestors often marched where they knew they would provoke a violent response (in their case, from local authorities)?

There is only one group here seeking to "snuff out someone else's rights": radical Islamists.

Quote:
As for those Muslim fanatics who kill over cartoons, they are cut from the same cloth as the bigots harassing peaceful American Muslims.


I thought I read that the last pair of would-be mass murderers frequented that very mosque. Maybe I was mistaken. Anyway, why aren't "peaceful Muslims" demonstrating against the violence of the fanatics? Every now and then Christianity is confronted with another "PissChrist" or the like and controversy ensues – but if some radical sect actually tried to kill those responsible, I believe "peaceful Christians" of all stripes would unite in denouncing the radicals. You wouldn't be able to turn on the TV without seeing another bishop or whatever making it clear that the radicals did not represent his religion. Has there been a huge moderate Muslim anti-violence backlash which I've missed somehow?


Yes, peaceful Muslims have spoken out against radicals, but they don't get the media coverage that the homicidal idiots get. And just because not every American Muslim doesn't speak out doesn't justify the bigotry aimed at them.
And yes, the shooters in Texas had worshiped at that particular Arizona mosque, but that hardly makes everyone else worshiping there guilty of their crimes.
And yes, intent is everything. Sure, the civil rights movement had used the stupidity and hate of the segregationists against them by allowing the media to catch attacks on demonstrators on camera. But that still doesn't mean that there was ever any sort of moral equivalency between them and racist bigots. That would be like saying there's a moral equivalency between the fire fighter and the arsonist.


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luan78zao
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31 May 2015, 8:43 am

Kraichgauer wrote:
And yes, the shooters in Texas had worshiped at that particular Arizona mosque, but that hardly makes everyone else worshiping there guilty of their crimes.


If Christian radicals were going around murdering people in the name of Jesus, you better believe the church they attended would attract protests and other attention. Who taught that pair that violence was the appropriate response to blasphemy?


Quote:
But that still doesn't mean that there was ever any sort of moral equivalency between them and racist bigots. That would be like saying there's a moral equivalency between the fire fighter and the arsonist.


What racist bigots? Islam is not a race, it is an ideology. One may be vehemently opposed to Islam and be neither a racist nor a bigot.

Your analogy is inapt. Individual rights aren't just for the people you like. As far as I am concerned those who defend individual rights stand on one side; those who violate rights, and their apologists, stand on the other.


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31 May 2015, 8:46 am

Kraichgauer wrote:
AspieUtah wrote:
Our constitutional protection of the natural right of free speech means nothing if it doesn't protect unpopular speech.

Sure, absolutely; but I'm just saying that, as with any right, one has to use it responsibly....

"Responsibly" is a moral descriptor with all the attendant expectations. "Legally" or even "lawfully" might be a better choice of word. You remember the ACLU and the neo-Nazis of Skokie, Ill.? It was an even bigger deal than the few hundred protestors and counter-protestors in Arizona yesterday. They spoke very unpopular words within a predominantly Jewish township where many citizens were Holocaust survivors, but, in doing so legally and lawfully, re-affirmed everyone's right to say what they wished just inches from each others' faces.

Kraichgauer wrote:
...Those bigoted kooks in Arizona have the right to say whatever they want, but that line bordering every right would have been crossed if someone acted out violently because of their words.

Incitement requires some very exacting conditions. If the opponents, instead of the supporters, of "those bigoted kooks in Arizona" were to be incited by the "kooks" words, would the "kooks" still be culpable in your opinion? The "fighting words" doctrine says definitely "maybe." The doctrine is often quoted by the fighters in a crowd who fail to remember that its application is determined by a judge's opinion of what "the average person" might do under the same conditions, not the fighters themselves.

The truism that constitutional rights can be restricted in certain conditions doesn't mean that just anybody (including those who champion sharia law over U.S. constitutional law) can twist them into something of their own choosing or act illegally or unlawfully after others do it for them.


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31 May 2015, 10:17 am

Right.

They're not just being hooligans looking for an excuse for a brawl.

Theyre being heroes because - if it results in a few gun deaths- that will have the intended effect. The effect being: all one billion Muslims in the world will instantly drop Islam (and adopt Christianity, or secular humanism, or Mormonism, or whatever the heck these guys imagine them doing).

This stunt will cause the whole Islamic world (from Morocco east to the Phillipines) to just magically instantly disappear!
So lets all get behind this hocus pocus!



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31 May 2015, 10:46 am

naturalplastic wrote:
Right.

They're not just being hooligans looking for an excuse for a brawl.

Theyre being heroes because - if it results in a few gun deaths- that will have the intended effect. The effect being: all one billion Muslims in the world will instantly drop Islam (and adopt Christianity, or secular humanism, or Mormonism, or whatever the heck these guys imagine them doing).

This stunt will cause the whole Islamic world (from Morocco east to the Phillipines) to just magically instantly disappear!
So lets all get behind this hocus pocus!

Huh?!? :?


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31 May 2015, 11:32 am

AspieUtah wrote:
naturalplastic wrote:
Right.

They're not just being hooligans looking for an excuse for a brawl.

Theyre being heroes because - if it results in a few gun deaths- that will have the intended effect. The effect being: all one billion Muslims in the world will instantly drop Islam (and adopt Christianity, or secular humanism, or Mormonism, or whatever the heck these guys imagine them doing).

This stunt will cause the whole Islamic world (from Morocco east to the Phillipines) to just magically instantly disappear!
So lets all get behind this hocus pocus!

Huh?!? :?


It's his inept Jon Stewart routine, he thinks it's clever.


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31 May 2015, 11:45 am

Dox47 wrote:
AspieUtah wrote:
naturalplastic wrote:
Right.

They're not just being hooligans looking for an excuse for a brawl.

Theyre being heroes because - if it results in a few gun deaths- that will have the intended effect. The effect being: all one billion Muslims in the world will instantly drop Islam (and adopt Christianity, or secular humanism, or Mormonism, or whatever the heck these guys imagine them doing).

This stunt will cause the whole Islamic world (from Morocco east to the Phillipines) to just magically instantly disappear!
So lets all get behind this hocus pocus!

Huh?!? :?


It's his inept Jon Stewart routine, he thinks it's clever.


I apologize for making you think..that I think...that I am being clever...or whatever this crime is that I commited that I am being accused of.

But...okay I get that its kinda like the civil right sit ins in dinners but...

ending segregation was an identifiable goal -that proved to be attainable.

What exactly is this terrorism-baiting supposed to accomplish?

Descredit Muslims in order to get Muslims to do..what...exactly?



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31 May 2015, 12:01 pm

naturalplastic wrote:
...What exactly is this terrorism-baiting supposed to accomplish?

Descredit Muslims in order to get Muslims to do..what...exactly?

Well, I don't believe that all Muslims are responsible for the terrorism that has been exercised since the 1990s. In fact, I believe that only a relative handful (those like Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab who have been recruited by U.S. interests) are responsible for it; but, we aren't supposed to talk about that are we? Meanwhile, I do have a problem with the useful idiots within Islam who are now demanding (and in certain jurisdictions, succeeding with) the adoption of sharia-related jurisprudence instead of U.S. constitutional jurisprudence.


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31 May 2015, 12:30 pm

My opinion on the matter is it's just like the internet: ignore the attention seeking trolls and they'll just disappear.



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31 May 2015, 1:27 pm

luan78zao wrote:
Kraichgauer wrote:
And yes, the shooters in Texas had worshiped at that particular Arizona mosque, but that hardly makes everyone else worshiping there guilty of their crimes.


If Christian radicals were going around murdering people in the name of Jesus, you better believe the church they attended would attract protests and other attention. Who taught that pair that violence was the appropriate response to blasphemy?


Quote:
But that still doesn't mean that there was ever any sort of moral equivalency between them and racist bigots. That would be like saying there's a moral equivalency between the fire fighter and the arsonist.


What racist bigots? Islam is not a race, it is an ideology. One may be vehemently opposed to Islam and be neither a racist nor a bigot.

Your analogy is inapt. Individual rights aren't just for the people you like. As far as I am concerned those who defend individual rights stand on one side; those who violate rights, and their apologists, stand on the other.


Do you really think those bigots don't associate brown skin with the Islamic religion? If you don't, then you're very much naive, or blinded by ideology.
And when the hell did I ever say that rights were only for people I like? I'm just saying that people - whoever they are - should think before opening their mouths. What's possibly wrong with practicing a little responsibility with freedom? But I don't ever recall saying that such persons shouldn't be allowed to say whatever they want.
And who knows, maybe there is a radical element in that mosque that inspired the shooters - though more likely, they were encouraged by ISIS on line. That doesn't mean that every member of that community of Muslims is guilty.


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31 May 2015, 1:33 pm

AspieUtah wrote:
Kraichgauer wrote:
AspieUtah wrote:
Our constitutional protection of the natural right of free speech means nothing if it doesn't protect unpopular speech.

Sure, absolutely; but I'm just saying that, as with any right, one has to use it responsibly....

"Responsibly" is a moral descriptor with all the attendant expectations. "Legally" or even "lawfully" might be a better choice of word. You remember the ACLU and the neo-Nazis of Skokie, Ill.? It was an even bigger deal than the few hundred protestors and counter-protestors in Arizona yesterday. They spoke very unpopular words within a predominantly Jewish township where many citizens were Holocaust survivors, but, in doing so legally and lawfully, re-affirmed everyone's right to say what they wished just inches from each others' faces.

Kraichgauer wrote:
...Those bigoted kooks in Arizona have the right to say whatever they want, but that line bordering every right would have been crossed if someone acted out violently because of their words.

Incitement requires some very exacting conditions. If the opponents, instead of the supporters, of "those bigoted kooks in Arizona" were to be incited by the "kooks" words, would the "kooks" still be culpable in your opinion? The "fighting words" doctrine says definitely "maybe." The doctrine is often quoted by the fighters in a crowd who fail to remember that its application is determined by a judge's opinion of what "the average person" might do under the same conditions, not the fighters themselves.

The truism that constitutional rights can be restricted in certain conditions doesn't mean that just anybody (including those who champion sharia law over U.S. constitutional law) can twist them into something of their own choosing or act illegally or unlawfully after others do it for them.


If the opponents of the kooks in question had reacted violently, then they would most assuredly be at fault, but it's still obvious that said kooks were the ones who had sought that response.


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AspieUtah
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31 May 2015, 1:38 pm

Kraichgauer wrote:
If the opponents of the kooks in question had reacted violently, then they would most assuredly be at fault, but it's still obvious that said kooks were the ones who had sought that response.

As I wrote, "fighting words" is a tenuous presumption to make. We never know how a court would accept that notion. Baiting others with speech is still protected speech. It is the legal obligation of the listener(s) to check their own responses except in the slimmest of areas within the "fighting words" doctrine.


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31 May 2015, 1:44 pm

AspieUtah wrote:
Kraichgauer wrote:
If the opponents of the kooks in question had reacted violently, then they would most assuredly be at fault, but it's still obvious that said kooks were the ones who had sought that response.

As I wrote, "fighting words" is a tenuous presumption to make. We never know how a court would accept that notion. Baiting others with speech is still protected speech. It is the legal obligation of the listener(s) to check their own responses except in the slimmest of areas within the "fighting words" doctrine.


That very well may be the law, but the law and common sense can be strangers to one another. It's obvious that those kooks were looking for a response from the Muslims, who they believed all fit into one violent stereotype.


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31 May 2015, 1:47 pm

Kraichgauer wrote:
AspieUtah wrote:
Kraichgauer wrote:
If the opponents of the kooks in question had reacted violently, then they would most assuredly be at fault, but it's still obvious that said kooks were the ones who had sought that response.

As I wrote, "fighting words" is a tenuous presumption to make. We never know how a court would accept that notion. Baiting others with speech is still protected speech. It is the legal obligation of the listener(s) to check their own responses except in the slimmest of areas within the "fighting words" doctrine.

That very well may be the law, but the law and common sense can be strangers to one another. It's obvious that those kooks were looking for a response from the Muslims, who they believed all fit into one violent stereotype.

Yes, and vice versa. It is good that neither party acted illegally in response to those taunts.


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31 May 2015, 2:17 pm

Kraichgauer wrote:
luan78zao wrote:
Kraichgauer wrote:
And yes, the shooters in Texas had worshiped at that particular Arizona mosque, but that hardly makes everyone else worshiping there guilty of their crimes.


If Christian radicals were going around murdering people in the name of Jesus, you better believe the church they attended would attract protests and other attention. Who taught that pair that violence was the appropriate response to blasphemy?


Quote:
But that still doesn't mean that there was ever any sort of moral equivalency between them and racist bigots. That would be like saying there's a moral equivalency between the fire fighter and the arsonist.


What racist bigots? Islam is not a race, it is an ideology. One may be vehemently opposed to Islam and be neither a racist nor a bigot.

Your analogy is inapt. Individual rights aren't just for the people you like. As far as I am concerned those who defend individual rights stand on one side; those who violate rights, and their apologists, stand on the other.


Do you really think those bigots don't associate brown skin with the Islamic religion? If you don't, then you're very much naive, or blinded by ideology.
And when the hell did I ever say that rights were only for people I like? I'm just saying that people - whoever they are - should think before opening their mouths. What's possibly wrong with practicing a little responsibility with freedom? But I don't ever recall saying that such persons shouldn't be allowed to say whatever they want.
And who knows, maybe there is a radical element in that mosque that inspired the shooters - though more likely, they were encouraged by ISIS on line. That doesn't mean that every member of that community of Muslims is guilty.


Please don't post personal attacks.