It's not a non sequitur at all. Overly-broad libel laws do just that; for a good example, look at Great Britain and the use of libel laws to attempt to stifle criticism in that country.Thanas wrote:That is a non sequitur. By the same token, libel laws weaken the barriers against restricting free speech.My point is that if speech is restricted based on area in some cases, that weakens the barriers against restricting it based on other areas.
If they give undefined rules legal weight, or if you can be assessed fines or jail time for violating a rule not written into law, then then yes, yes they are.So the German Government is irrational now?...and as unwritten rules, I tend to doubt that they can have legal force in any rational government.
Let me quote your previous post:Wooooh. Two strawmen in one sentence. Congrats on that one.I despise the division of the populace into "public" or "private" people. It's ludicrous to claim that someone is immune to public mockery because they're not a celebrity - or to claim that celebrities give up their right to privacy.
Let me know if what I leave out of those quotes seems relevant to the point; it looks to me like you claimed that it could be legal to say something about a public person, but illegal to say the same thing about a private person. True?If I were to march down in Berlin saying "He [the former prime minister] is a liar"...then nothing would stop me, because he is a political person...
If however Jack Nobody would die and I would do the same, I would face charges because...said person is not a public person.
I used hyperbole, but as far as I can tell, I didn't cross over into outright strawman. I stand by my argument; whether someone is "public" or not should have no fucking bearing on what I can or cannot say about them from a legal standpoint. I know that that is not the state of law in many places, but I'm arguing that those laws are wrong.
So you argue that the content of a political message should be able to affect whether that message is legal or not to publicly hold...and as an example, you give two messages that you yourself say would both be legal.Content matters, as well as the tone. For example, I might say that you are a "shit eating fuckhead who cannot formulate a thought process if your life depended on it" or I might say "this reasoning is illogical". Do you see the difference? (And no, neither is illegal).The content of a political message shouldn't have any bearing, unless that content is itself criminal (say, calls to burn down Muslim-owned businesses).
On the contrary, libel law in the US is often complex...but as a basic rule, the burden of proof falls very heavily on the plaintiff. Unlike the case in, say, quite a few European countries. As a result, it's quite difficult to use a defamation suit as a gag in the United States.Sure it has a well defined meaning. You just do not like that it cannot be applied as a simplistic formula in every case. Which roughly translates to "WAAAAH. I MIGHT BE FORCED TO THINK BEFORE I ACT." I am also sure libel laws in the USA do not have such a simplistic formula as you think they have.Thank you, Mr. Vague. My point - and I don't think that this is too hard to glean, here - is that using a term like "inciting hatred" is dangerous because it has no fucking well-defined meaning. It's a buzzword for "I don't like that".
Going from the (admittedly unreliable) entry for hate speech on Wikipedia, it looks like simply insulting certain groups can be legally prohibited - and yes, I do think that that disqualifies Germany from a legitimate claim to free speech. Please correct me if I'm mistaken there, but it looks like I could get into trouble in Germany for, as an example, calling the Catholic Church a festering hive of filth, staffed by pedophiles and those who willingly cover for them.
That is a very strange definition of respect you have there. You're the one who brought up acts of physical violence; I'm talking about the right to call someone a jackass without fear of legal repercussion.Yes, you are legally obligated to respect your fellow human beings. You do so every morning when you do not start the day by shooting your neighbours for looking at you funny.If you're honestly saying that I can be legally obligated to respect someone, I may just fall over laughing.
Just saying "it depends on context" doesn't answer a goddamn thing. Give me a concrete example of a situation where I could reasonably be restricted from saying someone is in Hell after their death, when there was no such restriction on me telling him to his face that he was going to burn in Hell.As I said, it depends on context. Is that so hard for you to get?The right to mock assholes is well-established by thousands of years of literature; the right to insult equally so. If I can tell someone he's going to go to Hell when he dies to his face, how the hell can you justify restricting my saying so when he's dead?
Yes, because slippery slopes never occur, and we've never seen libel or obscenity laws used to restrict legitimate speech anywhere on the globe! That certainly was a silly thing for me to say, wasn't it? I mean, it's not as if anyone has ever tried to use the "free speech zone" concept to quell protests. Such a sharp one you are.Serafina wrote:Wow - i guess we better get off that slope before we slip then. Everyone should be able to say anything to anyone at any time without any consequences whatsoever! Libel? Legal! Cheating? Legal! Fraud? Legal! Yay, FREEDOM
Oh, hey, Germany has a blasphemy law on the books. Of course, it dates back to 1871 - it's got to be a blue law, no chance that anyone in modern times would really try to use it, right?
Oh, yeah, wait, there was that time in 1994 when it was used to ban a musical comedy that someone didn't like.
Emphasis is mine.UCLA website wrote:Germany has an anti-blasphemy law dating from 1871, but it has been little used in recent decades.
It was, however, successfully used in 1994 to ban a musical comedy that ridiculed the Catholic doctrine of the immaculate conception by portraying crucified pigs.
So, Thanas, Serafina: Germany has a blasphemy law on the books, and it has been used in modern times to suppress freedom of expression. It remains, as far as I can tell, part of the body of law in Germany.
I feel quite justified in stating that no, Germany does not have freedom of speech. No fucking country with active blasphemy laws has freedom of speech worth a damn.
Before I hit the "submit" button, here's another little tidbit:
Sure is a bastion of free expression over there.Expatica wrote:Germany is to put on trial this week a man who printed the word "Koran" on toilet paper and sent this to a mosque, provoking outrage in Islamic countries.
The 61-year-old businessman had been indicted for insulting a religion.
...
Under a part of the German legal code last revised in 1969, a person can be sentenced to a fine or up to three years in jail for "insulting confessions, religious communities or groups promoting a special world view."