I'm not sure I understand your response at all. The two claims I made are that most western democracies do not have the same kind of free speech constitutional guarantee that the U.S. does and that most Americans are not aware of this fact. I'm not sure what police murders have to do with that and I wouldn't contest that you can disagree with a system and be aware of its details. Which of the two claims I made did you take issue with?Dynast Brass said:As a non-American who works with NGO's in and around Western "Democracies" I take issue with what you've said. It's possible to not agree with your perception of a system, and still be aware of its details. That said, I have discovered that an assurance in their systems, is a hallmark of those same Western "Democracies", even when their police are murdering people on the streets.Gorrath said:Comments like the one you responded to are often made by Americans who don't tend to realize that most western democracies do not have a constitution with free speech guarantees built in. You are quite right in pointing out that most western democracies do indeed ban things, it's just that we ban nearly nothing as far as speech in the U.S., so our citizens assume this is true of most places that share similar cultural values in the west.Halyah said:Never heard of a country that -doesn't- ban stuff. Every single one of them is at least banning -something- as far as I know.Dynast Brass said:I think I'm honestly as disturbed to discover that Australia is banning ANYTHING. Australia is a First World "Democracy" as the term is used, quite rich as these things go, and hardly isolated by modern standards. It's surprising to me, but I understand that it's not actually surprising.
Or to relate it to AU, relocating people to hell, or stuffing them in camps.
Edit: I think I may have deduced the problem. I was not clear in stating that the free speech guarantees that other countries do have are not the same as in the U.S. I can see how my comment might convey that I was saying that other western democracies had no free speech provisions at all. Some do in their constitutions but often are more restricted than the U.S. guarantee (eg. Deutschland) and some have free speech provisions that aren't in their constitution but are a part of common law (eg. the U.K.) This was my intended meaning.