Mr.Mattress said:
geizr said:
Man from La Mancha said:
geizr said:
I would also add that freedom of speech is not freedom from responsibility for that speech either.
Sounds pretty close to 'Nice freedom of speech you got there. Better respect muh feelz, it would be a pity if something happened to your Freedom.' for my taste.
It means that you don't get to just do or say whatever you want, whenever you want, to whomever you want, for whatever reason you want without there being consequences to the act. Those consequences may be good or bad, depending on the circumstances and the individuals involved, but you WILL be the one to deal with and receive those consequences.
But
Fucking Murder should never be a consequence for simply saying whatever you want. Those 2 could have done anything,
fucking anything else, then Murdering Cartoonists. They chose to Murder people they disagreed with. They even murdered people who were begging to be spared.
Let me put it you this way: Would you be okay Matt Stone and Trey Parker being murdered by a Christian because of their Depictions of Jesus Christ as a Drug Addicted Ninja, thus they should've expected it because they pissed off Christians?
EDIT: Actually, here's a different question: Most people would be against your opinion. So would it be okay if you're permabanned from this site, get fired from your job, get kicked out of your house, and get beaten 24/7 for your opinion? Like you said, every action you take has consequences.
I agree with you. Murder should never be the response to someone just saying what they want.
This is something you guys just ARE NOT GETTING about what I am saying. Look, 100%, the murder of Charlie Hebdo staff was a complete inappropriate response on the part of a few. In an IDEAL world, it is something that SHOULD NEVER, EVER HAPPEN! I believe and agree with that,
100%. The part you all keep missing is that we do not leave in an ideal world. We live in reality, and the reality is that human beings can do some fucked-up things sometimes in response to silly shit. When you say or do something to someone else, you need to be thinking REALITY, the fucked-up shit people may do in response, not the IDEAL, the wonderful enlightened way to properly respond. You need to be thinking about how your actions may affect and the kind of response it may elicit from another HUMAN BEING, not the idealized robot we wished all human beings would be. This is the basis of my statement why I'm not surprised at the response Charlie Hebdo received given what I've been learning of the publication. Do I agree with it? HELL NO! Do I feel it is justified? HELL NO! Do I think the perpetrators should be brought to justice? HELL YES!
Whether you are on the Internet, in a multiplayer game, or face-to-face with another person, you need to be thinking of that person's possible responses as a real human being and be prepared to deal with that response, and you need to be thinking of the REALITY, not the IDEAL.
BTW, consequences does not mean just bad stuff happening. It also means good stuff. In the sense that I have been trying to use it (and clearly failing given the responses I'm getting) is that it is simply the result of an action, nothing more. It may be good; it may be bad. That is a subjective judgement that is made by the bearer of the consequences of such actions in the aftermath.
And to directly address your contrived example at the end, if I knew ahead of time (and believe me, I am the type of person who would make all efforts to do so) that stating my opinion on this site would result in me being permabanned, fired from my job, kicked out of my house, and beaten 24/7, then I would not have joined this site in the first place such to entreat the possibility of such a consequence in response to such an action. You see how that's taking personal responsibility? Doesn't take a thought police or anything else. It just takes me making a decision based on the reality that is before me. But further, it takes me thinking far enough ahead to see the total chain of causal outcomes and to choose an appropriate action.
Now, let's turn that around. Supposed I felt it was wrong of the Escapist to have such a policy, and, as a statement of protest, I post my opinion on the Escapist and mention the hypothesized atrocities as being wrong and unethical. But, I would have to do so knowing that the consequences for the actions that I am about to take would be the aforementioned set of bad responses (bad for me, that is). However, and this is the important part, as a means of calling attention to such atrocities in the hope to gain sympathetic support to force the Escapist to change such a policy, I accept the consequences of those actions knowingly. I perform that action knowing that all the negative consequences mentioned will be exactly what will happen, but I perform the action anyway as a means of martyred protest. This is how a true freedom fighter behaves. They don't run from the consequences; they accept them, knowingly, willingly, but they do so in the hopes that their suffering will garner sympathy to bring about change.
Now, clearly, this in not what the staff at Charlie Hebdo desired, to be martyrs. They wanted to give criticism to an extremist segment that clearly has been going beyond the pale. That's all well and good. However, knowing how such a group operates and what their potential responses may be, one would think that a responsible adult whose thinking is reasonably grounded in the realities of human behavior would be more careful in crafting their criticism such to avoid causing troublesome responses. At the very least, be prepared for potential trouble, cause you know it's likely. You know who and what you are dealing with. It's not a surprise. If you're going to characterize extremists in such a horrid manner, be at least expectant of the very horrid behavior of which you accuse them. Don't just sit there in your intellectual bubble and think you're somehow immune to being punched by reality.