Because society has decided that criminal behaviour should not be tolerated. Not every action and behaviour does have the same rights. It's not about different groups with the same behaviour; they wouldn't be different then.LittleRaven wrote: ↑Sat Aug 04, 2018 9:40 pmBut that's not an example. Tolerance only requires acknowledging that they have the same rights that you do. You do not have the right to criminal activity; neither do they. Both of you get locked up if you break the law.
What's criminal, what gets you locked up, those are fundamentally arbitrary, hopefully based on fairly generally hold values of what should and should not be tolerated, but still arbitrary. You could just as easily say everyone has the same rights to the same what we now call criminal activity. In some times, in some places it would not be called criminal, and some things that now aren't criminal very mcuh were once. Whether or not a behviour is criminal isn't a fundamental difference to the discussion of the ethics (it would be very hard to improve the law if you couldn't separate them).
They're not allowed everywhere though. You could also argue that they're not really the organisations they claim to be if they've no intention of wanting to put their beliefs into practice given the chance. Even when they are you can't always march any time, anywhere.Absolutely. Not only are they allowed, they're given police protection when they march. They have the same rights you do. You can march....so can they. You can argue your position in public, so can they.should Nazi organisations be allowed (as long as they don't go putting some of their beliefs in to practice)?
They cannot punch people. Neither can you.