Freeverse wrote: ↑Mon Jun 15, 2020 2:36 pm
Darth Wedgius wrote: ↑Sun Jun 14, 2020 4:48 pm
Freeverse wrote: ↑Sat Jun 13, 2020 10:26 pm
The only thing I would add is that there have been plenty of times when someone is deplatformed due to protests being held against them speaking at a certain venue... but, this isn't the same thing as free speech being suppressed. It's actually just one group using their freedom of speech to convince the platform holder not to have these people speak on their platform. Essentially "HEY! don't give your microphone to that racist! They're probably going to use it to say some racist shit!"
I'll agree that using one's free speech in a non-threatening manner to convince people to remove one venue for speaking doesn't cross a line for me. Quite.
What about when threats of violence are used to deplatform? Is that free speech?
In a literal sense? Sure. Speech is speech. Legally speaking, here in America, threats are not protected speech. But neither is hate speech.
If threatening someone with violence is inherently violent... then so is bigotry, right? When someone spreads racist rhetoric, they don't have to explicitly say "let's kill brown people" for it to be threatening. A veiled threat is still a threat. So when someone is saying we should have a white ethno-state, they are implicitly threatening people of color with deportation, at the very least. And that's not to mention that letting people spread bigoted speech emboldens other bigots to violent action.
Though, I've tried to do some research on deplatforming to determine how often violent threats have been used to accomplish it and there may very well be some examples, but I haven't found any.
I'd say that neither threatening someone with violence nor bigotry are inherently violent. Not my favorite thing, but not violent. But Milo Yiannopoulos
might be racist -- he made a joke about Leslie Jones that
could be interpreted as racist, comparing her to a gorilla, though I've seen plenty of white men compared to gorillas as well. But AFAIK he's never advocated racist policies in any manner.
From WIkipedia:
n 1 February 2017, Yiannopoulos was scheduled to make a speech at UC Berkeley at 8:00 pm. More than 100 UC Berkeley faculty had signed a petition urging the university to cancel the event. Over 1,500 people gathered to protest against the event on the steps of Sproul Hall, with some violence occurring. According to the university, around 150 masked agitators came onto campus and interrupted the protest, setting fires, damaging property, throwing fireworks, attacking members of the crowd, and throwing rocks at the police. These violent protesters included members of BAMN, who threw rocks at police, shattered windows, threw Molotov cocktails, and later vandalised downtown Berkeley. Among those assaulted were a Syrian Muslim in a suit who was pepper sprayed and hit with a rod by a protester who said "You look like a Nazi", and a woman who was pepper sprayed while being interviewed by a TV reporter. Citing security concerns, the UC Police Department cancelled the event. One person was arrested for failure to disperse, and there was about $100,000 in damage. The police were criticised for their "hands off" policy whereby they did not arrest any of the demonstrators who committed assault, vandalism, or arson.
I don't see anything specifically labeling the protesters antifa, though.