If Jamie took to the streets and conveyed his honest view about Zionists while a group of Israeli-British children walked by, should he be arrested? To Fritz' point, I think Jamie should be entitled to tell kids their parents are evil if they're Zionists and that this only becomes a problem if, in doing so, he undertakes the action of harassment. To Jamie's point, the volume and violent nature of his speech may indeed be relevant to an assessment of whether it is harassment. I'm hard pressed to see how this applies to speech in a Facebook post or private Whasapp thread, unless maybe Jamie were finding children to message.CaptainFritz28 wrote: ↑Fri Jun 06, 2025 5:46 pmTell me, when you were in primary school, if a man came up to you and said this, would that really make you want to follow his every command or would it make you view him as a raving lunatic and become skeptical of his cause?Jamiet99uk wrote: ↑Fri Jun 06, 2025 5:22 pmWhat if I go up to a group of schoolchildren, let's say aged 9 or 10 years old, and I loudly say "gay men are fucking abominations and should have their dicks cut off with a rusty knife and force fed to them in front of their families, and if any of your mummies or daddies are fucking queers I hope they die!"CaptainFritz28 wrote: ↑Fri Jun 06, 2025 4:56 pmThe second should be loudly drowned out in dissent, but still allowed.
If a police officer is nearby and sees and hears me saying this, should they threaten to arrest me if I don't shut up? Or, should they just say "now now, children, this guy is entitled to say these things, but you shouldn't listen" ?
I assume you'd advocate for the latter, because, you know, free speech?
I was no genius at 9 years old, but it definitely would not have been the former for me.
If I was the policeman, I'd inform the fellow that if he continues in that manner he may be arrested for harassment, because that's what he's doing. Doesn't have so much to do with his speech as with his action. I'd probably also ask him a few questions about himself, but if there were no grounds for arrest then so be it.
The thing is that when someone is willing to put their words into action (in this case, the action of harassing random schoolchildren on the street), then that action is what is problematic. Online, people say a lot of things, but it is very easy to say something and quite another thing to act on that. Should you, as the government, be more wary of someone who posts obviously hateful things on the internet? Yes. But until they put that into action, they should be able to say what they wish. That action may be conspiring to attack a group of people or harassing children on the street, but until their philosophy is shown by action to be evil, it should be up for discussion.
We probably all agree an anti-gay bigot offends our sensibilities more than a pro-Palestinian protestor, but should this really hinge on something like the likeability of the speaker? There's a pretty compelling case for state neutrality here. To my earlier point, anyone who is happy with the current system should really consider what might happen if public opinion and politics change.