81
The Spectrum of Acceptable Politics USA
(lemmy.world)
Hello, I am researching American crimes against humanity. . This space so far has been most strongly for memes, and that's fine.
There's other groups and you are welcome to add to them. USAuthoritarianism Linktree
See Also, my website. USAuthoritarianism.com be advised at time of writing it is basically just a donate link
Cool People: !thepoliceproblem@lemmy.world
Yes, that's literally what free speech is.
Not happening at a federal level, but yes, the far-right is trying to legislate the erasure of lgbt people from society, but it's not something that has happened in the way you imply.
The meme is a misrepresentation of reality. It could happen that we eventually have oppressive state censorship like China, but we aren't yet at that stage and its a disservice to people to mislead them about the rights they still have.
Only free speech is free speech. Almost every country has explicit laws that are rarely worth prosecuting so the singular experience of not getting prosecuted is not an accurate measurement for a places laws.
The west is much more lenient then asia in regards to free speech. I am not contesting how varying too points on the same spectrum can be.
For an absolutist like me your argument appears like a invitation to meet in the middle. You would consider both china and my perspectives as being extremist and the current way of the west that is not being perfect as the preferred system.
I have to disagree with such argument on principle, i see great potential in a more radical status quo, accepting the current system as good or neutral devalues the anarchists goal.
You can find my reasoning to disagree in the quote below.
Note, you are not the unjust man, i don't wish to offend. lawmakers are the ones taking a step back here.
Your definition of free speech is actually wrong at face value. If I post a comment on the government website in the US, most of the time they're not allowed to take it down, because it's covered by free speech. If I want to speak at public comments at a City council meeting in the US, most of the time they have to let me speak. If we're only focusing on the US, it's clear that free speech is more than your ability to speak without being prosecuted. Free speech also has to do with limitations on what the government can do before or after you speak.