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Yeah, I'm pretty disturbed that something that started out as an argument for a free political forum ended up with a rush for the crappiest thing you can say, or just sheer opportunism. Idealism out the window, just cynicism, cheap legalism, and naked greed.PLAYER57832 wrote:crushing kittens with high heels is "free speech?"![]()
Well, apparently corporations have free speech, too. So, I suppose the next is why can't they lie about their products all they want.
.. and, well, a lot worse....
What? This is the first I've heard of this.Symmetry wrote:and in the US, the recent ruling that crushing kittens with high heels is free speech.
Actually, I would say he nailed it on the head.thegreekdog wrote:“We do not consecrate the flag by punishing its desecration, for in so doing we dilute the freedom that this cherished emblem represents.”
This might be one of my favorite quotes of all time. Clearly the NY Times writer doesn't get it or pretends he doesn't get it.
The writer writes "Get it? We cherish the emblem by burning and spitting on it." I don't think he gets it.PLAYER57832 wrote:Actually, I would say he nailed it on the head.thegreekdog wrote:“We do not consecrate the flag by punishing its desecration, for in so doing we dilute the freedom that this cherished emblem represents.”
This might be one of my favorite quotes of all time. Clearly the NY Times writer doesn't get it or pretends he doesn't get it.
In truth, I am on the fence on this one.
If the flag stands for freedom, then that should extend to the ability to use that symbol in protest.
I don't agree with such protests, but I do think making them illegal gives the act more power, not less.
On the other hand, if a symbol is not held up in a place of honor, is it really a symbol?
Actually crushing kittens under your heels ISN'T included under free speech, it's just that the US law that was recently overturned overshot its goal and effectively prohibited displaying pictures of such things even in the interest of reporting about them.Symmetry wrote:It used to be the case that free speech arguments took into account the idea that free public discourse was vital to a functioning democracy. Recently, it seems like it's a cover for almost any kind of activity. In the UK, I'm thinking of the protests over libel laws, and in the US, the recent ruling that crushing kittens with high heels is free speech.
Here's Stanley Fish talking about the history of Free Speech:
NYTimes
saxitoxin wrote:Your position is more complex than the federal tax code. As soon as I think I understand it, I find another index of cross-references, exceptions and amendments I have to apply.
Timminz wrote:Yo mama is so classless, she could be a Marxist utopia.
No, what he is saying is that this flag represent freedom, and it is hypocritical to say you are celebrating freedom by limiting that very freedom, even if it is just rules that limit the desecration of the symbol.thegreekdog wrote:The writer writes "Get it? We cherish the emblem by burning and spitting on it." I don't think he gets it.PLAYER57832 wrote:Actually, I would say he nailed it on the head.thegreekdog wrote:“We do not consecrate the flag by punishing its desecration, for in so doing we dilute the freedom that this cherished emblem represents.”
This might be one of my favorite quotes of all time. Clearly the NY Times writer doesn't get it or pretends he doesn't get it.
In truth, I am on the fence on this one.
If the flag stands for freedom, then that should extend to the ability to use that symbol in protest.
I don't agree with such protests, but I do think making them illegal gives the act more power, not less.
On the other hand, if a symbol is not held up in a place of honor, is it really a symbol?
OK, phew, some sense exists, it seems. Glad for the clarification.MeDeFe wrote:Actually crushing kittens under your heels ISN'T included under free speech, it's just that the US law that was recently overturned overshot its goal and effectively prohibited displaying pictures of such things even in the interest of reporting about them.Symmetry wrote:It used to be the case that free speech arguments took into account the idea that free public discourse was vital to a functioning democracy. Recently, it seems like it's a cover for almost any kind of activity. In the UK, I'm thinking of the protests over libel laws, and in the US, the recent ruling that crushing kittens with high heels is free speech.
Here's Stanley Fish talking about the history of Free Speech:
NYTimes
Animal cruely still isn't included under free speech in the US, the law will just have to be revised in order to differentiate between legitimate reporting and commercial trade of material for its own sake.
Okay, confusion has ensued.PLAYER57832 wrote:No, what he is saying is that this flag represent freedom, and it is hypocritical to say you are celebrating freedom by limiting that very freedom, even if it is just rules that limit the desecration of the symbol.thegreekdog wrote:The writer writes "Get it? We cherish the emblem by burning and spitting on it." I don't think he gets it.PLAYER57832 wrote:Actually, I would say he nailed it on the head.thegreekdog wrote:“We do not consecrate the flag by punishing its desecration, for in so doing we dilute the freedom that this cherished emblem represents.”
This might be one of my favorite quotes of all time. Clearly the NY Times writer doesn't get it or pretends he doesn't get it.
In truth, I am on the fence on this one.
If the flag stands for freedom, then that should extend to the ability to use that symbol in protest.
I don't agree with such protests, but I do think making them illegal gives the act more power, not less.
On the other hand, if a symbol is not held up in a place of honor, is it really a symbol?
The negative in this case is critical. He is not saying that we honor the flag by allowing its desecration. He is saying we fail to honor it by limiting the very thing it is to represent.. freedom.
OK, my bad, then. I misunderstood. (and rather wondered, to be honest, why you would have taken that position...lol). Yes, I agree with you.thegreekdog wrote:Okay, confusion has ensued.PLAYER57832 wrote:No, what he is saying is that this flag represent freedom, and it is hypocritical to say you are celebrating freedom by limiting that very freedom, even if it is just rules that limit the desecration of the symbol.thegreekdog wrote:The writer writes "Get it? We cherish the emblem by burning and spitting on it." I don't think he gets it.PLAYER57832 wrote:Actually, I would say he nailed it on the head.thegreekdog wrote:“We do not consecrate the flag by punishing its desecration, for in so doing we dilute the freedom that this cherished emblem represents.”
This might be one of my favorite quotes of all time. Clearly the NY Times writer doesn't get it or pretends he doesn't get it.
In truth, I am on the fence on this one.
If the flag stands for freedom, then that should extend to the ability to use that symbol in protest.
I don't agree with such protests, but I do think making them illegal gives the act more power, not less.
On the other hand, if a symbol is not held up in a place of honor, is it really a symbol?
The negative in this case is critical. He is not saying that we honor the flag by allowing its desecration. He is saying we fail to honor it by limiting the very thing it is to represent.. freedom.
The writer of the quote is a Supreme Court justice. He or she does get it (I can't recall who wrote that decision).
The writer of the article is a NY Times writer. He does not get it. That's who I was referring to.
Dukasaur wrote:Your obsession with mrswdk is really sad.saxitoxin wrote:taking medical advice from this creature; a morbidly obese man who is 100% convinced he willed himself into becoming a woman.
ConfederateSS wrote:Just because people are idiots... Doesn't make them wrong.
(1) Regardless of what some fancy lad at the New York Times writes, the United States flag does not "represent freedom." The United States flag is an heraldic identifier of 50 states operating in a corporate personality called "United States." Attempting to assign any greater significance to it is poetic but sophistic.PLAYER57832 wrote:No, what he is saying is that this flag represent freedom, and it is hypocritical to say you are celebrating freedom by limiting that very freedom, even if it is just rules that limit the desecration of the symbol.thegreekdog wrote:PLAYER57832 wrote:Actually, I would say he nailed it on the head.thegreekdog wrote:“We do not consecrate the flag by punishing its desecration, for in so doing we dilute the freedom that this cherished emblem represents.”
This might be one of my favorite quotes of all time. Clearly the NY Times writer doesn't get it or pretends he doesn't get it.
In truth, I am on the fence on this one.
If the flag stands for freedom, then that should extend to the ability to use that symbol in protest.
I don't agree with such protests, but I do think making them illegal gives the act more power, not less.
On the other hand, if a symbol is not held up in a place of honor, is it really a symbol?
The writer writes "Get it? We cherish the emblem by burning and spitting on it." I don't think he gets it.
The negative in this case is critical. He is not saying that we honor the flag by allowing its desecration. He is saying we fail to honor it by limiting the very thing it is to represent.. freedom.
Pack Rat wrote:if it quacks like a duck and walk like a duck, it's still fascism
https://www.conquerclub.com/forum/viewt ... 0#p5349880
Oh please .... symbols ARE poetic sophistry.saxitoxin wrote:
(1) Regardless of what some fancy lad at the New York Times writes, the United States flag does not "represent freedom." The United States flag is an heraldic identifier of 50 states operating in a corporate personality called "United States." Attempting to assign any greater significance to it is poetic but sophistic.
word jumbles rarely make good postsPLAYER57832 wrote:Oh please .... symbols ARE poetic sophistry.saxitoxin wrote:
(1) Regardless of what some fancy lad at the New York Times writes, the United States flag does not "represent freedom." The United States flag is an heraldic identifier of 50 states operating in a corporate personality called "United States." Attempting to assign any greater significance to it is poetic but sophistic.
Pack Rat wrote:if it quacks like a duck and walk like a duck, it's still fascism
https://www.conquerclub.com/forum/viewt ... 0#p5349880
You still have the right to free speech in the military. It is simply that, just like in the civilian world, there are consequences to your using speech that may happen to not be considered "free" (for instance, yelling "FIRE" in a crowded theater) and there are more things that fall under "not free speech" in those terms. It just happens that the consequences can be much more severe than in the civilian world, depending on the nature of the speech you are...err...freeing.DirtyDishSoap wrote:I lost my free speech. Damn military.
word jumbles rarely make good postssaxitoxin wrote:word jumbles rarely make good postsPLAYER57832 wrote:Oh please .... symbols ARE poetic sophistry.saxitoxin wrote:
(1) Regardless of what some fancy lad at the New York Times writes, the United States flag does not "represent freedom." The United States flag is an heraldic identifier of 50 states operating in a corporate personality called "United States." Attempting to assign any greater significance to it is poetic but sophistic.
make rarely word posts jumbles goodInkL0sed wrote:word jumbles rarely make good postssaxitoxin wrote:word jumbles rarely make good postsPLAYER57832 wrote:Oh please .... symbols ARE poetic sophistry.saxitoxin wrote:
(1) Regardless of what some fancy lad at the New York Times writes, the United States flag does not "represent freedom." The United States flag is an heraldic identifier of 50 states operating in a corporate personality called "United States." Attempting to assign any greater significance to it is poetic but sophistic.
natty_dread wrote:Do ponies have sex?
(proud member of the Occasionally Wrongly Banned)Army of GOD wrote:the term heterosexual is offensive. I prefer to be called "normal"
In Soviet Russia, the flag burns you!Army of GOD wrote:Am I allowed to burn a Soviet flag? =S