we all know about the racist lady on a tram. cases like this go to court and end up with severe sentences because they become cases of high public interest, i.e. they go viral on the internet. you have the mobile-phone youtube generation to blame for that more than the UK law. viral videos incite public outrage and the british public demand some sign of justice being done in order to remedy the public ill. this is nothing new, i really have no idea why you're using some specious and extraordinary case to make out we have draconian/stalinist speech laws. yes, sometimes events enter the public consciousness and mob/media justice arises. what are the courts meant to do but put them through the due process of law, at the crowd's behest? sounds familiar... have you heard of trayvon martin?specops10-4 wrote:
There have been quite a few cases in you're country where people have been jailed for simply making racist remarks, look up racist lady on tram, you're bound to find multiple videos of racist women who only stated their opinion and have been subsequently arrested.Uzique wrote:
did you read his tweets? he called for direct violence many times, to many people/victims. case closed then.specops10-4 wrote:
As long as the statements made by someone do not call for direct violence it should be tolerated. Think about the implications of banning a 'certain' type of speech are, any politician can spin the meaning of anyone elses words to be racist and thus illegal. Who is to judge what is 'offensive' or not, the government, the public, anyone?
libertarian benefit collector - anti-academic super-intellectual. http://mixlr.com/the-little-phrase/