Prickly City by Scott Stantis for March 25, 2023

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    ibFrank  about 1 year ago

    Look at the people they vote for.

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    Cornelius Noodleman  about 1 year ago

    When I use free speech, I get my mouth washed out with soap.

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    Georgette Washington Bunny  about 1 year ago

    No one is a free speech absolutist. That’s just the latest fad for posers.

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    A# 466  about 1 year ago

    “Tell the people the truth, and the country will be saved.” (Lincoln, approximately — I don’t recall the exact quote)

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    mourdac Premium Member about 1 year ago

    Unfortunately, the stupid became the new pandemic with the election of Raygun Ronnie in 1980.

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    The Nodding Head  about 1 year ago

    Although the First Amendment might seem at first glance simple and obvious, the idea of free speech took a while to work out. Witness the jailing of newspapermen during the Adams administration. John Stuart Mill took giant steps defining the concept but we are still and will ever be working out the necessary limits and practical parameters.

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    Darsan54 Premium Member about 1 year ago

    Free speech absolutists also seem to think it should be consequence free too. So that lying, hateful, endangering speech is “okay” in their book.

    Nope. Though in this case, I would say Carmen’s not wrong.

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    DW Premium Member about 1 year ago

    Too many people misunderstand, some intentionally, that in the US free speech means that the government cannot prosecute you for your speech (except in certain types of speech).

    Free speech does not mean that you cannot be held accountable for your speech by the other people or private businesses. Ex. you can express your hate for the president without fear of prosecution. However, if you express your hate for the CEO of the private business you work for, it does not mean that they cannot fire you. Neither does it mean that you can post anything you want in on-line forums such as twitter or Fb. You agree to certain terms of service for use of their platform, and if you violate them your account can be terminated.

    Other countries laws may or may not have the same limitations & restrictions.

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    BRBurns1960  about 1 year ago

    Fire in a crowded theater? Child porn? Slander? Libel?

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    Bookworm  about 1 year ago

    “Better to remain silent and be thought a fool than to speak and to remove all doubt” – dubiously attributed to Abraham Lincoln, Mark Twain, John Maynard Keynes, and others.

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    Wlly Blly  about 1 year ago

    So, what happens after they demonstrate their stupidity?

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    TwilightFaze  about 1 year ago

    I don’t disagree. The problem is not what people are saying. The problem is we have too many of them. Not being funny; our planet is over-populated on all 6 continents (No, not counting Antarctica). We need to thin our numbers a bit.

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    rossevrymn  about 1 year ago

    Just look to your right, then separate truer conservatives from the right-wing populists and voila.

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    Gary Williams Premium Member about 1 year ago

    MTG and her ilk prove the last panel everyday.

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    William A Short Premium Member about 1 year ago

    So that’s why we have to hear the cretins-greene and bobert-so often. They are a constant reminder of how ignorant they are and also that they do not stand for democratic values.

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    braindead Premium Member about 1 year ago

    “I truly believe I would have rushed in there, even without a weapon.”

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    ferddo  about 1 year ago

    Sadly, too many stupid people today insist upon demonstrating their stupidity – loudly and often – in public… whether the rest of us want to know or not…

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    Night-Gaunt49[Bozo is Boffo]  about 1 year ago

    Not stupid people DANGEROUS ONES Carmin.

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    eric_harris_76  about 1 year ago

    For examples, you need only look at how people post in social media. This includes how they avoid answering reasonable questions.

    1. Emotional responses to factual questions rather than, you know, answers.

    2. Personal attacks on the person who asked factual questions.

    3. Subject changes — “whataboutism”, personal criticisms of people or institutions, completely new topic, etc. — instead of addressing the issue.

    4. Silence in response to factual questions.

    5. Use of other logical fallacies — strawman arguments, etc. — instead of rational arguments.

    I’m reeeealy looking forward to seeing the replies to this.

    I expect a mix of rational responses and examples of the above, skewed towards examples.

    But I’m hoping for rational responses, including perhaps some descriptions of additional categories.

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