Sorry, I won't allow you to get away with that. Your original point was that they were not driven by the right:
Get away with what?
Hate speech laws are driven by the left. They are not driven by both sides of the political divide. If they were, I would have no problem agreeing with the sentence "Hate speech laws are driven by both sides of the political divide"."hate speech laws are driven by the left" is a denial, a negation, of "hate speech laws are driven by both sides of the political divide".
Just make up your mind already:
I already said, in post 106, that the Kentucky bill counts as an attempt to outlaw "hate speech" and that it was driven by right-leaning legislators.
I made up my mind already.
The existence of
an instance of hate speech driven by the right
in no way invalidates a rejection of the statement "hate speech is driven by both sides of the political divide". Saying the Kentucky bill is 'driven by the right' is a specific statement about a particular incident. "Hate speech is driven by the left" does not negate
any particular instance of hate speech that is driven by the right.
"This particular example of hate speech was driven by the right".
"Hate speech is driven by the left".
The above two sentences are both true. I'm sorry if this confuses you.