ronburgundy
Contributor
The purpose of this poll is to see where people stand on free speech and how it relates to age and political affiliation. Some recent polls (and many posts on this board) have suggested that left leaning millennials place much lower value on protecting speech than liberals of past generations.
There are only two options of free speech, with each having 4 sub-options that divide people by age and by general politics. No political division is ideal, but I chose one that is mutually exclusive and exhaustive of all possibilities. Also, we have few committed republicans here, so having ever voted for any GOP candidate seems more likely to get some takers. The poll is not public, so be honest.
Note that slander and libel are not criminal, but merely grounds for civil suit. This poll is about speech that is grounds for criminal conviction. Also, lets assume that falsehoods spoken under legal oath are by definition criminal and thus not part of the these options.
For this poll, there are two options on free speech:
Option A (essentially status quo in the US) Criminal speech should be limited to the following 4 situations:
Option B Includes all of option A but expands criminal speech to include anything else, including but not limited to:
Note that recent polls and posts on this board have shown support by some people on the left for all 3 of these expansions of speech criminalization.
There are only two options of free speech, with each having 4 sub-options that divide people by age and by general politics. No political division is ideal, but I chose one that is mutually exclusive and exhaustive of all possibilities. Also, we have few committed republicans here, so having ever voted for any GOP candidate seems more likely to get some takers. The poll is not public, so be honest.
Note that slander and libel are not criminal, but merely grounds for civil suit. This poll is about speech that is grounds for criminal conviction. Also, lets assume that falsehoods spoken under legal oath are by definition criminal and thus not part of the these options.
For this poll, there are two options on free speech:
Option A (essentially status quo in the US) Criminal speech should be limited to the following 4 situations:
1.Direct AND explicit promises of material reward or punishment to another if they commit a crime against a third party (thus suicide not included).
2. Definitely false assertions, that the speaker knows are false and are intended to cause tangible harm to others via public panick and riot
3. Assertions that the speaker knows are false and are uttered to encourage a reasonable listener to act in a way that harms themselves, their property, or a third party. (e.g. Includes false advertising and things like "Jump out the window, the building is going to explode!!"
4. Directly advocating a criminal action, but only where such advocacy is directed to inciting or producing imminent lawless action and is likely to incite or produce such action. (note the emphasis that makes this extremely limited and does not apply to 99% of what is called "hate speech")
Option B Includes all of option A but expands criminal speech to include anything else, including but not limited to:
1. "Hate Speech" that feels like it implies negative characteristics of particular sub-populations (what almost all of what "hate speech" laws try to prohibit).
2. Speech that generally advocates an illegal act like violence, theft, or vandalism, even if it cannot be shown that it was intended to would be likely to cause such actions "imminently" and at that particular moment.
(which is what current application of the law requires under the Brandenburg Test that basically makes almost everything the KKK says legal.
(which is what current application of the law requires under the Brandenburg Test that basically makes almost everything the KKK says legal.
3. Speech that some people feel is so offensive that they might react with criminal violence, such as terrorism.
Note that recent polls and posts on this board have shown support by some people on the left for all 3 of these expansions of speech criminalization.
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