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Andrew's avatar
8hEdited

I feel like actually maintaining the line between speech and aggressive action is the thing that’s missing.

When people beat me up or sexually assault me for my lifestyle and it’s excused away by authority figures as boys being boys it becomes a question of physical and psychological safety.

With no guarantee that the line between speech and action will be honored and aggressively enforced then speech becomes an important prelude to violence. Maybe I’m just being paranoid hyper vigilant but it’s the most salient event of my life and moving to a community where professional norms are effectively a gag rule against certain types of speech are also a significant shield against violence.

Also the fear and anxiety created by the speech in the wake of that violence makes the distinction really quite thin feeling. I understand it’s unworkable to make people responsible for how safe I feel but conditions where people speak a certain way are exactly the same as where they punch you or sexually assault you. Conceptually I get the value of free speech but it’s hard to see it when it usually means give up any red flags to abuse in the workplace and public.

Isobel Ross's avatar

Thank you for this article explaining that free speech is the only way to ensure the ability to debate ideas, which, in turn, is the best way to expose morally harmful ones.

I wonder if in some future writing you might address the idea of censorship. As a woman and a grandmother to a granddaughter, I am concerned about the pervasiveness and availability of violent and extreme pornography online. While I have no hard evidence to connect this extreme pornography to increasing violence against women and girls IRL, my “common sense” understanding tells me that the two are likely to be connected. In my ideal world, pornography that normalises eg choking and sexual assault would not exist because I believe it harms women and girls and, from a moral perspective, if not so much a physical harm harm perspective, I believe it affects men and boys adversely too. Indeed I see it as a danger to society as a whole because of its dehumanising effect.

However, freedom of expression, the twin of freedom of speech, presumably requires that extreme online pornography should not be censored. While I have become close to a free speech absolutist in recent years (woke made me do it!) I do find it difficult to reconcile the problem of the harms created by extreme pornography with my belief in free speech/expression. I’d love to hear your views on this dilemma. (Perhaps you’ve already written about it?)

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