|
|
|
|
|
by notacoward
2295 days ago
|
|
"State of your heart" is itself a misleading phrase, implying good vs. bad or benevolent vs. malevolent when the operative distinction is intentional vs. unintentional. See how easy it is to misrepresent without meaning to? That distinction is well established in law, and most definitely does matter if people are calling for things to be censored. |
|
Sure, this matters for things like negligence standards. Why would it matter here?
> and most definitely does matter if people are calling for things to be censored
Um... again, why? People usually call for censorship based on the content of the speech.
> This has nothing to do with the "state of one's heart" (nice strawman there)
I think you've confused our positions. I'm the one arguing that whether you're spreading misinformation has nothing to do with the state of your heart. You're the one arguing that it does. The whole argument you're making here is "even though this is misinformation, I would rather call it something else, because I sympathize with the people spreading it".