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by schoen
1910 days ago
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I think this summary conflates at least four different concepts: * "Hate speech" is an ill-defined or incoherent concept * People will never agree about what belongs in this category * No one can be trusted to make an authoritative decision about this * U.S. law, unlike that of European countries, has never included such a category of unprotected speech, and it would not be constitutionally permissible for the government to prohibit it |
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"Threat" seems no easier to define than "hate speech". I'm not a lawyer but I imagine that boundaries of "threat" exist as a long series of judicial decisions, many of them containing the word "reasonable person".
The US does not ban hate speech, but I don't know precisely what protects hate speech but does not protect threats.
As I said I'm not a lawyer, so I can only observe this from outside. I remain baffled at the way lawyers talk as if they have rigid interpretations of the law, which as a scientist and programmer I find unlikely.