Monthly Archives: March 2015

Free speech isn't free

Posted: March 13, 2015 at 3:47 pm

SEPTA DID what it felt it had to do, pointlessly, and wound up in federal court after banning posters deemed to be anti-Islamic.

I say pointlessly because the same ban had been tried and defeated in Washington, D.C., New York and San Francisco.

The U.S. District Court here ruled Wednesday that since SEPTA has accepted other advocacy advertising, it can't refuse ads that call for ending U.S. aid to Islamic countries and that portray an Islamic leader as an ally of Adolf Hitler.

SEPTA general counsel Gino Benedetti said SEPTA rejected the Hitler ad because it "disparaged Muslims because it portrayed them in a way that I believe was untrue and incorrect and false," adding the ad "put every single Muslim in the same category as being a Jew hater."

I'll get to the specific ad in a moment, but that's a huge stretch by Benedetti, like saying attacking Boko Haram is an attack on all Muslims.

The posters (and other ads) are commissioned by the American Freedom Defense Initiative, co-founded by Pamela Geller. Both are accused of being "Islamophobic," which is a convenient way of trying to shut down those who disagree with you.

Those attacking Geller and AFDI include the Council on American-Islamic Relations, other Islamic groups and the leftist Southern Poverty Law Center, which I have supported over the years, even while not agreeing with all it says and does.

I also don't agree with everything Geller says. She's too often a bomb thrower whose careless words allow her critics to paint her with the anti-Muslim brush.

"This is part of the Islamic supremacist narrative," she told me. "I oppose an ideology that calls for the annihilation of the nonbeliever."

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Free speech isn't free

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Mitch Jones – Unnecessary Censorship – Video

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Mitch Jones - Unnecessary Censorship
The pleb at his finest. http://www.twitch.tv/watchmeblink1 In the words of skyline1478: If any of the involving parties have issues with me uploading this, j...

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Mitch Jones - Unnecessary Censorship - Video

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My Last Video Was Deleted – Google Internet Censorship – Video

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My Last Video Was Deleted - Google Internet Censorship
I posted a Voice over video of an ISIS beheading video that was solo fake it was silly and Youtube deleted it from my account within 24 hours. This is ridiculous!

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My Last Video Was Deleted - Google Internet Censorship - Video

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My Thoughts on Free Speech, Islam, and Censorship – Video

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My Thoughts on Free Speech, Islam, and Censorship
In this video, PC bullshit is flushed into oblivion. I #39;m getting so fucking tired of dealing with people #39;s stupid religion being shoved down our throats. Meanwhile, Canada is striking ISIS,...

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My Thoughts on Free Speech, Islam, and Censorship - Video

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Censorship can't cure Oklahoma frat racism

Posted: at 3:46 pm

Robert Shibley 11:24 a.m. CDT March 13, 2015

The University of Oklahoma football team and coaches walk into practice wearing all black in protest of the Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity at the University of Oklahoma on Monday, March. 9, 2015. The Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity has been banned from campus after several members of the fraternity took part in a racist chant caught on video.(Photo: Nick Oxford/AP)

The Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity chapter at the University of Oklahoma is giving America another crash course in how offensive people can be when they put their minds to it. Members of the now-defunct chapter are featured in a video singing a song that works in the n-word no fewer than three times, references lynching and pledges allegiance to an odious form of racial discrimination.

And if you're against racism, you should be glad they could do it. Free speech has many benefits, but one of the most overlooked is its ability to warn us of truths about the world especially when we'd rather not hear them. Doesn't the video tell us something we need to know about the racial attitudes of at least some OU students? The protesters on the OU campus must think so.

University President David Boren wasted no time condemning the SAE chapter, expelling two of its members and giving the others a day to clear out of their house. Though OU may punish SAE if it finds the chapter actually engaged in unlawful discrimination against African-American students, it shouldn't punish the fraternity members solely for the content of their expression.

Many people might find this disappointing. Indeed, punishing those who engage in offensive expression is perennially popular because it gives the impression that we're "doing something" about the problem of racism, sexism and bigotry. In France, for instance, Holocaust denial has long been illegal, and just this year the country arrested more than 70 people for praising the Charlie Hebdo terrorist attack.

Yet according to the Anti-Defamation League, 37 percent of the French harbor anti-Semitic opinions. In the U.S., that number is 9 percent, among the lowest in the world. While this comparison can't capture all the differences between the two nations, it strongly suggests that punishing expression is no real cure for bigotry, and refusing to punish hateful speech does not lead inevitably to its spread.

Censorship isn't necessary for those who are confident in the truth of their views. Somehow, college administrators are convinced that if they don't officially punish racism, their students will be drawn to it like moths to a flame. But there's no reason to expect that. There are myriad reasons to expect the opposite.

Instead of government crackdowns, it is far better to let the marketplace of ideas determine the social consequences for racist speech. In this instance, the OU members of SAE are not only likely to spend the rest of their college careers as pariahs but also to be hounded on social media and exposed for posterity on Google.

Baseless bigotry won't survive in a free marketplace of ideas which is what our campuses are supposed to be. College students are adults. Let's allow them to make up their own minds about what to believe, free from the coercive power of the state.

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Censorship can't cure Oklahoma frat racism

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Ron Paul : Obama Has Started ‘Illegal and Immoral’ Wars in Syria, Iraq and Libya New Cold War – Video

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Ron Paul : Obama Has Started #39;Illegal and Immoral #39; Wars in Syria, Iraq and Libya New Cold War
Ron Paul : Obama Has Started #39;Illegal and Immoral #39; Wars in Syria, Iraq and Libya New Cold War Subscribe to my channel for newest about DOLLAR COLLAPSE / ECONOMIC CRISIS / CURRENCY ...

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Ron Paul : Obama Has Started 'Illegal and Immoral' Wars in Syria, Iraq and Libya New Cold War - Video

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The Alex Jones Show – 2nd HOUR VIDEO Commercial Free – Tuesday January 13 2015 – Ron Paul – Video

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The Alex Jones Show - 2nd HOUR VIDEO Commercial Free - Tuesday January 13 2015 - Ron Paul
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The Alex Jones Show - 2nd HOUR VIDEO Commercial Free - Tuesday January 13 2015 - Ron Paul - Video

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RON PAUL Warns : Economic Collapse and Martial law in 2015 – Video

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RON PAUL Warns : Economic Collapse and Martial law in 2015
RON PAUL Warns : Economic Collapse and Martial law in 2015 Subscribe to my channel for newest about DOLLAR COLLAPSE / ECONOMIC CRISIS / CURRENCY WARS / FINANCIAL WARS / NEW ...

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RON PAUL Warns : Economic Collapse and Martial law in 2015 - Video

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Daniel McAdams: US Foreign Policy Hurting US Companies Abroad – Video

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Daniel McAdams: US Foreign Policy Hurting US Companies Abroad
Jason Burack of Wall St for Main St interviewed the Executive Director of the Ron Paul Institute of Peace and Prosperity http://www.ronpaulinstitute.org/, Daniel McAdams. Daniel #39;s full bio...

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Daniel McAdams: US Foreign Policy Hurting US Companies Abroad - Video

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Why climate denial is about much more than corporate interests

Posted: at 3:45 pm

Its not An Inconvenient Truth yet. But for a movie focused on climate change, Sony Pictures Classics Merchants of Doubt based on the widely read book of the same name by historians Naomi Oreskes and Erik Conway, and directed by Robert Kenner (Food, Inc.) is already generating a huge volume of discussion. It seems poised to become a must-watch film in the climate debate.

The film, which opens today in Washington, D.C., explores along history of challenges tothe science behind a variety of environmental and public health risks. Smoking. CFCs. Acid rain. Climate change. In many cases, these challenges were linked to corporate interests thus the tobacco industry, for many years, questionedthe emerging science of smokings risks.

Merchants of Doubtis certainly landing in the right news cycle. It comes out in the wake of reports includingby The Washington Post about energyinterests funding of climate skeptic researcher Willie Soon, of the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics. In a statementposted on the Web site of the Heartland Institute, a conservative think tank, Soon responded thathe had been the subject of attacks in the media, but acknowledged that his research had been partly supported by some energy producers something he said had long been a matter of public record. Soon added that in submitting my academic writings I have always complied with what I understood to be disclosure practices in my field generally, consistent with the level of disclosure made by many of my Smithsonian colleagues.

It all plays into a common narrative: That industry doesnt want government regulations, so it tries tocast doubt on the science behind them. Many of those who go to see Merchants of Doubt will, I suspect, go with such a narrative in their minds.

But the film itself presents a more complex picture. True, Merchants of Doubt focuses a great deal on the role of industry in supporting scientific argumentsthat are consistent with less regulation. But it alsoshows that denial of science on issues like climate change is about much more than that. Its aboutcertain deep seated beliefs and ideologies particularly those championing the free market and individual liberty (which we tend to call libertarianism).

None of this is about the science, says Oreskes, a Harvard historian and co-author of the book behind the film, in the movie. All of this is a political debate about the role of government.

In another segment, the film follows libertarian-leaningSkeptic magazine founder Michael Shermer as he tries to convince his ideological compatriots that climate change isnt just something that liberals made up. Shermer concludes that the whole issue has become tribal. Indeed, you can see the emotion on screen at one point as Shermer is challenged from the audience at a libertarian gathering, where hes gone to present the case for climate change being real.

So whatreallydrives attacks on certain bodies of environmental and public health science? Is there a root cause?To address that question in the context of Merchants of Doubt, Icalled the woman behind it all Oreskes. In our conversation, I asked Oreskes whom Ive known for a long time about my concern. And she brought up what I considered a very goodanalogy to help both address it and also explain it.

Thats the chicken and egg thing, she explained. Theres two stories to be told: One is the supply of disinformation, and the other is the demand, why do people accept it, and buy it. Our book is definitely a supply side story, because we stumbled across a supply side story. I think the demand side is also important to understand.

Supply and demand.It fits the situation nicely.Supply in this context would refer to the volume of arguments and claims in the public arena that challenge mainstream science with respect to environmental or public health risks. For many of these issues, these claims take a similar form. Scientists have asserted the existence of a risk say, smoking causes lung cancer and the claims in question then sow doubt about this conclusion. (Hence the film and book title.)

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Why climate denial is about much more than corporate interests

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