Completely wrong. It's usually those that allow "freedom of speech" to mean "freedom from consequences" that turn more easily towards fascism than those who outlaw hate-speech. There is nothing to be gained by allowing people to spew all sorts of evil rhetoric, it only enhances spreading of such vile forms of beliefs. Suffice to say, the Nazis came up in a period that had free speech, and they relished in saying and doing whatever they wanted to. They would have loved it even more if it had been even more of a free for all, like in the US.Nalikill wrote: ↑Wed Apr 15, 2020 11:14 amCould've fooled me. Suppression of speech is always the tool of a fascist. If they hate them so much, why are they imitating them? And as Kerensky so aptly quoted earlier... those who play with the devil's tools will be brought by degrees to wield his sword.
As I said in the very next sentence:
I know that's not the intention, I just find it ironic that they're falling into the same rhetorical traps that the Nazis loved to lay so much. The "double-talk" of nazism was one of the core ways it managed to be so radical and spread so far. Most of its language was directed against bolshevism - i.e., communism - but they used that as a code word for jews.
I wonder what "nazi" might come to be a code word for in these countries, that are so fervent about prosecuting "nazis" and "nazism"?
Some nations have learned from the past, and that it is more important to protect the dignity of humans than to hold on to an absurd concept of every speech being equally valid. Other nations sadly have not, and you can see where that has led to in places like the USA, whare racism is rampant and far-right ideology is way bigger than any supposedly democratic nation that did actively fight the Nazis should ever have.
Sounds more like you are following a typical black and white approach, where not allowing the most disgusting rubbish to be spoken somehow means that you are on your way to outlaw everything. That's basically the Glenn Beck approach to things, and it has little to do with reality. A proper democracy will have freedom of speech with tough rules on hate-speech. If you allow hate-speech, you end up with tons of radicals and fundamentalists, and you also open the door to everyone lying their rear off to influence common people. You end up with charlatans who build their own sects or try to find other way to scam people, you end up with widespread groups of paranoid conspiracy theorists, you end up with tons of people who think they are above the law. Funnily enough, nations with that kind of approach tend to have a society that is a whole lot closer to the ones you find in corrupt and oppressive regimes that outlaw every speech that doesn't suit their view. You end up with less people defending the actual democratic values that the nation is supposedly build on.