The Consequences of Free Speech

by Gene Howington, Guest Blogger

On a recent thread, the topic of politically correct speech as it relates to free speech came up. As with many of the more interesting threads on this blog, the topic came about from meandering rather than the subject proper of the thread. The subject was brought back to fore in my mind this morning when I read this: How Free Speech Died on Campus by  Sohrab Ahmari, published on The Wall Street Journal (online.wsj.com). It seems there are a lot of misconceptions about what constitutes free speech, the limitations thereon and the consequences thereof.

The core of the American free speech right and tradition is codified in the 1st Amendment of the U.S. Constitution.

Congress shall make no law [. . . ] abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press[.]”

The U.N. Universal Declaration of Human Rights, Art. 19, states:

Everyone has the right to freedom of opinion and expression; this right includes freedom to hold opinions without interference and to seek, receive and impart information and ideas through any media and regardless of frontiers.”

This has implications that apply to public discourse.  Let us consider these implications.

What is free speech?  I think the Universal Declaration gets to the heart of the idea with the words “freedom of opinion and expression”. You are free to think what you like and express your thoughts. The marketplace of ideas – a consequence of freedom of speech – relies upon this. Everyone says what they like and may the best idea/argument win. However, that being said, there are some limitations on free speech that are universally accepted in domestic and international jurisprudence.  Namely the exceptions of defamation (lying about someone for gain and/or profit) and incitement language (encouraging others to violence or panic). Many countries also recognize sedition (calling for the overthrow of government) as unacceptable as well. Consider the difference in these prohibitions and the different ways of addressing the 1st Amendment: the absolutist approach, the categorical approach and the balancing of interests approach.

All three approaches allow for restrictions on free speech. The absolutist approach takes the stance that literally no law prohibiting speech is permissible . . . except when the words are so intimately tied to a specific action like inciting panic or contracting for an illegal purpose as to be inseparable from the otherwise prohibited act itself. The categorical approach attempts to define what speech is or is not protected by assigning categories such as obscenity, fighting words, commercial speech and political speech. The balancing of interests approach in every case courts should weigh the individual’s interest in free expression against a valid governmental interest in restricting the speech in question with a thumb on the scale of justice in favor of free speech. Most modern jurists adopt either the categorical or the balancing approach as the absolutist approach is impractical. Personally, I’m somewhere in between those two analytical schools: circumstances should be considered, but some speech should be categorically protected like political free speech.

Defamation and incitement have sound public policy behind them. In the case of defamation, it arises from the long respected notion in torts that someone should not be able to lie about another to their detriment and/or for the defamer’s benefit. It’s a matter of equity. It has nothing to do with your feelings being hurt. There is a separate tort recognized in some jurisdictions called “Intentional Infliction of Emotional Distress”. It is a very specific, very hard to prove tort where someone says things to or about someone with specific foreknowledge and the intent to cause the hearer or subject to suffer extreme emotional distress. It is a wilful tort and you must prove the speaker had mens rea (guilty mind) in causing the extreme emotional distress.

In the case of incitement, everyone knows the old trope about “yelling fire in a crowded theater”. Inciting panic or violence often ends up with innocent bystanders getting harmed either physically or by having their property destroyed and that is a matter of public safety as well as equity. Sedition, on the other hand, is a “political crime”. In the United States, a particularly odd political crime too considering the express language of the Declaration of Independence.

However, with these above noted exceptions, free speech means anything goes basically.  You are allowed to think and express your thoughts. This carries some broader implications.

As all people are free to express their thoughts and opinions, you are certainly going to hear things you disagree with or disapprove of or maybe even find insulting or offensive. That is simply a cost of the freedom. If you value free speech then you accept that you will be disagreed with, insulted and offended at some time. If you don’t accept this fact, then you value freedom of speech as long as you approve of what others say first and that, by definition, is not free.  If you cannot accept this and try to oppress others simply for having a different, insulting or offensive opinion, then you miss the point of free speech. The antidote for different ideas, just as it is for offense or insult, is more free speech. Make a rebuttal. Offer rejoinder for insult and offense. But everyone gets their say whether you personally like it or not. Respond. Don’t. It’s your choice. However, if you value freedom of speech, you’ll never try to censor. Even if the motive behind your thought is to crush an idea that is deeply offensive and indefensible. Motives don’t matter. Once you cross the line into censorship, you’ve abandoned criticism and counterargument for oppression. You will never beat a bad idea with oppression just like you’ll never stop a good idea with oppression. As the titular character V said in V for Vendetta, “Beneath this mask there is more than flesh. There is an idea, Mr. Creedy – and ideas are bulletproof.” Ideas and arguments are not idea and argument proof though. That’s the whole notion behind the marketplace of ideas. This illustrates why the antidote to bad ideas and bad arguments is precisely more free speech – better ideas, better arguments.

Your feelings are not generally protected by law with the one exception in tort. They are subjective. They are your own reactions and you own them. They may or may not be rational.

This is part and parcel of what is wrong with the idea of politically correct speech. An idea that has crept on to what was once the bastion of free speech – American college campuses. Rather than interpret or summarize How Free Speech Died on Campus by  Sohrab Ahmari, I am simply going to direct your attention to it and suggest that you read it in full for a scathing example of “politically correct” speech regulations on college campuses and how it has gone wrong. It’s a short article, but dense and well worth the read, full of examples like;

At Western Michigan University, it is considered harassment to hold a ‘condescending sex-based attitude.’ That just about sums up the line ‘I think of all Harvard men as sissies” (from F. Scott Fitzgerald’s 1920 novel ‘This Side of Paradise’), a quote that was banned at Yale when students put it on a T-shirt.”

and astute observations like;

‘The people who believe that colleges and universities are places where we want less freedom of speech have won, Mr. Lukianoff says. ‘If anything, there should be even greater freedom of speech on college campuses. But now things have been turned around to give campus communities the expectation that if someone’s feelings are hurt by something that is said, the university will protect that person. As soon as you allow something as vague as Big Brother protecting your feelings, anything and everything can be punished.‘” [emphasis added]

Suffice it to say, in an academic environment, there is nothing more detrimental to learning than shutting down the marketplace of ideas because some pinheaded “risk management” administrator thinks someone’s feelings should get hurt by words they themselves are free to challenge. If this trend continues, our colleges and universities will become a global laughing stock.

Free speech must be protected at all costs.  It is how we speak truth to power, to others and to ourselves when we are interested in learning truths.  It can make you uncomfortable.  It will challenge you. It will piss you off. It will hurt your feelings.  Freedom isn’t free.  It comes with costs.  These are some of the costs that you pay for freedom of speech.  If you don’t like getting your feelings hurt? If you don’t like being challenged? Develop thicker skin, learn to counter what you don’t like, or be ready to have yet another important freedom eroded, but this time not in the name of (false) security, but the onus of political correctness and catering to the subjective over the objective. James Madison thought freedom of speech (and the press) was critical and the 1st Amendment the most important item in the Bill of Rights.  Maybe you should think about that too.

What do you think?

Think, mind you.  Not feel.  That being said, have at it.

Source(s): WSJ Online, U.S. Constitution, U.N. Universal Declaration of Human Rights

~submitted by Gene Howington, Guest Blogger

237 thoughts on “The Consequences of Free Speech”

  1. bettykath,

    But in the end, both solutions to the problem aren’t less free speech, but more. You can’t educate about a problem you can’t openly talk about.

  2. Gene,

    I think we’ve been talking past each other.

    There are two parts to the problem of non-pc speech.

    One part is its affect on those who are targeted and the need to provide them with the support they need to deal with the hurt. That’s where you seem to be coming from.

    The other part is to educate those who use the speech to at least understand that they are inflicting hurt. Some really don’t know that it’s hurtful. Others know and that’s why they use it. This is where I’m coming from.

  3. The soap opera aspect of this blog is fascinating. As I’ve stated previously, my wife is a lover of fiction, I nonfiction; believing it much more interesting. I have never been a watcher of soap operas but my grandmother was. She loved the intrique, conflict, etc. However, she didn’t like the real life soap opera we all experience because she would then see the dark side of people. She felt that would turn her negative, but it didn’t. She was one of my positive mentors. However, my old man, her son, taught me to see things as they are. To never bury your head in the sand. He taught me that even when the truth is ugly, there is an inherent beauty in it. Almost all of the leaders here were obviously brought up in different variations of positive world views. People are basically good.

    Sports have also taught me a lot. I learned a lot as a player of baseball and football, finding the lessons of baseball more relevant to life. By virtue of being a coach for many more years, the lessons were greater. I learned quickly that while I was the leader, the team would also have leaders within their ranks. When the team had positive, compassionate, leaders we would exceed our talent. When the leader[s] were selfish and negative, we would have a long, underachieving season. The American Legion teams[16-18] were the most fascinating because these were talented, young men. I was never a micromanager, I had a few rules and we played a fun, aggressive style. The teams w/ good leaders never came to me w/ problems within the ranks. The negative leaders often threatened to report someone to me[I don’t miss much] and indeed did. Mr. Turley is a great coach, not a micromanager. So, it is incumbent upon the leaders in the ranks here to set the tone. I’m merely a rookie utility infielder, the veterans need to step up and make sure the tone is positive. That is NOT to say there shouldn’t be conflict. It means the conflict should be handled fairly. You deal w/ the conflict and then YOU LET IT GO. And you don’t continually threaten to “tell the coach.”

  4. Mike,

    Not to worry … my organization only has one member and is so secret I never know where the next meeting will be held.

  5. “However, this is something I don’t think you can protect young people from by oppressing speech.” (Gene)

    Certainly not, but you can protect them from being the purveyors of such language by teaching them through word and deed and formal instruction what responsible free speech is all about.

  6. Any institution that would teach me a “secret handshake” is an institution I wouldn’t join. To roughly paraphrase Groucho.

    BTW I do know that “sense” is not spelled “sence”. I don’t need no stinkin spell check.

  7. bettykath,

    1) Your possibility is not so, but probably because I had a really good instructors at an early age about human nature in my grandfather and mother. I see what you describe as a problem for teens and it was something that when I was a teen I saw many friends go through. However, this is something I don’t think you can protect young people from by oppressing speech. They’ll find out the world is often not a gentle place soon enough. Better to arm and armour them from the slings and arrows by keeping the desire to please others and their sense of self-worth in perspective.

    2) You’re welcome.

  8. Gene H. 1, November 18, 2012 at 11:14 pm

    bettykath,

    Your assumption is that I’ve never been on the receiving end.
    ————————
    This is what I was responding to.

    In fact, I accept that you’ve been on the receiving end of hurtful language. If not, why such strong support of the “sticks and stones”. I think you’ve repeated it so much b/c the words DID hurt and you needed help in dealing with that hurt. I could be wrong so I don’t take this thought as “the truth”, just a possibility.

    Thanks for thinking of me as being nice. I don’t know about the lady part. )”Lady” brings up some images that don’t fit me.) : )

  9. pete,

    Good catch on the comments at the source material. Most entertaining to see whom was trying to “out victim” whom.

  10. The SPCT, eh? They’re a rough crowd. Mostly ex-Mafia and the Mexican professional wrestlers known as luchadores. A couple of SAS types too. It is rumored that they use nefarious secret alien technology recovered by NASA from the Tycho crater on the Moon. Very shady.

  11. PS. I have sent copies of the twinkie thread to the SPCT (society for prevention of cruelty to twinkies). I anticipate 5 or 10 of youse guys are going to get a VERY NASTY letter.
    We’ll see how tough youse guys are then !!!!!!!!!!! NEENER NEENER.

  12. The consequences of free speech is gloriously seen in the last half of the twinkie thread two days ago.

    About halfway through someone nudged the petcock attached to the pent-up male urine reservoir. Someone nearby got a little spray on them. Of course the male response was to nudge the petcock a little more. A 3rd then 4th party got hit with drops. Any guess what happened next!!

    RELEASE THE HOUNDS “LET THE SPRAYING BEGIN”

    Several individuals went so far as to hook into their own private stock, most likely stored in 55 gallon drums in the back of their garages, and hooked up a hose to their lawn sprinklers. Indiscriminately splashing and spraying anyone innocently visiting the Twinkie site
    THE HORROR…THE HORROR

    How many innocents have suffered on the Twinkie thread, because of their Love and Concern, for such a fine confectionary delite, They too were infected. by the territorial markings of un-neutered male imperialism “gone wild” Oh ye stray and feral beasts, If ye only knew the trauma youse have unleashed onto the twinkie afficianados.
    , Now I like many have lost my innocence. I fear I will never again be able to enjoy the epicurian mystery delite of hostess products ever again!!!!

    Yes free speech has consequences, sadly the Twinkie empire has caught the full brunt of it. Never EVER again will I disassociate the trauma here with the freedom of filling my tub with hostess products and and setting my naked self down in their soft and embracing gooey wonderfullness.

    MADNESS.

  13. Good night, kiddo. Early start tomorrow. Shopping and then the first phase of prep for Thanksgiving.

  14. “Well if you’re the only one who knows the secret handshake, you should teach the rest of us.” (Gene)

    No

    “However, then it wouldn’t be a secret now, would it?” 🙂 (Gene)

    I hold the patent on the secret handshake and I ain’t sharin’ it with none of youse guys ’cause you’re all blabbermouths.

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