I know. I'm just taking another poke at a ridiculous notion. 

People shouldn't get in trouble for what they say regardless, with obvious exceptions made for destructive actions. Freedom of speech does not apply to yelling "FIRE" in a crowded theater. Unless the theater is actually on fire.
Dead on. They're talking about burning the American flag, an activity I personally find revolting. But to stop a person from burning the flag, as long as they own the flag and there's no imminent danger of it setting something else on fire, violates their freedom of expression. So while I am certainly allowed to verbally abuse them and their cause as I see fit (the freedoms they are making use of apply to me as well), that is all I can do.Everybody knows American isn't easy. America is advanced citizenship. You gotta want it bad, 'cause it's gonna put up a fight. It's gonnasay, "You want free speech? Let's see you acknowledge a man whose words make your blood boil, who's standing center stage and advocating, at the top of his lungs, that which you would spend a lifetime opposing at the top of yours."
While this wasn't in the US, a punishment of a year in the slammer for remarks said in private exceeded even my expectations.
https://www.reuters.com/article/idUSKBN2852DI/
An evasive response, just as I expected.
I already said I had no idea if this action was being specifically taken. I don't live in the EU, and I use "no one" by personal preference anyway.
I was expressing a general concern about anyone receiving any punishment for choice of language. And I established that yes, that does happen.
If I were to use the N word and voice publicly that black people are inclined towards criminality (a disgusting thing to say and not something I would ever say other than to make this example)...
I am sorry, but I cannot agree with you. Whether it's 1950 or 2024, the Constitution cannot be set aside when it becomes inconvenient.
I am neither black nor trans, so I will not use them as examples. But, if you say that people on the autism spectrum, which I am, are mentally defective and should be drowned in a bucket of water because they are a drain on society (and I am sure you have no such feeling, I am merely extending your prior example), that's definitely hate speech. But, in America, I have no right to punish you in any way. I cannot call the cops on you, and I cannot interfere with you. You have a Constitutional right to feel your hate, and to express it, no matter how much it might upset others. If you choose to act on your hate, and drown me or one of the ASD kids I work with in a bucket, that is a hate crime. And you will go to jail for it, assuming you haven't perished in the attempt.
Social: Definitely. A perfectly valid way of expressing your own feelings.
Job-wise: Under certain circumstances, yes.
Criminal: Absolutely not, unless they deliberately incited criminal acts.
Indeed, yes. However, these days, many don't agree. There was an incident where a kid got censured by his school for wearing a T-shirt saying that there were two genders. I didn't include it because I don't consider getting asked to change and being sent home from school upon declining to be punishment per se. But it certainly was a denial of his right to express an opinion.
So, you're saying that, if a child were sent home from grade school for wearing a T-shirt that said "Censorship is bullshit!" on it, that would be a denial of his right to express an opinion?Indeed, yes. However, these days, many don't agree. There was an incident where a kid got censured by his school for wearing a T-shirt saying that there were two genders. I didn't include it because I don't consider getting asked to change and being sent home from school upon declining to be punishment per se. But it certainly was a denial of his right to express an opinion.
So, you're saying that, if a child were sent home from grade school for wearing a T-shirt that said "Censorship is bull" on it, that would be a denial of his right to express an opinion?
In general, the statement "students don't leave their rights at the schoolhouse gate" is noble, but false. In the case where those words were uttered, the decision was to allow a search (and the punishment for the contraband found) that would have been illegal elsewhere. Schools do place restrictions on apparel.
The best way to measure the fairness in banning an expression would be whether its opposite number was also banned... if the school prohibited rainbow or trans flag shirts, its ban on a shirt proclaiming two genders would be appropriate. But if it permitted expressions from one side of the gender debate but blocked expressions from the other... that means that the school is actively enforcing a political viewpoint.
You misquoted me. I didn't say "bullDepends on if another student was allowed to stay while wearing a shirt that said "Racism is bull" or "Homophobia is bull
". If those students were sent home, then it would clearly be about the use of the S-word. If only the "Censorship is bull
" shirt got... well, censored, that would be censorship.
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