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Comment by kreetx

1 day ago

AFAIK, the speech is still free.

The denied person seems to be a foreign national and by all looks of it, an activist, taking part in university protests. It doesn't seem all that surprising that he got denied entry.

Man, if we can't agree that "freedom of speech" includes protection from legal consequences for something you say then there's really nowhere to go from here.

  • Well, he appears to have been a protester at Columbia University in 2024, and he is also not a citizen.

    If you yourself are a citizen, I'm sure you can express your views and not be sent anywhere. You can also vote to get people in power who are more to your liking, or even attempt be one of those people yourself.

  • Remember, the far left uses terms like "assault" to describe speech they don't like. Maybe this is conservatives' chance to play "manipulate the meaning of words" and spin it as "denied entry in order to prevent assault" ?

    Either way, they made certain forms of speech de facto illegal and we're not going to go all "free speech" a few years after people on the right were fired or kicked out of school for expressing wrongthink.

    • The far left is welcome to use those stupid terms. That is also their First Amendment protected speech.

      Has anyone been charged with assault by the state for their speech? No.

      Private schools and private employers are private entities (it’s in the name) ergo they do not have to respect the First Amendment. In fact they have First Amendment rights to kick out whoever they want, free of government compelling them otherwise.

      Incredible eh?

  • Has any country ever functioned like that? The idea seems absurd. Of course you should be held legally accountable for what you say. You can see trivial examples in American culture with defamation law, laws against calling for violence, laws about when and where you're allowed to protest. Agree with it or not, we don't have a right to say what we want with no consequence. The devil as always is in the details. But people need to actually agree what sort of values we should have represented as a people to write those laws, and america has never figured out how to do that without either violence or a massive river of cash to distract us from each other.

    For an instance of how bad free speech can get, look no further than the role RTLM played in the genocide of the Tutsi in 1994.

    • > You can see trivial examples in American culture with defamation law, laws against calling for violence, laws about when and where you're allowed to protest.

      Defamation is extremely hard to stick in the US.

      You also are allowed in general to call for violence in the US. Incitement is very specific and not merely "calling for violence."

      > we don't have a right to say what we want with no consequence.

      Yes, in the US you absolutely are allowed to say what you want with no state-sanctioned consequence. There are extremely, extremely narrow exceptions. Way, way narrower than most people on either side of the political aisle intuit.

      For an instance of how great free speech can get, look no further than the role the 1st Amendment has played in creating a highly adaptive society that, despite the internal chaos, conquers most of its challenges.

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  • It's the same thing a lot of the people on the right were complaining about ten years ago. Most people don't seem to understand these contradictions until it affects them.

    Watching this happen twice has really killed the idea that polls are a useful way to determine mandates for government policy in my mind. Most of the population probably just shouldn't be involved.

    • What legal censorship were conservatives facing ten years ago? There is no real precedent for this that I can think of since maybe the Red Scare in the 50s.

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    • > Most people don't seem to understand these contradictions until it affects them.

      And, by design, it won't affect most people. Except the people who have the chutzpah to speak out against israel, of course—good luck finding that on cable tv or the opinion column. That shit is only on social media.

Restating:

    > It doesn't seem all that surprising that he 
    > got denied entry. [because he was]
    1> an activist
    2> taking part in university protests
    3> foreign

In your mind: Why do these qualifications move US Gov behavior - from the unacceptable column into the unsurprising column?

  • The protesting and activism are the same. I think foreign students/citizens should refrain from doing either of these, as they are in the country for a specific reason (to study), and not to turn its government. You'll probably get away with it when you do it at a small scale, but as things get out of hand, you are unlikely to go unnoticed - as person in the topic apparently did.

    • There are no such considerations in the US Constitution.

      As an American, I have a right to hear the speech of foreign students and citizens. The government does not have the power to prevent me from hearing what they have to say. Small or large scale does not matter.

      Stanley v Georgia: "It is now well established that the Constitution protects the right to receive information and ideas... This right to receive information and ideas, regardless of their social worth is fundamental to our free society."

      https://supreme.justia.com/cases/federal/us/394/557/

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