New Zealand Censors Declare Christchurch Shooting Footage Illegal; Start Rounding Up Violators
from the this-will-end-badly dept
Following the recent mass shooting in New Zealand, the county's government swiftly declared the live footage of the attack, along with the shooter's manifesto, "objectionable." This classification is more than a condemnation: it made both illegal to possess or distribute. Thanks to this response, New Zealand law enforcement is now rounding up and charging anyone who violates this post-tragedy decision to make newsworthy content the legal equivalent of child porn.
The first reported arrest occurred March 17th, two days after the shooter livestreamed his attack on local mosques.
A teenager has appeared in a New Zealand court charged with distributing the livestream video of a deadly mass shooting at Christchurch’s Al Noor mosque.
The 18-year-old, whose name was suppressed by the judge, was also charged with publishing a photograph of the mosque with the message “target acquired”, and for inciting violence.
He faces a maximum of 14 years in prison for each charge, prosecutors said.
On top of the stiff potential penalties, the judge also apparently believed the 18-year-old posed enough of a threat (for further violence or just simply disappearing) to deny him bail.
The arrests resulting from New Zealand's media censorship office's declaration continue.
A Christchurch businessman has appeared in court on charges of distributing footage of one of the mosque shootings.
Philip Neville Arps, 44, had his application for bail declined when he appeared in the Christchurch District Court today.
He was remanded in custody until his next appearance on April 15.
Another arrest for distributing "obscene" footage and another denial of bail.
In both cases, those arrested appear to be sympathetic (if that's the right word -- it seems so wrong) with the shooter's hatred of Muslims and preference for a whiter tomorrow. The 18-year-old's "target acquired" comment suggested, at minimum, they saw nothing wrong with targeting members of certain religions.
Philip Arps appears to be a long-time proponent of white nationalism -- even going so far as to use a symbol appropriated by neo-Nazis as the logo for his business. Arps apparently spent the days after the shooting praising the shooter and refusing to apologize for his views. A review of Arps' business by Stuff Magazine shows Arp hasn't exactly kept his personal beliefs and his company's public presence from intermingling.
Beneficial Insulation also charges $14.88 per metre for insulation – 14.88 is a hate symbol popular with white extremists.
The company's website www.BIIG.co.nz, is an acronym for the company's full name Beneficial Insulation Installs Guaranteed. BIIg was the name of a barracks at Auschwitz concentration camp, operated by Nazi Germany in occupied Poland during World War II and the Holocaust.
While it may seem like it's a good idea to take these people out of circulation, the fact that they're facing a possible 14 years for sharing content arbitrarily declared "obscene" is… well… obscene. These may appear to be clear-cut interpretations of the law, given the sympathies of the people arrested, but future arrests may not be so unambiguous. The footage declared illegal is still newsworthy and the media censorship board hasn't exactly made it clear it won't be sending cops after people who use the footage for journalism, research, or criticism.
The ban of the complete video does not automatically mean that any image or short extract from it is also banned. However any edited clips, screenshots or still images taken from the full video depicting scenes of violence, injury or death, or that promote terrorism, may also be illegal.
Violations will be in the eye of the government beholder. Some violators won't even know they've violated the law until they're being rung up on charges and denied bail. This is an overreaction to a pretty much unprecedented development: the livestreaming of a mass murder. The potential for misjudgment and abuse is huge, given the natural tendency of people to share and comment on newsworthy incidents.
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Filed Under: attack, censorship, christchurch, criminal, free speech, massacre, new zealand, philip arps, sharing, video
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Hopefully the US will eventually outlaw "saying mean things" (which go way beyond mean), to promote a more civilized society.
Free speech has been abused to the point where the maximalist approach no longer works. A great start would be to eliminate truth as a defense in libel actions, after Section 230 is gutted.
We as a species need to grow the **** up.
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"charging anyone who violates this post-tragedy decision to make newsworthy content the legal equivalent of child porn"
Erm, playing devil's advocate here, but isn't that the correct classification? Child porn is illegal because it by definition involves a child being abused.
Don't you think that footage of children being outright murdered should count for the same protections?
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I've read that the manifesto both names explicit targets (individual people) that he exhorts people to murder and contains explicit details on how to go about murdering people. I can understand wanting to prevent those things from being circulated, but the government could have narrowly stated that just those things couldn't be shared, with a redacted version of the manifesto being okay for sharing.
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I genuinely can't tell if you are kidding or not.
If not, this is just the biggest blind spot in people. For some reason they cannot comprehend that establishing thoughtcrime for ostensibly good outcomes is not only likely to be applied for bad outcomes, it has been proven to be over and over.
Give an establishment subjective power over people and it will be abused and abused and abused.
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British law does not allow truth as a defense for libel.
Free speech is another one of those socipathic, social-Darwinist policies which are on the way out. It's why single-payer, basic income, and other "socialist" policies are taking over.
Privileges which are abused can and should be taken away. We don't need TOTAL free speech, just fairness, and we do not have that at present.
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…which is how they managed to put the truth of the Holocaust on trial.
Objectively define “fairness” such that it applies evenly across all speech instead of only to speech you do not like.
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When police in the United States release body camera footage of themselves shooting and killing people, we tend to call that “evidence”, and we do not make it illegal to distribute or view. The Christchurch shooter’s video is evidence of his crimes; while it may be difficult for anyone with even an ounce of empathy to watch the video, it should not be illegal to do so.
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Very scary
Of course, these people probably are no good. But please keep in mind that everybody looks bad in the papers if they get arrested.
Arresting people for random offences because they look bad, is what makes a police state.
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You cannot silence nutjobs. If you take away their avenues for free speech in a public setting, then you can expect them to find more emphatic methods to make a statement... such as going around killing people to "make their point".
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We don't have fairness now, even WITH our liberal free speech laws.
We do have people radicalizing and inciting terrorists with it though. That's got to stop.
Fairness would mean no revenge-porn, no defamation stuck in search engines in perpetuity, no public bullying, etc.
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authoritarian impulse
... current NZ Government seems decidedly authoritarian.
That is the normal governing impulse.
Even the explicit U.S. Bill of Rights has proven a weak bulwark against authoritarians with govenment titles.
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So what? I despise the Westboro Baptist Church, but so long as they do not incite people to violence or defame someone, they should have as much right to spew their anti-gay propaganda as I should to call them homophobes.
Short of policing everyone’s speech — off- and online — in Orwellian fashion, how exactly do you plan to do that?
Good luck identifying revenge porn before it is uploaded.
Search engines are content aggregators; that they scrape what could be defamatory content is the fault of the website that posted such content, not the search engine.
Only so long as we can start with Donald Trump.
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It's difficult to work out where the line would be. In your example, the two aren't really comparable. Firstly, because the former is the record of a public servant performing his public duty, while the latter is purely criminal activity. Also, while I'm sure it happens are there any examples where the cop's entire video was released, or just the parts relevant to evidence? I was under the impression that they were always edited before release. It appears to be the full stream that's being targeted here, not the edited versions.
The other is of intent. Child porn is intended to titilate its targeted audience. ISIS beheading videos are intended to shock and help recruit terrorists. The intention of the Christchurch video appears to have been both. The cop videos are valuable, but they're not created with the intention of capturing a specific act beforehand
While we should certainly be wary of where we draw the lines, if we're banning child porn and ISIS videos, why not mass shooters? Remembering, of course, that NZ might already be drawing the lines somewhere different to where an American would draw them...
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Fair points.
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The Censorious crowd
TechDirt commenters seem especially censorious. Since the US government is forbidden from being censors by the First Amendment, they just go along with corporate censorship from Silicon Valley billionaires.
It's the one thing those multinational corporations are consistently praised fro doing around here.
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Even taking away your socialist leanings, your mindset is frightening. How can you have a complete lack of being able to grasp a simple truth. There are no degrees of free speech, you either have it or you don't. At least have the guts to speak your truth instead of a silly statement like 'We don't need TOTAL free speech", as if capitalizing the word total implies everyone agrees with your definition of objectionable speech.
In the case of NZ, just because you ban free speech doesn't mean you ban hatred. At least when there is free speech you have a better chance to know who your enemies are.
In the case of your post, I find it offensive and unfair due to the fact that it defies a fundamental truth. Under your version of free speech, you wouldn't be able to post such babble. Under actual free speech, the world gets to see who you are and then can subsequently ignore you.
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I literally just argued that the Christchurch shooter’s video should not be illegal to either view or distribute.
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Re: The Censorious crowd
It's weird how you always present a false dichotomy and ignore the simple truth that you're just being told you're an asshole. Free speech doesn't protect you from people expressing their true opinions about you.
I know it's easier to invent a conspiracy than to accept the harsh truth, but there it is.
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Who decides what is allowed, and what do you do if you disagree with them? Also, such laws hand power to authoritarian dictators, because they can use them to silence opposition by calling it hate speech or detrimental to public order.
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And don't forget war videos and pics. Famous Time cover comes to mind.
Intent. More than 1 party to look at for intent. eg. Baby bath pics. Are you sharing a cute pic of your child or are you scouting a prospective buyer? Does the viewer see a cute pic of your child in the bath or porn?
If I were to share the video in question, am I sharing a news story or recruiting?
I think the only reason it is being banned is because of the long police response time. They don't want people to see how long this was carried out with zero interference from the police.
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I wish that John Doe would get an account here, so that I could tell the difference between his genuine comments vs people pretending to be him.
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I'll make you a deal. You can have my free speech when you agree that I get to ban speech I dislike too, and everyone else does as well. For instance, we'll start with the bible for promoting incest, move onto the koran for promoting violence against women, gays, heretics, apostates, children, goats, and dhimmi, then the communist manifesto for promoting violence against its own people, maybe the little red book for the same reasons.
Oh, and lets not forget the more fictional side of things, we'll have to ban The Giving Tree for promoting violence against trees, most scifi for promoting transhumanism, Harry Potter for promoting segregation, Ayn Rand for bloviating, anything with a bad guy for having a bad guy who's a meany poopy meany head...
Or, and here's a different alternative: You can keep your hands off our free speech, and we'll keep ours off yours.
Rule #1 for having a happy future is to never give government a power that can be used against you, because it eventually will be, every single time.
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Re: The Censorious crowd
[Citation needed]
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Yeah, fuck that first amendment shit. And while we're at it, let's get rid of that second amendment shit as well.
Because if words can hurt so badly, you certainly can't disagree that bullets can hurt worse.
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Actually that the search engines scrape AND REPUBLISH what they find on the net, without regard to takedown notices (thanks to Section 230), is their own doing, not that of the original website, though often stuff is posted specifically to weaponize the search engine, which causes damage wholly separate from what the original site and poster (who may be impossible to sue) has done.
This is why distributor liability still applies everywhere in the world except the American internet. Pretending it doesn't exist or asserting that search engines don't cause damage doesn't make it so, though it does lose points in a properly scored formal debate.
Unfairness such as this versus unfairness due to censorship is still unfairness. Inciting violence and terrorism is NOT free speech, and it's clear that what we used to think was harmless "mean" speech is far more insidious. Governments are moving in my direction, not yours, so maybe take it up with them.
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Disgust is not phobia.
Women call straight men "creepy" and far worse for preying on them under pretext of friendship. Now add a lie about the predator's sexual orientation to slip "under the radar" and you have something bordering on rape, or at least highly intrusive. Gays do this all the time to unsuspecting straights who are then vilified for actually recognizing the red flags for what they are.
Assuming homosexuals and heterosexuals are "equal," they are also equally predatory, except straight men can't cloak the way gay men can. Lesbian women can do the same under guise of "sisterhood," particularly when coaching high school sports, etc.
If Miss America becomes a teacher and has sex with a fifteen year-old boy, is that really a sex-crime? Let's have a divorced male therapist who sends all his money to his ex treat him for his "damage." That'd be hysterical.
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Community standards. We already decide which speech is allowed, btw. The First Amendment is not absolute.
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The Bible does not directly harm individuals.
Bullying, hate speech, libel, defamation, threats, and even namecalling, do.
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Commonwealth countries like New Zealand typically ban cartoons and text depicting/describing totally fictional characters.
99.95 percent of the reason child porn is banned anywhere, including the US, is that it's icky. All the other "reasons" people give are post hoc rationalizations. Yes, knowing that it's being viewed can cause ongoing distress to the victims, and that might be a good enough reason to ban it, but it's not the actual reason.
I do agree with you that the shooting video is ickier. It's probably not actually any more "newsworthy", either. From the shooting video you'd maybe find out something about how a particular shooter acted, which might generalize somehow, and from child porn you'd maybe find out something about how some pedophiles acted, which might also generalize somehow. For whatever either one is worth.
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There is no free speech if someone can anonymously defame another, know that the 230-immune search engines will spread it, and use that speech to retaliate against someone they don't like, or worse, a whistleblower.
We might as well just abolish all libel laws so that everyone has access to the same verbal weaponry, and can respond in kind when lied about.
Bullying need not be protected speech either. Here's another good idea: impute mental illness on someone, and a hearing is immediately held to determine its truth. If true, the target immediately qualifies for disability, and if false, the speaker must pay court costs and damages. The First Amendment remains intact.
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Unlike those poor fucks in New Zealand I'm actually able to read the manifesto, and have a copy I'm looking at now. What you read about it is incorrect. He spends a couple sentences mentioning, not explaining, nor giving explicit details, other methods to murder than guns. The only people he mentions killing by name are Angela Merkel, Erdogan, and Sadiq Khan. Not exactly a revelatory hit-list, considering they're already infamous to white nationalists.
He spends the vast majority of 74 pages explaining why he chose to do what he did and explaining his political views in the hopes that you'll agree.
If you want to read for yourself and not be misinformed by others there's a copy on the wayback machine.
NEW ZEALANDER WARNING, DO NOT CLICK THIS LINK https://web.archive.org/web/20190315225154/https://assets.documentcloud.org/documents/5770516/The-Gr eat-Replacement-New-Zealand-Shooter.pdf DO NOT CLICK THAT LINK IF YOUR COUNTRY MADE THE MANIFESTO ILLEGAL TO POSSESS
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Would you rather NOT have a way to track which weapons most criminals use?
The same case is made for legalizing sports betting: bookies cause a paper trail that makes fixes easier to catch.
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Nice defense of child porn.
Many who adopt foreign children do so because they are molesting the kids, btw.
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"Nutjob" is a bigoted slur that has no more place in a debate than racial or gender slurs. If anything, the person hurling the slur is more likely the "nutjob."
At some point in the future people who use slurs like that will be imprisoned, or at least ostracized. We're just not there yet. My other idea that if you call someone a "nutjob" there is a hearing to determine if you are right: if you are right, the person you insulted qualifies for lifetime disability, while if you are wrong, you pay court costs, attorney fees (the target's is appointed free of charge to the target), and damages.
Not that anyone would dare piss off a genuine "nutjob," so the insult is almost always self-refuting.
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Good luck getting that argument over in court. Search engines do not “republish” content in the sense you are thinking.
If Google does not publish defamatory content, it is under no legal obligation to remove links to defamatory content. That it may do so if presented with a court order saying the content is defamatory is irrelevant.
Then go after the people who “weaponize” search engines to promote defamatory content — or, better yet, figure out how defamatory content rises to the top of search engine results through artificial means and write a search engine algorithm that takes such “weaponizing” into account when presenting search results.
And yet, the Westboro Baptist Church and the Ku Klux Klan can still express their horrendous opinions while enjoying the protections of the First Amendment. How do you plan to do something about them while still allowing, say, GLAAD and Black Lives Matter groups to share opinions that anti-gay bigots and White supremacists would consider “mean” and “unfair”?
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Yes.
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Re: Re: The Censorious crowd
Your opinion that someone is or isn't an a***ole isn't definitive. It's one person's opinion.
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Re: Re: The Censorious crowd
The "private companies should be allowed to censor" that we see here would seem consistent with that sentiment.
The question is whether or not big tech rises to the level of a free-speech state actor has been asked, and the courts have said it does not. I agree with the courts. Heck, USENET is still active and that has free speech.
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Funny, because the Bible is the cause of many cases of each of those. Plus I've hit someone on the head with a bible, and it does directly harm individuals. Quite a bit if you've got the right bible.
Also, since the bible causes people to act in harmful ways, it is causing them harm by making them suffer the consequences of those ways.
Lastly, the number of things the bible proscribes means anyone in those categories is directly harmed by the namecalling, threats of hell, hate speech, and bullying contained within.
It seems like you're wrong on basically every level, so we're gonna have to ban your bible now. Please surrender any copies to your nearest fascist government or provide notarized evidence of their destruction in triplicate.
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Which community, and whose standards, would be used in such a situation — and how could you ensure the idea of fairness when using someone else’s subjective standards of “acceptable speech”?
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Anonymity is generally protected by the First Amendment, but it can be revoked if a court says so. If’n you wanna sue someone for defamation and they are hiding behind anonymity, you should ask the courts to help unmask that person’s identity — not to destroy the concept of anonymity as a whole.
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Is that meant to make some point?
I doubt that's true for any sane interpretation of the word "many", and I doubt even more that you can provide any evidence for it beyond tabloid articles... but, more importantly, what does it have to do with anything?
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Tell me, do you support FOSTA/SESTA?
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Of course we'd like to track what weapons criminals use. The problem is that the price for that is tracking what weapons I use, and I consider that price far too high.
And then there's the part where people can build their own weapons that won't show up in any database anyway. An SMG is shockingly easy to build. Under $200 and a trip to the hardware store gives enough materials to build a Luty, and there are examples significantly cheaper than that.
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If the Westboro Baptist assholes cannot be jailed for their “God Hates Fags” signs, someone saying “nutjob” will not be jailed for doing so any time soon. Deal with it.
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Re: The Censorious crowd
What the f**k are you talking about? Those are two completely different issues. The First Amendment only guarantees that speech is protected from government interference. It has nothing to do with private corporations censoring speech, which is their prerogative and, should it happen, there are alternative ways to speak out online without fear of fines or jail time.
Saying that Techdirt commenters “consistently praise” Silicon Valley corporations for exercising that prerogative is a bit of a stretch, especially given the criticisms made regarding how well they execute their policies. But even if we set aside their criticisms, recognizing that X has the right to do Y, or even praising the right itself, is a far cry from praising X for doing Y.
I recognize that people in America have the right to, say, fly the Confederate flag in public view. I praise the fact that we have the roght to fly whatever flag we want for the public to see as an important part of free speech. However, I absolutely don’t praise the people who fly the Confederate flag for doing so; on the contrary, I think they’re generally ignorant and/or racist assholes for doing so. I also recognize that, say, a homeowners’ association has the right to have that flag, or any flag, taken down, as they’re a private organization.
Also, in this very thread, as of the time I’m typing this reply, no comments have been hidden, and with one exception, no one has seriously advocated censorship by anyone here.
I seriously have no idea where in the world you got the idea that “Techdirt commenters seem especially censorious,” that “they just go along with corporate censorship from Silicon Valley billionaires,” or that such censorship is “the one thing those multinational corporations are consistently praised [for] doing around here.” I see no evidence to suggest any of that, particularly in the thread.
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I posted a link to the manifesto in this article's comments. It got censored.
I'm willing to give the ol' spam filter the benefit of the doubt, but lets see if the comment with link intact shows up in a few hours or not.
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Your opinion of what is and isn’t fair speech isn’t definitive. It’s one person’s opinion.
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1) Why would molestation of adoptees be more common among international adoption vs domestic adoption?
2) Is this some sort of dig against Ken White (Popehat), since he's adopted three children from overseas?
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According to Google Translate, what you said was
Obviously, this is not terribly good and doesn’t make much sense. I hate to say “speak English”, but given that this is an English-language publication that, as far as I know, isn’t translated to other languages, please keep comments in English. I do appreciate the apparent interest from people for whom English may not be their first language. (I assume that you can read English given that you can apparently read the article.)
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The Taliban made that claim, as does China, to justify their censorship. So absent free speech, they are mainly set by those with the power to enforce them.
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Why don't you ask the person who posted the assertion?
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Even if it doesn’t, it doesn’t seem like TechDirt commenters would be responsible for the censorship as TheLizard suggests. But yeah, I’d say that that was probably just the spam filter. I can still see TechDirt moderators (or whoever reviews potential spam) deciding not to have the link in the comments for potentially legitimate reasons, but I don’t think it should be in this case, and it would be ironic if they did. (Not hypocritical; TechDirt isn’t a government agency, so they can censor whatever they like.)
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if anyone thought posting a video of a gunman going around killing people like a POV shooter wasn't obscene, then something has gone drastically wrong in their upbringing.
Defining a real life snuff film as obscene isnt in any way controversial, in the same way child pornography being obscene isnt controversial.
Techdirt may need to check it's data-libertarian impulses with some common sense and basic morality here.
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No problem, I've made the same mistake myself.
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I'd rather just outlaw speech that argues for outlawing speech and be done with it.
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"Commonwealth countries like New Zealand typically ban cartoons and text depicting/describing totally fictional characters."
That is certainly wrong, and past the line. Unless it can be proven that it is related to real abuse (e.g. the depiction is of a real event), then it's over the line to ban it as there's no real victim, just as it would be wrong to ban a videogame because of the shooting.
"99.95 percent of the reason child porn is banned anywhere, including the US, is that it's icky"
Yes, child rape is icky.
"From the shooting video you'd maybe find out something about how a particular shooter acted"
Which would be great training material for the next shooter?
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Re: Re: Re: The Censorious crowd
That is true. Which is why the filters here trigger based on the votes of more than one person.
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Re: Re: Re: The Censorious crowd
Does everyone say that? If not, then it's not consistent.
Also, since you are a proponent of abolishing section 230, the amount of content private companies will remove will increase by several magnitudes if repealed.
So, are you for or against free speech? You can't have it both ways.
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"(I assume that you can read English given that you can apparently read the article.)"
That's a fun assumption, but given that the link is pointing to some kind of application download (I can tell from the URL, I'm not clicking on it!), it can safely be marked as spam whether it's a bot or not.
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Or perhaps for the person setting up security measures against the next shooter. Or for the person voting on whether to fund those measures, or on what changes to make to how this or that related public facility or service was administered.
Or for the person who just believes that understanding how things happen in the world is of value in and of itself.
But, anyway, fundamentally I'm agreeing with you that there's not an obvious bright line between the shooting video and the child porn. Or at least I'm saying that and I thought you were too.
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Setting aside the real issues with that (Stephen T. Stone addresses one of the main ones), one thing you said offhand struck me:
Back to the main issue, IANAL, but in the U.S., the government and government officials cannot make a law against content-based speech (including artwork, verbal or written speech, games, movies, music, etc.) except for (rarely) obscenity (specifically sexual obscenity; offensive words don’t count), “true” threats/advocacy for violence (which has a very high bar to reach), and defamation (which is limited to provably false statements of fact or opinion based on undisclosed facts, and in the case of public figures it’s further limited by the “actual malice” standard). Even non-content-based restrictions are limited, requiring a compelling government interest and that is the least restrictive means for accomplishing the stated goal. Not that that matters, as a ban against “bigoted slur[s]” would clearly be a content-based restriction, so it would have to reach a very high bar to be constitutional.
Even if such a ban was put in place (constitutional or not), it’s highly unlikely that there would be a fee-shifting provision Re:attorney’s fees that a) doesn’t go both ways and b) doesn’t favor the defendant in a case about the defendant’s speech. It would almost certainly follow the American rule except in extreme cases, like if the case was frivolous. It would also be unlikely to include jail time as a consequence.
On top of that, unless maybe if you’re a licensed psychiatrist or something (and even then it’s a stretch), calling someone a “nutjob” is an opinion, not a statement of fact. It is no longer limited to saying someone is literally mentally ill from a medical perspective. As a result, I don’t think it’s possible to prove it true or false.
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What have you done to earn a bad online reputation?
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Re:
There will always be people who have a sick fascination of watching stuff like that. It's the same impulse some people have when they come upon an accident and the first thing they can think of is pulling out their phone so they can film it and post it on FB or whatever...
What TD is questioning is the legal ramifications of declaring said video illegal because of "objectionable" content and arresting people for sharing it. Saying that the video is obscene isn't true from all viewpoints. A crime scene analyst may not find the video obscene if he or she disregard the emotional aspect, instead he or she could find it factual since it will help them analyze the crime.
My personal opinion is that I can't see any valid reason for making it available publicly but at the same time I question the wisdom of making the video illegal to possess or distribute.
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Re: Re: Re:
You see that is the problem - you think free speech is a privledge instead of a right. It is "Darwinistic" in the sense that it adheres to reality - an adaptive behavior.
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Re: Re: Re:
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Re:
The thing is obscenity as a definition is obscene im itself. It is special pleading writ large. Why is that an illegal snuff film and not war crime footage? Why is obscenity grounds for censorship in the first place except means of control and the most dangerous sentence in the English language - "We havecalways done it that way."
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Re: Re:
Sometimes you don't find out they're "a genuine nutjob" until after you've managed to do something to get on their bad side. Don't ask me how I know.
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Re: Re:
Umm... maybe because you can't have a war crime when no state of war exists?
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Re: Re: Re: Re:
"Or perhaps for the person setting up security measures against the next shooter. Or for the person voting on whether to fund those measures, or on what changes to make to how this or that related public facility or service was administered."
The things you mention don't require the full video to be freely available to the general public.
"Or at least I'm saying that and I thought you were too"
I think we do agree to an extent, but possibly disagree on where the real boundaries should be.
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Re: Re:
"Why is that an illegal snuff film and not war crime footage? "
a) because the film was showing real death being committed in order to be recorded (a.k.a. a snuff file) - possibly not 100% but the livestream was clearly intended upfront
b) because it was showing actions committed by a civilian in peace time and not military personnel during wartime.
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Re:
First, your suggestion goes directly against the First Amendment, as in most cases where someone “impute[s] mental illness”, that’s classically protected opinion (unless it’s based on undisclosed facts). It’s often hyperbole.
Second, we already have laws against harassment and defamation. You may not like their limitations, but those exist because any more restrictive and they’d be unconstitutional.
Third, the Supreme Court has made it extremely clear that they will not tolerate any additional exceptions to the First Amendment. What we already have is all the exceptions we’ll get.
Fourth, the search engines are 230-immune for good reason: they’re as responsible for the contents of the results as a person who manages the card catalog of a library they don’t control the contents of or a journalist is responsible for what someone they’re reporting on says.
Finally, it’s worth noting your proposal does literally nothing to address the “issues” you claim exist. It still has the exact same issues with anonymity and §230 that existing libel laws already have. You don’t even attempt to address those things.
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Re: Re: Re:
Should photographs of one type of crime be special? The footage discussed in this article is of real abuse too. I've seen video of robberies on the news and we could ban those by the same logic.
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Re: Re:
One can't be right or wrong with a meaningless term like "nutjob".
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Options
Canada also does not have freedom of speech, unlike the USA. However, it does have a right to jury trial if the maximum sentence is greater than 5 years, so there's always the possibility of Jury Nullification. What about New Zealand?
(Of course the gotcha is that the jury is not allowed to be told about potential or even minimum sentences for crimes, so there will be a lot of jurors who think "we'll find him guilty and he'll get a well deserved $200 fine...")
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Re: Re: Re: Re:
You're missing the fundamental point. In the case of those robberies, the crime was being committed anyway, it just happened to be caught on video. With child porn, the crime is the entire reason why the video is created. Robbery footage is created and released in order to find the perpetrators. Child porn footage is created in order to victimise a child. They are not the same thing.
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Re: Re: Re:
"Privileges which are abused can and should be taken away."
Let's start at the top rather than at the bottom of the class hierarchy.
I suggest starting with Wall Street. Their privileges have been abused to the point of causing a global economic recession and yet not one of them has been chastised, hand slapped or any of the other typical punishments doled out to the riche and influential.
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Re: Re:
Are you on drugs?
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Hitler is alive and well today as a baby growing up somewhere who will
love his newly realized reality that his holocaust will not be televised
as all the sheeple fill his chambers because of the total lack of freedom we have imposed on ourselves
I slow clap the world today
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Re: Re: Re:
"We don't need TOTAL free speech, just fairness, and we do not have that at present."
Please tell me you are kidding. If not, who is going to judge what is fair?
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Re: Re: Re:
Would you rather NOT have a way to track which weapons most criminals use?
I'm advocating for abolishing private ownership of weapons altogether - or better yet, having the community apply standards for banning private ownership of weapons.
If we're going to advocate for stronger control of words because your precious feelings might get hurt, then what exactly is wrong with stronger control of guns because weapons might end up getting someone hurt?
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Re: Re:
My other idea that if you call someone a "nutjob" there is a hearing to determine if you are right: if you are right, the person you insulted qualifies for lifetime disability, while if you are wrong, you pay court costs, attorney fees (the target's is appointed free of charge to the target), and damages.
So in the case of the Westboro baptist church assholes saying that "God hates fags" - how do you make that hearing go? Ask god if it really hates LGBTQ people?
And in the off chance that you can make some kind of god show up, and he does hate LGBTQ people, does that make the Westboro people right, or does it make both them and god assholes?
Just trying to understand how this is supposed to work with the "god" people and their justification for being some of the biggest dickheads walking the planet.
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as unsavoury as this is, what an over-reaction by the NZ govt! and the sentences for doing this are almost the same as those who perpetrate such crimes (given time off, maybe, if not put to death! as bad as being put inside for sharing a video, way exaggerated! talk about a govt that wants to make a statement, albeit one that is, i think, way OTT! the damning thing about what this lad did though was put such an inflaming comment to it!
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However, people who want to download either it, the the Manifesto, can use a proxy or a VPN to hide what they are are doing.
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Re: Re:
If anyone was still taking you seriously, here is a great point to stop.
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Re:
If that's what you think, YOU ARE A IDIOT!!! I'm FREE to say that.
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Re: Re:
Citation needed.
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Re:
It is not the Bible itself, but people's misinterpretation of it that sometimes causes harm. How much of it have you actually read, and if so, without any preconceptions or bias? Have you ever thought to ever look at what was written from a perspective other than your own, from the perspective of the culture in which it was written? And has it ever occurred to you that it wasn't written in English? How much do you actually know about it? How much have you actually studied it?
I would gather that your opposition comes from willful ignorance and your own preconceptions and biases about what you think it says. You seem to base those perceptions upon misunderstandings and misrepresentations of the text and have not actually made any honest attempt to understand it yourself without letting your biases get in the way and with allowing the possibility that you and your biases and perceptions could be wrong.
People unfortunately sometimes pick and take bits of the Bible out of context to use as a bludgeon against others, stripping it of the actual meaning those words were meant to have and leading people such as yourself to blame the book rather than those who misread and misused it. If you misunderstand the instructions in a manual, do you blame the manual or yourself?
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Re: Re: Re: The Censorious crowd
"Should be allowed to censor" and "should censor" are two very different positions, though the latter obviously depends on the former.
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Re:
From the article: "These may appear to be clear-cut interpretations of the law, given the sympathies of the people arrested, but future arrests may not be so unambiguous." That's the real concern as far as I can tell: how will this law be used (or abused) in the future?
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Re: Re: Re: Re:
It statements on homosexuality have resulted in massive harm to them.
This is undeniable.
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Hardly unprecedented. Anyone remember 9-11? I recall watching the people jumping to their deaths and those towers collapsing live and in color.
Why isn't that footage 'objectionable' in New Zealand?
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re:
It's not taking bits a pieces of the bible.
It really is that bad https://www.skepticsannotatedbible.com/DWB/
Your the one cherry picking.
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Re: Re: Re:
You do realize it will take a helluva lot more than passing a law in the U.S., don't you, child?
Good luck with repealing the Bill of Rights. I'm sure not losing sleep over your authoritarian crusade.
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Re: Re: Re:
I messed up punctuation a bit so my meaning was less than clear. I didn't mean the shooting would qualify as a war crime but why would similarly horrific war crimes not count as obscene? ISIS even publicized their own war crimes (murdering captives) to spread a message.
Why does that suddenly not count as an obscene snuff film? It is still real horrific violence by terrible people - for a terrible ideology no less.
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Re: Re: Re: Re:
We're not advocating for that.
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Re: Re:
No, it's really not.
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Re: Re: Re: Re:
OK, that makes more sense.
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Re: Re: Re:
It would still be hypocritical because they just wrote an entire article arguing against censorship of this material, so if they did indeed censor a link to the manifesto, that would be hypocrisy.
Just like Politico's article last week arguing against the New Zealand censorship policy. They even titled their article "Don't Censor the Video or Manifesto", then declined to publish or even link to either one.
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Re: Re: Re:
A tip you might want to bear in mind.
If you don't know what you're talking about, DON'T TALK!
"British law does not allow truth as a defense for libel."
Defamation Act 2013 chapter 26, Defences Section 2
Truth
(1)It is a defence to an action for defamation for the defendant to show that the imputation conveyed by the statement complained of is substantially true.
(2)Subsection (3) applies in an action for defamation if the statement complained of conveys two or more distinct imputations.
(3)If one or more of the imputations is not shown to be substantially true, the defence under this section does not fail if, having regard to the imputations which are shown to be substantially true, the imputations which are not shown to be substantially true do not seriously harm the claimant's reputation.
(4)The common law defence of justification is abolished and, accordingly, section 5 of the Defamation Act 1952 (justification) is repealed.
http://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/2013/26/section/2
Oh, and that section 5 that was repealed said "Justification
In an action for libel or slander in respect of words containing two or more distinct charges against the plaintiff, a defence of justification shall not fail by reason only that the truth of every charge is not proved if the words not proved to be true do not materially injure the plaintiff's reputation having regard to the truth of the remaining charges."
In other words, even under hte 52 act, if it was true, it wasn't defamation.
See, I know this, because I literally fought a Government department who claimed libel in a consultation submission. They had a bunch of lawyers (both in house, and at the collecting societies) to consult with, I had just myself. They admitted they overreached.
And that was under the 1952 rules.
So, stop repeating any old crap you once heard someone say, eh? Because odds are, it's not true.
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Re: Re:
It's also not some newborn child of the internet age. I remember back when I was a yout, there was a series of VHS videos called "Faces of Death" that were nothing but an amalgamation of video clips of fatal accidents and executions. I don't remember there being any serious talk of locking people up for possessing a copy.
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What could possibly go wrong?
What could possibly go wrong with a law like that?
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Re: Re: Re: Re:
Tell that to the victims of the crusades.
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re:
Jhon has been a bad bad boy and is terrified someone will find out.
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Re: Re: Re:
Is that a confession?
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Re: Leave Jhon alone
Poor crazy impotent Jhon got his feel feels hurt.
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Re: The Censorious crowd
Or alternatively we are proactively moderating spam and off topic garbage kinda like what your masters at the MAFFIA want everyone including the government to do except with all entertainment.
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Re: Re: Re:
I remember there being serious talk of banning them for being obscene.
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Re:
What a weird unhealthy fantasy. You should seek professional treatment.
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Free Speech, Free Guns, Free power
The argument for all these things comes down to the same:
Either we trust the public to behave like responsible adults and use their rights with discretion (with rare exception)...
Or we do not trust the public to behave like responsible adults and use their rights with discretion.
The problem with the former is that people really are stupid and irresponsible. We might argue that this is especially if they're incensed or inebriated but regardless, right now, the levels of stupid, inappropriate behavior regarding obscene speech and reckless gun use is commonly regarded as too much,and thus A Problem, even when there are criminal repercussions.
The problem with the latter is we can't trust anyone else to oversee the rest of us Law enforcement in the US has turned into an ad hoc aristocracy, where they kill whoever they want, and seize whatever they want with scant consequences. Even our President who is obviously a diminished-capacity case, and whose crimes are obvious is protected by a Gordian knot of a legal system that plods along with investigations but never actually sets things right.
In the UK (some examples were cited) we have prime ministers sending thugs to news media companies to physically destroy speech they don't like and threaten people who might speak critically of their overlord masters. So there we are seeing examples of the kind of oppression that leads societies to want free speech.
So currently, we have no working system to control speech and guns (or, generally, power) that doesn't lead to the enforcers behaving like mobsters or arrogant aristocrats above their own laws.
Right now, freedom vs. responsibility is for us naked apes, an unsolvable paradox.
We hypothesize we can teach our kids to cherish their rights, but that assumes they aren't going to be driven to desperation and hatred, which they are.
Or we imagine that we can create a system of laws that encapsulates everyone, but it never does.
So, until someone gets clever and finds a working solution and gets it implemented, we are, regarding speech, regarding guns and regarding power, kinda fucked.
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Re: Re: Re: Re:
Boy I really hope you're not one of the people who'd been whining up a storm in the TD comment section about how the community keeps flagging your comments for being against their standards if that's the rule you want to go with...
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Re: Re: Re: The Censorious crowd
The "private companies should be allowed to control who is allowed to use their platform, and what is posted to it" that we see here would seem consistent with that sentiment.
Fixed for accuracy.
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Re: Options
"Canada also does not have freedom of speech, unlike the USA."
Why do people say nonsense like this?! Many, many countries, including Canada, have freedom of speech enshrined into constitutions, bills of rights, laws, etc. Just because they're not named "The First Amendment" doesn't make them any less important.
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Re: authoritarian impulse
"... current NZ Government seems decidedly authoritarian."
Not even close.
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Re: Re:
I see his post as a commentary on the absurdity in declaring a video illegal to possess because it chronicles a horrific act in gruesome detail.
Out of sight, out of mind, soon forgotten.
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A Dilemma
I have a bit of a dilemma here. I don't really want to see this video. I've been on the internet for my entire adult life, if I'd wanted to see it, I would have found it by now. However, when people make (or threaten to make) speech like this literally illegal it goes against a core set of my personal beliefs and makes me want to acquire the data "just in case". Just in case what? I don't know, I just don't like the idea of information not being allowed to be spread to those who want it.
For example, I have a torrented copy of all those 3D printable firearms that were taken down a few months back because I couldn't get past the idea that the government was trying to make data illegal to transmit. I don't even own a 3D printer myself (although I did check out the files in CAD software).
I'm generally going to land hard in favor of free speech as long as that speech is either true or clearly expressed opinion and not an incitement to violence.
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Re:
W habe no democracy or free speech anywhere, especially in the UK.
2 examples:
See how a remainer was made prime minister to sabotage BREXIT and the people's vote.
See as well how Tommy Robinson is harassed by corrupted police and justice to dare saying the truth about muslim rapist gangs in the UK.
free speech: my arse
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Re: A Dilemma
NZ shooting is an obvious setup.
The good old "Lee Harvey oswald" op again and again, still works with zombies (and kiwis are particularly ignorant zombies).
They did exactly the same setup as they did in Montreal Canada (same state sponsored act of "terror" against muslims) to impose sharia laws to Canadians under the guise of "anti hate speech" (the new censorship).
Both Trudeau and NZ PM are liberal/socialists and pro-islamists.
The globalists and their islamists friends just have now to send hundred of thousands of "inoccent always victim muslims' into New Zealand to start the colonization process underway in Europe or the USA...
In the mean time, 55 Christians were mudred by islamists in Nigeria: Not a word in the msms media...
They really take us for idiots. And it works!
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re:
When you assume you make an ass out of you. Not you and me. Just you.
I was raised Catholic. I went to Catholic schools. I've not only read the bible multiple multiple times, but I've been educated in the philosophies and various differing denominations that sprang from it.
I've also read chunks of it in Latin, and various alternate translations.
Everything I said was true.
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Re: A Dilemma
Oh FFS, stop being a pussy. Go to the Pirate Bay and search for "Christchurch". It's a grainy 64 MB video and it's worth watching just to see how pointless it is to do nothing but cower in a corner when a mass shooter shows up. If everyone had rushed the guy, he'd have only taken out a fraction of them instead of every last one of them.
Either rush the guy or throw your kids out a window and follow them. Do something!
BTW, it also shows how long you can expect to be waiting for the coppers to show up. Another reason to step up...
P.S. If this in any way sounds like victim blaming, it's not my intention. I realize that those poor souls were panicking and desperate and not making the best decisions, but it doesn't mean you, your friends or family have to react the same way. Knowledge is power.
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Re:
Different projectiles used. No guns used in 911 so it isn't offensive and is A-ok.
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Re: Re:
Actually you should look up "Munchausen's by proxy," which is when an unqualified individual imputes illness on another.
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Re: Re: Re:
Most of that video was debunked as staged.
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Re: Re: The Censorious crowd
A private company that is influential enough can be found a state actor for 1A purposes.
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Re: Re: Re: Re:
They were, but a lot of people didn't know that at the time, IIRC.
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Re: Re: Re:
Thanks for providing an obvious example of what I'm talking about.
"Oh, there's no censorship, but [whatever corporate entity] isn't government, so they can censor whatever they like."
And when these big multinational corporations (FB, Google, Twitter, YouTube, Apple, etc.) collude on stuff they want to censor (like they have multiple times) they actually have MORE power than government to silence voices and people and promote the narrative they want.
I'm not saying governments should step in to regulate that behavior, I'm saying we shouldn't be giving them a free pass and just waving our hands with "well it's their platform so whatever they want" either. We should be calling them out and admonishing them that such behavior is NOT okay. They have Section 230 protections, after all, but the more they act like publishers and not platforms for OTHER publishers to use, the less it makes sense for them to have those protections.
And the crowd here commenting on TechDirt, bhull242 as the instance example, seem very quick to dismiss censorious behavior of these tech companies as perfectly ok.
It's NOT.
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Re: Re: The Censorious crowd
Look again. They are all over the comments on this article, you've done it yourself, and go back and check the article on the Laura Loomer lawsuit and see how many people praising all the SV tech companies for censorship.
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Re: Re: Re: Re:
"And when these big multinational corporations (FB, Google, Twitter, YouTube, Apple, etc.) collude on stuff they want to censor"
That's when regulators should step in to stop them from illegally colluding. But, unfortunately the same people who insist that the companies running websites should have no control over who can post what there are also the ones who insist that any government regulation should also be stopped.
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Re:
What law would that break?
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Re: Re: Re: Re:
Moderating (or censoring if you prefer that term) is not acting like a publisher. I mean, allowing platforms to moderate the content published on them without facing liability as publishers is the reason section 230 exists. If you favor stripping that protection, then in effect you are proposing a completely unmoderated internet, because platforms could not afford the liability risk that would come with moderating. Say goodbye to useful stuff and hello to trolls and spam.
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Re: Re: Re: The Censorious crowd
Do you have a citation for that?
"In United States law, a state actor is a person who is acting on behalf of a governmental body, and is therefore subject to regulation under the United States Bill of Rights, including the First, Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments, which prohibit the federal and state governments from violating certain rights and freedoms. "
Note "on behalf of a governmental body" not "influential".
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/State_actor
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Re: Re: A Dilemma
Not wanting to watch people get murdered is not being a pussy, and wanting to watch it is not being brave or manly. They're orthogonal considerations.
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Re: Re:
What fantasy ?
Muller Proved trump was't a Russian puppet and people are upset he wasn't
WOW way to show faith in your Govt .
Smullet gets off Scott Free ???
.See No evil Hear no evil must be true no evil to see here
back to ignorant bliss
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Re: Re: Re:
Since you have obviously read the entire Mueller report, please explain to the class the bits that didn't make it into the very brief summary.
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"Muller Proved trump was't a Russian puppet"
Mueller failed to prove President Trump was a Russian puppet -- According to Barr (who is not an independent agent).
Assuming A is always true if B is true, then B is false if we know A is false. But if we only know B is false, we don't know A is false.
What is the matter with the logic skills of people these days?
Incidentally, Trump's behavior around Putin and regarding Putin and Russia (including policy he's pushed) has still yet to be explained, even if Mueller didn't find any connections.
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Re: Re: Re: A Dilemma
This week, 5 muslims "migrants" (aka illegal aliens) gang raped a 12 year old girl for hours (annally and vaginally). In full daylight!
The harshest punsihment for one of them was 18 months of jail!
While the town mayor has covered up this crime and the local residents are furious at him.
The msm media of course stay silent.
The reality is that in Europe, all the jails have 60 to 70% of their populations being muslim criminals and most crimes are committed by them.
But, let's focus on the one in a decade shooting that means nothing and surrender even more of our freedom to the fascist religion that is islam.
While talking for hours about video censorship and ignoring the real problme: the organized islamic invasion of the Western world..
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"5 muslims gang raped a 12 year old girl"
There are no news articles covering an incident of these specifications within the last month.
A conspiracy of every news agency worldwide?
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Re: Re: Re: Re: A Dilemma
"The msm media of course stay silent."
Then, surely you wouldn't mind sharing the source you got it from so that everybody else can see it and spread the truth?
Strange how people making these sorts of claims never actually tell anybody else where they know this information from, they just announce that they have superior knowledge that;'s more trustworthy than established sources for... reasons they won't share.
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Re: Re: Re: Re: A Dilemma
"The reality is that in Europe, all the jails have 60 to 70% of their populations being muslim criminals "
Oh, and your source for that figure would be nice as well...
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Re: Re:
I actually thought you were joking. I shouldn't be shocked that you are serious considering flatearthers and anti-vaxxers but I'm genuinely shocked.
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