whister.
I think you are going round in circles .You were given an example of hate speech and you labeled it incitement , not I.
You seem to do so because you would not directly deal with the fact that there are lines drawn in case law against what I consider you wrongly describe as the right to free speech.
Trying to assist your argument with a false claim of incitement , in my view is no better than the student subject of this thread, who is apparently trying to shield her position behind an argument for freedom of religious expression.. - In reality that is not the position, as it is clear there could be a supportable case under law for sanction by the college within its rules and values.
You have decided to dodge that. Fine. It appears you would rather wave a stick around with constitution and free speech written on it, hit yourself and everyone else around the head with it and disguise the issue under freedom of (christian) religious expression, in the same way the student does.
I presumed all your rhetoric about every citizens right to free speech under the First Amendment of the Constitution would sound questionable when in reality , indirect consequences of that so called free speech, caused an indefensible situation, and without falling foul of any incitement to act law
And sure enough, it appears I was right. You failed to understand what was being described , so you called my example incitement to wiggle out or because you can't think past demanding something you have named "free speech", only then going onto assume the patronizing tone of one who doesn't like to be found incorrect, try to give a teach lesson on what is and isn't incitement.
I find you shout an over simplistic idea and are not giving a rats ass about much so long as you can grandstand on the basis of load mouthing rights to this and that, where in reality there is a consequential price to pay outside your favored group you demand rights for.
It may be your particular version of what free speech is, but I don't believe it is the Law's or the Constitutions. And I don't think you will be able to brush that fact away by falsely using the word incitement , or the other scapegoat you chose, as the student does, freedom of religious expression.
Quote from whitster:
stu, i am relying on the constitution - you don';t
incitement to riot is not constitutionally protected
opinion is.
as i cited, the scotus has made clear, as has common sense, that the fundamental tenet of the 1st amendment in regards to speech is that govt. and the constitution can take no stance as to opinion.
again, i rely on constitutional law, and the constitution.
you rely on rhetoric
if angela davis (i witnessed this personally) spews that she hates capitalists, that they are scum deserving of death, etc. that is protected 1st amendment speech. is that hate speech? sure. so what? hate speech is constitutionally protected speech - IN THE USA (not most other countries)
if she had exhorted her (misguided) followers "let's go storm the faculty building and smash some windows!" - that would be incitement to riot
the former expresses an opnion
the latter is an incitement to specific illegal act.
check the case law