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She called for a hotel which housed migrants to be set on fire. It's swear-wordy so here's a link instead of me doing copy paste:
set fire to hotels
Maybe it was someone else then. I could have sworn there was a case of someone who claimed (in their defence of posting inciteful material) that they did it because they thought the Southport attacker was an immigrant. Granted it's a pretty weak defense, but it was to Blackswanwood's point about the line between posting material knowingly intending to do harm, and posting material that you genuinely thought was true.
 
She called for a hotel which housed migrants to be set on fire. It's swear-wordy so here's a link instead of me doing copy paste:
set fire to hotels
I'd not seen that. So, she spoke 'freely', but it wasn't truth that she failed to be responsible for (no truth claim was made), it was the consequences - in this case, other people's safety. What a delightful woman.
 
Doe it matter which way around the analogy was used? The results were the same., centuries of church dominance and forced dogma.

Yes, to me I definitely think it does.

Galileo's position was not a new one - and he had the evidence to prove his claim that forebears did not possess, having only philosophised at the solar-centric model. In short, Galileo owned the truth.

The church was "organised post-truth" and misinformation peddlers selling, and violently enforcing a lie. (Whilst attempting to take moral high ground and perpetrating violent torture at the same time.) The analogy is almost a perfect one.

For my money the analogy of Galileo and the church can only really fit one way around. Ymmv,
 
That's an interesting grey area. For example; I'm pretty certain I recall a lady being prosecuted for posting some false information regarding the recent "Farage Riots" that she claimed she believed to be true. Is ignorance an acceptable defence when you may have incited people to violence? In that instance the law thought not.
The thing is it has been long accepted that there is no direct link between the things said and the actual violence commited.
This is the same flawed argument that was used by people saying violent video games would make everyone murderers.

The responsibility for the violence or rioting or whatever is solely in the hands of those who participated.
You cannot really suggest that the rioting thugs were waiting for the suburban houswife ringleader to send them into action with a tweet.
 
I'd not seen that. So, she spoke 'freely', but it wasn't truth that she failed to be responsible for (no truth claim was made), it was the consequences - in this case, other people's safety. What a delightful woman.

It wasn't even the consequences, per se, it wouldn't have mattered if anyone had followed through on her incitement and intent to incite violence. It was the incitement itself that constitutes the offence.

The fact that it would have been blinking obvious that tensions were high and that any incitement was far more likely to be followed through in those circumstances, compared to an everyday situation, that merely constituted an "aggravating factor". It had nothing at all to do with the offence. But it did affect the sentence after the guilty plea.

You just can't legally go around either "inciting racial hatred" (which is a specified offence) or "inciting actions likely to endanger life" (which is a specified offence). Whether those incitements are conveyed in speech, or on social media posts, or in a strongly worded letter is irrelevant, it's still the same offence that is being committed and likely to bring arrest and prosecution.
 
The thing is it has been long accepted that there is no direct link between the things said and the actual violence commited.
This is the same flawed argument that was used by people saying violent video games would make everyone murderers.

The responsibility for the violence or rioting or whatever is solely in the hands of those who participated.
You cannot really suggest that the rioting thugs were waiting for the suburban houswife ringleader to send them into action with a tweet.
Feels like they're two different things to me. One is escaping reality (playing video games) one is twisting reality (putting out untrue information that demonises or incites violence against some individual or a group).

Said thugs would probably have been unlikely to have rioted (in that instance) without the widespread sharing of fearmongering misinformation. A mob doesn't just appear from nowhere.
 
The thing is it has been long accepted that there is no direct link between the things said and the actual violence commited.
Has it?

Yes, it was brought up in an interview I watched with Andrew Doyle. I forget the actual name of the studies etc.

You can`t blame the Sun or Daily mail if one of their readers decides to do something violent because of a story in the paper.

This is the same flawed argument that was used by people saying violent video games would make everyone murderers.
As far as I'm aware, nobody said that.

I realise you can`t type "tone" in a forum, this was meant in a tongue in cheek way.

But, actually they did say this in various ways.
I remember considerable outrage against the first GTA games, Mortal Kombat and Doom as well.
People have tried to link video games to several school shootings in America, the same argument about movies has been made for years as well.

Same with heavy metal music, which is particularly funny as metalheads are usually really nice despite appearances.

The point is, it is the individuals responsibility for their actions no matter what they have read or watched.
 
The point is, it is the individuals responsibility for their actions no matter what they have read or watched.
They are, indeed. But so too is the person who may be shown to have incited their actions. Or is Marx (Communist Manifesto) not in any way responsible for the rise of communism and its revolutions, nor Hitler (Mein Kampf) responsible for the rise of National Socialism? In some cases, words provoke very positive outcomes; in others, very negative.
 
You can`t blame the Sun or Daily mail if one of their readers decides to do something violent because of a story in the paper.
I think you can if they haven’t exercised a suitable level of care to make sure what they are saying is accurate. Blaming them doesn’t absolve the violent individual from also needing to accept accountability and the consequences of their actions.
 
The thing is it has been long accepted that there is no direct link between the things said and the actual violence commited.
This is the same flawed argument that was used by people saying violent video games would make everyone murderers.

The responsibility for the violence or rioting or whatever is solely in the hands of those who participated.

Yep. This is true. The perpetrators of violence were arrested on charges of violent affray and similar offences.

You cannot really suggest that the rioting thugs were waiting for the suburban houswife ringleader to send them into action with a tweet.

No, that is not what is being suggested at all. Did you not read any of my posts?
The offences that the housewife committed were entirely different, See above, they were actual specified offences under certain Acts.
The housewife is therefore to be held responsible for the specific offences she committed. Not the offences of the violent perpetrators. The two are separate and distinct.


The other part of the issue with "free speech" is that it has been widely distributed by some sections of the media that the housewife in question was singled out for nothing other than "non-PC language" or other such baloney, trying to obfuscate the actual crimes that were committed (while also saying other rubbish about being 2-tier and government led) none of which is true - the worst part being that the outlets that are peddling these deliberate lies know that they are lies.
The upshot being that if you weren't actually aware that the housewife in question was sentenced for pleading guilty and admitting to "intent to incite behaviour that endangered life" (a specific offence in its own right - regardless of whether any idiots carry out that intent or not), then it is highly likely that the media that you are getting your information from is a "right wing" outlet and is deliberately obfuscating the reality, in pursuit of its own agenda.


I also see that an arrest had taken place recently connected to a death threat sent to Jess Phillips. Intent to incite behaviour that endangers life" is not entirely dissimilar to sending a death threat, whether you actually try to carry out that death threat or not. It's the sending of a death threat that constitutes the offence.
https://news.sky.com/story/man-char...s-jess-phillips-sky-news-understands-13284679

The threats sent to Jess Phillips were sparked by people using their "Free Speech". /discuss
 
They are, indeed. But so too is the person who may be shown to have incited their actions. Or is Marx (Communist Manifesto) not in any way responsible for the rise of communism and its revolutions, nor Hitler (Mein Kampf) responsible for the rise of National Socialism? In some cases, words provoke very positive outcomes; in others, very negative.
Thinking about this, I still think there is a clear separation between the ideas in the books and the actions.

I don`t think Marx was directly responsible for what the various attempts at implementing communism did. He wrote his manifesto laying out his ideas Everyone was free to read it, most took it for an interesting thought experiment that could not work in reality, some other people took it a bit too far shall we say.

Similarly if Hitler would have stopped with the book it might have all been fine.


You cannot really suggest that the rioting thugs were waiting for the suburban houswife ringleader to send them into action with a tweet.
No, that is not what is being suggested at all. Did you not read any of my posts?
The offences that the housewife committed were entirely different, See above, they were actual specified offences under certain Acts.
The housewife is therefore to be held responsible for the specific offences she committed. Not the offences of the violent perpetrators. The two are separate and distinct.
Sorry, this was not a direct reference to the particular housewife or your post specifically. More a general principle about the responsibilty for the actions.I meant "you" in a general sense, not saying you were suggesting it. If you see what I mean.
 
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Given the number of people immediately imprisoned recently for spreading “Misinformation”, I was quite surprised to read that the BBC can do this without fear of prosecution, or is this incorrect?

Jeremy Bowen is still unrepentant about his fake report about that Hospital car park in Gaza damaged by a Hamas rocket.

IMG_3078.jpeg
 
Given the number of people immediately imprisoned recently for spreading “Misinformation”, I was quite surprised to read that the BBC can do this without fear of prosecution, or is this incorrect?

Jeremy Bowen is still unrepentant about his fake report about that Hospital car park in Gaza damaged by a Hamas rocket.

View attachment 195749
From the Telegraph, not an exactly unbiased source of information!
 
The problem is not free expression

The problem is that the liars are winning.

We now live in the era of “alternative facts”….and the big question is: “how do we put the genie back in the bottle”

The main problem is social media and its firm grip on society I feel.

Elon Musk and his tweets are being reported all over the world, governments are now reacting to them instead of just ignoring them and getting on with what they should be doing which is running the country. It's daft!

So in answer to your question how do you put the genie back in the bottle? If everyone just ignore the idiots posting garbage, realise that there is still a world outside of social media then that may help.
 
I can't access the Telegraph report, nor the original report, but found this

https://honestreporting.com/1500-br...scathing-report-on-israel-hamas-war-coverage/

The report used AI to analyse the phrasing of BBC reports - well, I think that, if nothing else, allows for doubt about the findings. Then I read this:

  • "Repeated Failure to Label Hamas a Terrorist Organization
Throughout its coverage, the BBC refused to refer to Hamas as a terrorist organization, despite its official designation as such by numerous countries, including the UK. Instead, the BBC often portrayed Hamas in sympathetic terms, framing the group as a “resistance movement” and its fighters as “soldiers.” This failure to accurately label Hamas contributed to a skewed portrayal of the conflict, in which the brutality of Hamas’s attacks, including the kidnapping of over 250 Israelis, was downplayed or presented in a neutral tone."

That's clearly complete cobblers. BBC news repeatedly described Hamas as recognised by UK govt as a terrorist organisation, to the point that it started sounding ridiculous. So that is simply untrue. The comments about resistance etc is indeed, open to interpretation - pretending it is untrue or wrong is to assume one side of the argument rather than the other, but this is definitely more of a grey area. Finally, the brutality of the Hamas attack was not downplayed, it was repeatedly identified as the instigator of the current war, describing killings, rape and abductions. Again, we could look to what caused the attack and attribute blame elsewhere, but again, that's an ongoing argument - the important point is that BBC did emphasise the horrors of that attack, I remember their coverage clearly, it was horrific.

ps As for giving a balanced view of what's going on in Gaza, it's rather tricky when Israel won't allow reporters to enter the territory.

pps Wiki has this on the author of the report:
"Trevor Asserson (born 26 November 1956) is a British lawyer specialising in litigation.[1][2][3][4][5] He is the founder and Senior Partner at Asserson Law Offices.[6][7]
A member of the Law Society, Asserson is active as a lawyer within the Jewish Community in the UK and Israel. He is based in Jerusalem, Israel.[8][9][4]"
Does that raise any potential issues regarding truth, bias etc? I don't know enough, but it might be worth considering.
 
The thing is it has been long accepted that there is no direct link between the things said and the actual violence commited.
This is the same flawed argument that was used by people saying violent video games would make everyone murderers.

The responsibility for the violence or rioting or whatever is solely in the hands of those who participated.
You cannot really suggest that the rioting thugs were waiting for the suburban houswife ringleader to send them into action with a tweet.

Interesting how many stories I've seen recently of people taking action due to online information. This new years just gone saw thousands of people turn up in birmingham for a firework display that was just made up by someone on the internet.

That is a direct correlation between false information and thousands of people taking an action. It could have easily resulted in civil unrest.

https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2025/01/01/birmingham-fireworks-display-social-media-scam/

There have been others with christmas parades that were never going to happen.

These are just simple examples. Across the pond it was not hard to see that Trump yelling for people to 'fight like hell' and telling them to march on the capital was a direct call for action and resulted in the death of a protestor and injured many others.
 
Given the number of people immediately imprisoned recently for spreading “Misinformation”, I was quite surprised to read that the BBC can do this without fear of prosecution, or is this incorrect?

Jeremy Bowen is still unrepentant about his fake report about that Hospital car park in Gaza damaged by a Hamas rocket.

As already said the report appears to be an interpretation of the BBC’s editorial guidelines and the conclusions are perhaps flawed. I’d expect these guidelines are in any case seeking to adhere to a standard that’s higher than just meeting the level of avoiding prosecution.

If there was a breach of the law, given the deep pockets of the anti-BBC camp, I’d have expected it to have led to some action if the report really had substance.
 
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