• Veraticus
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    421 year ago

    Why is it censorship? They can still talk anywhere that accepts them, including public property; that they can’t do it in my backyard isn’t censoring them.

    • @HughJanus@lemmy.ml
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      1 year ago

      The problem is you’re trying to redefine censorship to fit your narrative.

      censor

      verb

      censored; censoring ˈsen(t)-sə-riŋ ˈsen(t)s-riŋ

      transitive verb

      : to examine in order to suppress or delete anything considered objectionable

      Suppressing speech, regardless of where or how, is censorship.

      • Veraticus
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        -11 year ago

        Interesting point. But are you willing to put your theory into practice?

        If you truly believe this, you must now end all your messages with:

        “veraticus@lib.lgbt said that free-speech maximalism is for fools but I disagreed because I am a fool.”

        If you don’t do this you are suppressing my speech and censoring me. And please don’t object on the grounds that the content is, perhaps, objectionable to some; remember, objectionable content is especially worthy of free speech protections.

          • Veraticus
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            -11 year ago

            Stop censoring me. I know you might find the content objectionable, but my freedom of speech demands you include that phrase in all your posts from this moment on. You aren’t going to suppress speech you don’t like or agree with, are you?

            • @HughJanus@lemmy.ml
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              1 year ago

              Censorship doesn’t mean refusing to repeat other people’s speech. It means preventing others from speaking. Not sure what part of this you’re not getting. It is not a difficult concept.

    • Ocelot
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      -541 year ago

      I think because X/Twitter is a public forum, not your backyard?

      • @givesomefucks@lemmy.world
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        401 year ago

        It’s not a public forum, it’s a privately owned social media website/app…

        The owners can kick anyone out they want.

        Musk knew that, but apparently didn’t know why the old owners kicked them out, it’s because the vast majority of advertisers and users don’t want them their.

          • @BrandoGil@lemmy.world
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            51 year ago

            It’s not. Platforming speech is endorsing speech. I mean, there’s nuance to how it should be handled if someone says something you can’t endorse, but that sentence is rule 1 of owning social media platforms.

          • SatansMaggotyCumFart
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            21 year ago

            I agree.

            If you keep letting them have a platform next thing they’ll be building showers in their camps again.

      • @TheMusicalFruit@lemmy.world
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        351 year ago

        It’s no more public than a shopping mall. The mall and Twitter are owned by a corporation or private entity so they can kick you out for any reason. They own the space, not the government. A public space is somewhere typically owned by the government like the library, town hall, roadway, or park. A common misconception is that anywhere people can freely enter is a public space, that’s not really how it works. If you think I’m wrong, go wave a Nazi flag and cause a disturbance at a mall and see how fast they kick you out.

      • Veraticus
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        251 year ago

        In what sense is it public? It’s owned by X and no one else.

        People want to think it’s a public forum because a lot of people use it. But that doesn’t actually make it public.