Well...we have hundreds of thousands of laws that curtail or limit or completely ban certain activities in which certain individuals would be prone to dabble; you know, things like murder, theft, extortion, terrorism...stuff like that. Some people still partake of these antisocial hobbies, and our criminal justice system is supposed to find and apprehend these ne'er-do-wells and take steps to re-educate them...or, failing that, remove them from society altogether by one means or another. I think that most people would agree that a set of laws and rules that are put in place for everyone's benefit is a good thing and generally serves to make our society safer, although there is naturally some disagreement as to how far some of these laws should go in pursuit of this goal.
Censorship is nothing more than an extension of this system, except that it controls the proliferation of ideas rather than actions. This tends to piss a lot of people off, and some of them are the very same people that applaud the proliferation of legislation that controls their activities. They apparently don't mind being told they can't do something, and in fact they quite enjoy laws that don't affect them personally but which curtail the chosen actions of others...but they get all lathered up if they are told they can't talk about something.
It's a quandary. Ideas are powerful things, often leading to unpleasant actions. So, should they be controlled? The hue and cry is always "NO! Censorship is always bad! There are no exceptions!"
Come on, let's get real. Nothing is always good or always bad, and there are always exceptions. I see and hear news stories constantly that seem practically designed to spread bad ideas to bad people, under the pretense of "The people have a right to know!"
Why? Why does everybody have a "right" to know everything? At what point does the right to know something segue into a harmful, negative thing? It's illegal to yell "Fire!" in a crowded theater, if there isn't really a fire. Extending that to making it illegal to promulgate ideas that are harmful in a more insidious way seems inevitable. Is that wrong? Beats me.
And I of course agree that there is the issue of who should have the authority to make decisions about releasing potentially dangerous info to the public, or what ideas must be quashed before they come to the attention of the "wrong" people. But that's no different than the problem of who should be authorized to think up all those wonderful for-your-own-good laws that so many of us admire. We're all human, we all have failings, and every one of us is fraught with imperfections which ideally should keep us from having that kind of authority...but, hey, somebody has to do it...don't they?
Censorship is nothing more than an extension of this system, except that it controls the proliferation of ideas rather than actions. This tends to piss a lot of people off, and some of them are the very same people that applaud the proliferation of legislation that controls their activities. They apparently don't mind being told they can't do something, and in fact they quite enjoy laws that don't affect them personally but which curtail the chosen actions of others...but they get all lathered up if they are told they can't talk about something.
It's a quandary. Ideas are powerful things, often leading to unpleasant actions. So, should they be controlled? The hue and cry is always "NO! Censorship is always bad! There are no exceptions!"
Come on, let's get real. Nothing is always good or always bad, and there are always exceptions. I see and hear news stories constantly that seem practically designed to spread bad ideas to bad people, under the pretense of "The people have a right to know!"
Why? Why does everybody have a "right" to know everything? At what point does the right to know something segue into a harmful, negative thing? It's illegal to yell "Fire!" in a crowded theater, if there isn't really a fire. Extending that to making it illegal to promulgate ideas that are harmful in a more insidious way seems inevitable. Is that wrong? Beats me.
And I of course agree that there is the issue of who should have the authority to make decisions about releasing potentially dangerous info to the public, or what ideas must be quashed before they come to the attention of the "wrong" people. But that's no different than the problem of who should be authorized to think up all those wonderful for-your-own-good laws that so many of us admire. We're all human, we all have failings, and every one of us is fraught with imperfections which ideally should keep us from having that kind of authority...but, hey, somebody has to do it...don't they?
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