I understand how it's likely to cause trouble for the merchant if they allow pornographic items. But don't pretend you'll "defend to the death my right to say it". Here's a cause! Why not defend to the death?
There are clearly some processors which accept adult products, as demonstrated by the fact that you can buy dildos online with a credit card. Why doesn't Shopify use partners that are more free?
It looks like Shopify allows adult products in general, but it's not worth anything if you're able to get money for it.
To some people, "defending free speech" only means protecting swastikas, but not female nipples. Why aren't business willing to defend my right to sell a double penetration!
Lmao, this is what happens when the left calls everyone they don't agree with Nazis. Even media outlets compromised solely of practicing Jews are now Nazis.
I don't read Breitbart (nor most media tbh), but I just skimmed through this site and can't find anything related to national socialism. It just looks like another right-wing news site, being that national socialism is a center-wing political stance, I think it is incompatible in principle.
Do you have any link of them claiming to be nazis or taking nazis stances about something? Or do you just call nazi anyone who disagrees with you? Not trying to pick a fight, just honestly asking.
Aren't you using your own version? The original meaning of left and right is the French Revolution, where people who sat on the left wanted revolution and people who sat on the right wanted to keep the status quo. People who sat in the center wanted a little bit of both. Then the definition transitioned to left being collectivism and right being capitalism.
But for some reason a good portion of academia (to not say most) labeled right as authoritarian and violent, and left as humanitarian and progressive. Hell, even Wikipedia and Google definitions says that national socialism is a far right-wing movement. So I don't blame you, definitions are a bit messy
I'm using the common version. It's not that the right is authoritarian and violent and the left is humanitarian and progressive. It's that extremes on both sides are authoritarian and violent, but differently. (Nazis vs Communists being the obvious example there.)
I actually think the 2D version discussed in your link makes a lot of sense overall. But I think it's a mistake to label the horizontal axis as "Left/Right." Just label it "Collectivist/Individualist" like the vertical is labeled "Authoritarian/Libertarian."
Well, I can list a few incompatibilities if you want:
* Right-wing is usually in favor of free market and free enterprise, whilst NSAP stole private property (mostly from Jews) and heavily controlled the economy, also got out of the international financial system.
* Right-wing is usually against gun controls, whilst NSAP was very gun control.
* Right-wing is usually pro free speech for everyone no matter what. NSAP was not pro free speech. Government literally ran the media.
* Right-wing is mostly against welfare state, while NSAP was very pro welfare state. In fact Otto von Bismarck (a personal hero for Hitler) was the creator of the welfare state as we know it.
They do, however share some nationalism views and don't like open borders, and think that protectionism is ok. So there's that.
> Right-wing is usually in favor of free market and free enterprise
Nope; while that's a libertarian point of view also shared (though typically balanced against other concerns, for those not primarily libertarians) by a number of center- and moderate-right (and center- and moderate-left) groups.
> Right-wing is usually against gun controls, whilst NSAP was very gun control.
That's a fairly recent quirk of the American Republican party, not true of the general right-wing.
> Right-wing is usually pro free speech for everyone no matter what. NSAP was not pro free speech. Government literally ran the media.
Free speech, is again, a libertarian position with fairly broad support from the moderate left to moderate right, though those that aren't primarily libertarians on both sides tend to be likely to favor significant restrictions because of competing priorities. Pure free speech has never been a position typifying the right wing.
>
> Right-wing is mostly against welfare state, while NSAP was very pro welfare state
No, the NSDAP was not pro-welfare state. (The welfare state is not just any state that does more than libertarian minarchists would prefer.)
The American right loves gun control as long as it's directed against what they see as the proper target. Candidate Trump said he wanted police to stop people on the street and confiscate their guns. The only reason there wasn't a complete revolt in his party over this was the understanding that he meant it would only be done to minorities.
> On November 8th, the day of the US election, the whole world got more black and white. People in the center have been called upon to choose sides. In a way, my position is an appeal to preserve some of the gray in the world. All solutions necessarily have to come from the middle ground. No progress happens when ideas are censored and everyone sorts into one of two camps.
It is just sad that they actually wrote a post about that. As long as it is not clearly illegal stuff Breitbart should be able to sell their merch no matter what idiotic positions they might have. That should not be something to brag about but standard business practice, even for Silicon Valley.
Cutting unpopular industries/sites/businesses off from payment processing has been a popular sport of activists behind the scenes since I've been in the industry.
It's a huge chilling effect no one really discusses very much, and is why I was originally so obsessed with the Bitcoin idea - finally a payment method no one could subvert to force their political and moral ideology on you.
The level of censorship the typical banking partner (e.g. merchant account) exerts on a business is probably the largest out of any vendor by an order of magnitude - perhaps only shared in scale by telecommunications/hosting provider.
> That should not be something to brag about but standard business practice, even for Silicon Valley.
Wait until you hear about how accepting US Silicon Valley companies are about female nipples! Or pornography! That's heavily censored by many companies.
As I understand it - at least in the US - hate speech is protected speech. Inciting someone to commit a violent act or to otherwise break the law might not be, but hate speech is protected speech.
>What do nazi ideologies fall under? They are illegal in Germany and not protected by free speech no?
I believe in Germany you are correct, yes.
>why is hate speech protected by freedom of speech, is it so that dictators can't accuse people critisizing them of hate speech?
In a decision on a 1st Amendment case Samuel Alito wrote:
"Speech that demeans on the basis of race, ethnicity, gender, religion, age, disability, or any other similar ground is hateful; but the proudest boast of our free speech jurisprudence is that we protect the freedom to express “the thought that we hate.”"
I see legally protecting hate speech as the 'cost' of not having someone else decide what counts as allowable speech.
I live in France where there are stricter limits to speech. Quoting Wikipedia on French hate speech laws, French "laws forbid any communication which is intended to incite discrimination against, hatred of, or harm to, anyone because of his belonging or not belonging, in fact or in fancy, to an ethnicity, a nation, a race, a religion, a sex, or a sexual orientation, or because he or she has a handicap ."
That's all well and good for me...up until the point where someone starts questioning what a nation is, for example. Or what an ethnicity is.
We also can't deny crimes against humanity and genocides here. I wouldn't want to do so, but having that restriction on speech means that there is someone charged with deciding whether something rises to the point of genocide (where denial is illegal and punished by law) or 'merely' a mass killing (deny it all you like). Given the choice between the French and American laws on hate speech, I'd prefer living under the latter.
I just had a look and in almost all western countries hate speech is forbidden based on race, sexual orientation, gender, religion
and is punishable by law EXCEPT in the united states.
Well Germany's free speech laws on Nazi symbols is actually so restrictive that many WWII games remove all images of the Swastika and tend to rename Hitler to something else.
And it's because banning any speech is a slippery slope. Many people on reddit would make the argument supporting Trump at all is hate speech. In the US, yelling fire in a crowded theater and threats specifically against the president are I believe the only two major restricts on free speech. The question "If x isn't allowed, than why is y" would get asked constantly, so it's better to just allow it all and let society work it out.
The "fire in a crowded theater" thing is an urban legend. It was a snippet from a ruling that has been subsequently ruled against many times in the last 100yr.
Free speech in the US is basically:
1) don't do anything that would be a slam-dunk defamation lawsuit.
2) don't tell people to commit crimes
3) don't try to play technicality games with the above rules (e.g. "I only said I wish X were dead, not that my followers should murder X).
Following those rules doesn't necessarily mean someone won't try to harass you via the courts but that happens for all sorts of issues not related to free speech as well.
Whether you see it as Breitbart paying them, or Shopify paying Breitbart; both are profiting by the presence of the other party.
I guess it would take other major clients to start leaving the service to make them change their minds. So if you wanted to pressure Shopify, petition the other clients.
They frame it as "imposition of morality" though the issue is broader than that, i.e. Breitbart's tendency to incitement and spreading disinformation.
Crying "free speech" over issues of incitement or violence is the bread-and-butter of the alt-right, and I'm deeply curious as to why Shopify decided to employ that tactic.
> In a way, my position is an appeal to preserve some of the gray in the world. All solutions necessarily have to come from the middle ground.
Free speech is a right, and something that the government must allow. People and companies have no imperative to provide the same freedom on platforms they control.
While I respect the decision to remain neutral, I have more respect for companies that say no to hate on their platforms. There is no requirement for them to provide a platform for it, and I think it's courageous for companies to have human morals, too many don't.
I find nothing wrong with either approach. "Service providers" that are neutral are fine by me.
Free speech - the concept, not the amendment - would not work in the current connected world if every service provider had to "ok" your message before it got out.
True, and I'm not suggesting that service providers would have to "ok" anything. I just think it's fair for them to set terms of service that lay out what you can and can't do, and for those terms of service to have some moral backing to them, beyond simple legality.
One thing I think should be differentiated though is certain types of communication channels. I think internet access should be protected for freedom of speech. Selling merchandise online though is not fundamental to that speech though and should not be protected. Similarly I don't think a domain name is a fundamental requirement (in the case of the Daily Stormer).
> I just think it's fair for them to set terms of service that lay out what you can and can't do, and for those terms of service to have some moral backing to them, beyond simple legality.
This would make a great piece of cyberpunk dystopian fiction. Humanity in a far off future finds its codified moral compass not in religious texts, not in the spoken words of religious leaders, and certainly not in books written by philosophers. But rather, in corporate contracts copy-pasted together by Employee #5 at some hyper-growth startups during the Early Years.
I just wish they'd be honest about it. Shopify Payments has a long list of products they won't allow. But when it's Nazis, suddenly they're taking a principled stand that they don't pick and choose.
Nazis? That's starting to become a pretty broad word. How conservative do you have to be before you become a Nazi? More importantly, how fast is the line moving?
So, I could argue that the fact that it is being discussed indicates that it may be a little ambiguous after all. It's worth noting that your final conclusion was that the symbol "screamed Nazi" when you saw it, and that you could understand it not being sufficient.
Literally anything can be ambiguous when people blind themselves sufficiently. There's a gigantic debate over whether the Confederate flag is a symbol of slavery!
Organizations like Breitbart thrive on "reasonable" people's willingness to give them a tremendous benefit of the doubt. They're like a little kid who lies down on top of the covers and plays with toys when you tell them to "go to bed." And a lot of people who should really know better step up and say, "technically they did what you said, I see nothing wrong with that."
Your first sentence is a hoot, since you're taking the fact that Breitbart stylized the back of the US quarter and put it on a t shirt as signs that they are Nazis.
May I make a suggestion? Just entertain for a brief moment that you are the one deceiving yourself. And then go back on with your day.
I have considered what you say. But understand that I'm not calling them Nazis because of what's in their store. I'm just amazed that they don't even bother to hide it.
It is different...but it is even more different than the Nazi eagle emblem. Your logic is like saying a rat is bigger than a mouse so it must be an elephant. Perhaps context helps here? Did Nazis used the phrase "e pluribus unum"?
Look, I fully support the overall idea that we should question the type of pretense you're talking about.
That said, we're talking about a site conceived by five Jewish guys (even if one not ethnically), which declares itself unapologetically pro-Isreal[1] and which is confirmed by the NYT[2].
Are you really sure those images are enough to declare them Nazis?
They don't constantly argue against bigger government. For example, they love police and want much stricter immigration restrictions.
Don't confuse "I am in favor of small government" with actually being in favor of small government. The American right wing has been playing that stupid game for decades.
The left is a bazillion times more fascist than the right. But you brainwashed monkeys wouldn't know it. Too busy gargling cock and toeing the party line. Fuck off commie.
The Getty Images link below has a pretty broad range of American eagle emblems with similarities to eagle emblems used by other countries. It seems this is case of seeing Nazis where one wishes to see Nazis.
Especially considering the fact that our coinage literally has an eagle with the words "e pluribus unum" on it. The lengths that people will go in order to self deceive is mind boggling to me.
Just paying devil's advocate but it seems by your logic all the phone companies should be ok to monitor all conversations and ban anyone having a hate converations. All email providers should be ok to scan email and ban anyone for hate emails or any other topic they dislike. They're private companies right?
The phone companies may be regulated as public utilities but most of my friends don't use the phone company's voice services anymore. Instead they call on Facebook Messenger or Line or WhatsApp which are not regulated as public utilities.
I don't know where to draw the line. Kicking them off say youtube? Maybe. Kicking them off the entire internet? I'm not so sure. Allowing them to stay on the internet (if you agree banning them from the internet is going too far) requires some companies to carry their content.
There is a way to carve out exceptions to corporations ability to limit free speech. The cost of laying phone lines or setting up a network of cell towers and buying bandwidth makes entering the phone market prohibitive. If even one company bans your speech from their phone network, you are likely to be unable to speak. Phone companies should be considered the infrastructure of speech, and thus not be allowed to limit the types of converstions you have.
Shopify is just one of many ecommerce platforms. There are simple roll-your-own ones as well. If they ban someone, there is no major impedements to getting their speech out still.
Right now all I see is shopify profiting from hate, not defending free speech. Brietbart can go set up opencart on a vps.
Monitoring phone calls seems like a big leap from where the conversation was it.
I think most people would agree that if you keep things private that even a private entity shouldn't expose that. But if you broadcast the information publicly, then you are now liable to be held to a different standard.
So if a group started holding advertising public WhatsApp calls where they'd discuss plans to exterminate minority groups then I think WhatsApp would be OK in canceling their account (assuming its consistent with their TOS).
I don't think messaging apps should be able to collude though. This should be at a case by case, company by company basis.
There's a difference between viewing their public pages and listening to private conversations, so your argument doesn't hold water.
If ISIS had a Verizon phone number that they publicized, I don't think it'd be stepping over a line for Verizon to shut that down. But if it was just a normal phone line, not advertised to the public, then Verizon has no way of knowing what it's used for.
Likewise if ISIS had an email address kill_them_all@gmail.com and advertised that this was the ISIS email address, yep. It's time for Google to revoke that. But if it's just disc_golf_playa_69@gmail.com and no one knows it's ISIS, then no one knows it's ISIS.
Breitbart isn't hiding its hatred, and it isn't hiding its store. Shopify doesn't have to infringe on anyone's privacy to realize they're running a store that lets people profit from hatred and racism.
There's no way to ban someone from the Internet. But they can be banned from various corporate sites if the corporation wants nothing to do with them. Which is what has been happening.
Keep in mind, a few decades ago this same thinking would allow companies to deny services to people because of the companies' racist policies.
So right now things dovetail nicely into morally defensible stances, but there is no guarantee things will coincide this way in the future which is why we defend free speech in more absolutist terms (with special carve outs).
You're confusing free speech with US constitutions' first amendment.
Not all of us live in USA. Free speech is a universal right, independent of the platform.
Now US government respects this freedom and executes it on it's platform, that's the public space.
Now, on the other hand, many US companies don't give you the same freedom. They don't allow the free speech on their platforms.
We should be thinking whether it's good or bad and don't muddle the discussion with the American-specific PoV.
I personally don't like to see companies having any morals. There's nothing courageous about it. I would like to see companies have ethics instead and follow them to the best of their abilities. Ours is the privilege of judgment.
> I personally don't like to see companies having any morals. There's nothing courageous about it. I would like to see companies have ethics instead and follow them to the best of their abilities.
Yes, absolutely. Corporations are people and don't need to take moral or political stances, especially when there is still so much work to be done just getting Corporations to behave at all ethically.
There is no clear definition of what "hate speech" is.
For example, would you categorize this WaPo article:
"Segregationists have again assumed their pedestals in the Justice Department, the White House and many other American temples. Paper alone won’t drive them out. Start throwing rocks." [1]
as hate speech?
If yes, should we ban WaPo?
If not, why not?
Who decides? By what standards?
Private entities which are not de-facto monopolies (like Google) have the right to do as they please, but they should publish VERY clear rules, which will then apply to anyone, regardless of political affiliation.
> People and companies have no imperative to provide the same freedom on platforms they control.
That's what I keep hearing, and yet a company in Denver was forced by law to bake a wedding cake for a gay couple against his religious morals. Why does that not apply to internet companies?
I disagree with this in the context of their argument. If you own a business, you have the right to make "moral code" decisions about how your business operates. In the same manner that individuals who dislike big oil don't have to purchase Exxon stock (even though they might profit from it), business owners don't have to pander to clients that operate in a market they despise. Writing it off as some grander definition of refereeing the world's "moral code" is just a convenient boogeyman to hide behind.
The simple fact is that Shopify, as a business, supports Breitbart. This article presents an inflated sense of importance of their role in policing the world.
> To kick off a merchant is to censor ideas and interfere with the free exchange of products at the core of commerce. When we kick off a merchant, we’re asserting our own moral code as the superior one. But who gets to define that moral code? Where would it begin and end? Who gets to decide what can be sold and what can’t? If we start blocking out voices, we would fall short of our goals as a company to make commerce better for everyone. Instead, we would have a biased and diminished platform.
> If you own a business, you have the right to make "moral code" decisions about how your business operates.
They are making that decision. Their decision is to act as a service provider that does not pass judgement on any users of their platform operating within the law. There is nothing wrong with this decision - it is a non-decision.
I'm more perturbed by providers that choose to take a side. Those providers are now implicitly morally approving of all remaining users of their platform.
They're completely within their right to make the decision that they've made. What I think is disingenuous is hiding behind some larger "moral code" reasoning. They're trying to make it seem like they're doing humanity some good by keeping Breitbart when what they're doing is simply conducting business as they have a right to do.
They would have been better off not making a statement than making the one they did.
The post makes the argument that selling things is speech and that shopify is protecting free speech by not dropping controversial clients.
You claim that this argument is disingenuous, ie that the argument is not sincere. It seems sincere to me.
I think it's a pretty convincing argument. Free speech doesn't mean a whole lot if you can't buy pen and paper, or engage some web company to host your website, or sell merchandise (so this post argues).
No, that doesn't constitute implicit moral approval. We all understand that platforms and providers can't police each individual user. That's a concern about logistics, not moral consistency.
That said -- there are products that Shopify does (and would) kick a user for selling. Shopify isn't neutral, in fact, they're saying Breitbart is acceptable.
Do you not see the inherent difference between prohibiting the sale of whole classes of goods and services, and prohibiting certain types of political speech by your users?
No. Things that get banned almost always have significant political content.
Homosexual content (not necc. porn) comes to mind as a perfect example of "whole classes of goods and services" that are also very much political speech. "obscene speech" (see The Howl trial) is another famous example of an attempt to re-brand "political speech" as an apolitical "whole class of goods and services".
Taking some class of controversial goods and services and branding it as "not political" is just begging the question. It's saying "this thing is so obviously bad that discussion of its acceptability is beyond the scope of our current politics." IMO saying something is "beyond politics" is the ultimate political judgement.
> No. Things that get banned almost always have significant political content.
If you look at list of banned goods and services, most of them are not politically related, but are related to liability, abuse potential and (probably) payment processor restrictions.
I'm not saying that banning whole classes of goods doesn't have an impact on free speech.
Yet there is still a fundamental difference between having a list of prohibited goods / services and removing a member selling allowed goods and services because you don't like their politics.
The first one is banning the sale of pornographic products on your platform, the second is banning the sale of (otherwise permissible) t-shirts by pornography companies on your platform.
Yet another guy who thinks he's a government entity. Refusing to do business with someone isn't censorship, _it's speech_. No-one's campaigning to remove Breitbart's license to do business, they're just saying Shopify shouldn't be doing business with them.
If a guy says offensive stuff in a bar and keeps starting fights, sooner or later you'll have two groups of people. The ones who don't want to hang around with him any more, and the ones who are okay with his behaviour.
All of which, frankly, is pretty much covered by the obvious XKCD comic.
And yeah, there's plenty of grey in the world. But I'll let you in on a secret: even the grey stuff doesn't like Breitbart.
>Yet another guy who thinks he's a government entity
Free Speech is more than just a legal right, it is an important social institution. We impose stricter controls on government entities than we do on business entities, but that doesn't mean that business entities don't have huge effects of the freeness of speech in our culture.
>Refusing to do business with someone isn't censorship, _it's speech_.
It is censorship and it is also speech. Some types of this speech are not legal, for example: Refusing to do business with someone based on their race is illegal.
It's not entirely clear to me that we as a society have thought through the consequences of making political discrimination wholey legal.
Do we allow businesses to blacklist customers based on political affiliation?
Do we allow businesses to blacklist customers who support abortion or gay marriage?
Do we allow employers to fire you if you don't agree with them politically?
> No-one's campaigning to remove Breitbart's license to do business
You are campaigning to compel Shopify to say what you want and in doing so impinge on the speech of another. This assaults not just Breitbart's freedom of speech, but also Shopify's. While legal, this is also directly harmful the freeness of speech in our society.
I think you're confusing campaigning with saying, and compulsion with ostracism. You're not talking about free speech, you're talking about freedom from consequences. If you truly believe all political speech should be considered equal, I suggest you upvote this comment.
And yes, some forms of speech can be used to close down other speech. Online harassment is an obvious example but I seriously doubt it's what you had in mind.
Incidentally, the answer to your above questions is: in many states, actually, they do. If that's something that concerns you, maybe campaign to make that illegal.
I remember watching the media report on Donald Trump's campaign speeches and debates late 2015. It seemed crazy, how could he say all those things! Why were the minorities getting beaten up at the rallies!
I became interested and downloaded a lot of them and proceeded to watch. There was nothing there! Everything he said seemed to be straight out of 90s/early 2000s policies and campaign promises. Some dude spat on another dudes face and got punched.
Now I'm wondering if I should read what is on Breitbart and Daily Stormer.
If it's not illegal or doesn't fit into one of a few categories that cause legal headaches for the platform (porn, guns, etc) you can sell it. If people don't like it they can just not buy it.
If you hate the presence of a particular seller so much then don't go to the flea market.
Personally I think the deeper reason they don't kick Breitbart off is because they can't be seen to be vulnerable to pressure from activist campaigns. If they kick off Breitbart, it sets a precedent for the next time an internet shitstorm gets whipped up over a controversial organization.
In yesteryears, utilities were the domain of the government. However, big internet companies are the utilities of today. Increased reliance on their services makes them as powerful, or sometimes even more, than the government.
In this new world, companies need to recognize the importance of free speech when it's within their right to control the same. I laud shopify for acknowledging their power and place in the e-commerce world, and for doing the right thing.
If corporations are the new government, then they should live by Othello's saying - "I Disapprove of What You Say, But I Will Defend to the Death Your Right to Say It"
> big internet companies are the utilities of today
IMO this is a dangerous conflation.
Many large internet companies are monopolies. Anti-trust mechanisms should be used to force competitive market places. But there are substantive differences between being the far-and-away best option in a competitive market place, and the sorts of things we typically call utilities.
This comment on a story about Shopify is even more disturbing. Amazon or Facebook or Google... okay. But Shopify?! Nothing about Shopify is utility-like. Shopify isn't even a monopoly, let alone a natural one.
since when is breitbart equivalent to hate speech? has anyone here even read it? I have, and it looks like it's just a bunch of news that would be interesting to conservative types. I see no evidence of "hate speech".
are you sure that this isn't just left wing propaganda trying to reduce the influence of conservatives? don't forget, all of this is just a simple power struggle, and we're the pawns.
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[ 2.6 ms ] story [ 172 ms ] threadhttps://stripe.com/blog/why-some-businesses-arent-allowed
I'm not sure why they block the adult industry. Perhaps extremely high rates of credit card fraud?
To some people, "defending free speech" only means protecting swastikas, but not female nipples. Why aren't business willing to defend my right to sell a double penetration!
Alex Marlow (Editor in Chief) - Jewish
Joel Pollak (senior-editor-at-large) - Jewish
Larry Solov (CEO) - Jewish
Lmao, this is what happens when the left calls everyone they don't agree with Nazis. Even media outlets compromised solely of practicing Jews are now Nazis.
Do you have any link of them claiming to be nazis or taking nazis stances about something? Or do you just call nazi anyone who disagrees with you? Not trying to pick a fight, just honestly asking.
But for some reason a good portion of academia (to not say most) labeled right as authoritarian and violent, and left as humanitarian and progressive. Hell, even Wikipedia and Google definitions says that national socialism is a far right-wing movement. So I don't blame you, definitions are a bit messy
I actually think the 2D version discussed in your link makes a lot of sense overall. But I think it's a mistake to label the horizontal axis as "Left/Right." Just label it "Collectivist/Individualist" like the vertical is labeled "Authoritarian/Libertarian."
Do you realize what you are saying here?
* Right-wing is usually in favor of free market and free enterprise, whilst NSAP stole private property (mostly from Jews) and heavily controlled the economy, also got out of the international financial system.
* Right-wing is usually against gun controls, whilst NSAP was very gun control.
* Right-wing is usually pro free speech for everyone no matter what. NSAP was not pro free speech. Government literally ran the media.
* Right-wing is mostly against welfare state, while NSAP was very pro welfare state. In fact Otto von Bismarck (a personal hero for Hitler) was the creator of the welfare state as we know it.
They do, however share some nationalism views and don't like open borders, and think that protectionism is ok. So there's that.
Nope; while that's a libertarian point of view also shared (though typically balanced against other concerns, for those not primarily libertarians) by a number of center- and moderate-right (and center- and moderate-left) groups.
> Right-wing is usually against gun controls, whilst NSAP was very gun control.
That's a fairly recent quirk of the American Republican party, not true of the general right-wing.
> Right-wing is usually pro free speech for everyone no matter what. NSAP was not pro free speech. Government literally ran the media.
Free speech, is again, a libertarian position with fairly broad support from the moderate left to moderate right, though those that aren't primarily libertarians on both sides tend to be likely to favor significant restrictions because of competing priorities. Pure free speech has never been a position typifying the right wing.
> > Right-wing is mostly against welfare state, while NSAP was very pro welfare state
No, the NSDAP was not pro-welfare state. (The welfare state is not just any state that does more than libertarian minarchists would prefer.)
Do you realize what you are saying here?
> On November 8th, the day of the US election, the whole world got more black and white. People in the center have been called upon to choose sides. In a way, my position is an appeal to preserve some of the gray in the world. All solutions necessarily have to come from the middle ground. No progress happens when ideas are censored and everyone sorts into one of two camps.
You don't even have to pick and choose, the headline story on the 'bart right now:
http://www.breitbart.com/big-government/2017/08/20/source-mc...
It's not Trump's fault he doesn't do a lot of briefings and just says whatever the hell whenever, it's the Whitehouse staff and NatSec Advisor!
It's a huge chilling effect no one really discusses very much, and is why I was originally so obsessed with the Bitcoin idea - finally a payment method no one could subvert to force their political and moral ideology on you.
The level of censorship the typical banking partner (e.g. merchant account) exerts on a business is probably the largest out of any vendor by an order of magnitude - perhaps only shared in scale by telecommunications/hosting provider.
Wait until you hear about how accepting US Silicon Valley companies are about female nipples! Or pornography! That's heavily censored by many companies.
Blatant fake news are also not freedom of speech, are they?
Furthermore, why is hate speech protected by freedom of speech, is it so that dictators can't accuse people critisizing them of hate speech?
I believe in Germany you are correct, yes.
>why is hate speech protected by freedom of speech, is it so that dictators can't accuse people critisizing them of hate speech?
In a decision on a 1st Amendment case Samuel Alito wrote:
"Speech that demeans on the basis of race, ethnicity, gender, religion, age, disability, or any other similar ground is hateful; but the proudest boast of our free speech jurisprudence is that we protect the freedom to express “the thought that we hate.”"
I see legally protecting hate speech as the 'cost' of not having someone else decide what counts as allowable speech.
I live in France where there are stricter limits to speech. Quoting Wikipedia on French hate speech laws, French "laws forbid any communication which is intended to incite discrimination against, hatred of, or harm to, anyone because of his belonging or not belonging, in fact or in fancy, to an ethnicity, a nation, a race, a religion, a sex, or a sexual orientation, or because he or she has a handicap ."
That's all well and good for me...up until the point where someone starts questioning what a nation is, for example. Or what an ethnicity is.
We also can't deny crimes against humanity and genocides here. I wouldn't want to do so, but having that restriction on speech means that there is someone charged with deciding whether something rises to the point of genocide (where denial is illegal and punished by law) or 'merely' a mass killing (deny it all you like). Given the choice between the French and American laws on hate speech, I'd prefer living under the latter.
So what does that mean? https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hate_speech
And it's because banning any speech is a slippery slope. Many people on reddit would make the argument supporting Trump at all is hate speech. In the US, yelling fire in a crowded theater and threats specifically against the president are I believe the only two major restricts on free speech. The question "If x isn't allowed, than why is y" would get asked constantly, so it's better to just allow it all and let society work it out.
Free speech in the US is basically:
1) don't do anything that would be a slam-dunk defamation lawsuit.
2) don't tell people to commit crimes
3) don't try to play technicality games with the above rules (e.g. "I only said I wish X were dead, not that my followers should murder X).
Following those rules doesn't necessarily mean someone won't try to harass you via the courts but that happens for all sorts of issues not related to free speech as well.
Whether you see it as Breitbart paying them, or Shopify paying Breitbart; both are profiting by the presence of the other party.
I guess it would take other major clients to start leaving the service to make them change their minds. So if you wanted to pressure Shopify, petition the other clients.
Crying "free speech" over issues of incitement or violence is the bread-and-butter of the alt-right, and I'm deeply curious as to why Shopify decided to employ that tactic.
> In a way, my position is an appeal to preserve some of the gray in the world. All solutions necessarily have to come from the middle ground.
This is bankrupt, morally and intellectually.
While I respect the decision to remain neutral, I have more respect for companies that say no to hate on their platforms. There is no requirement for them to provide a platform for it, and I think it's courageous for companies to have human morals, too many don't.
Free speech - the concept, not the amendment - would not work in the current connected world if every service provider had to "ok" your message before it got out.
One thing I think should be differentiated though is certain types of communication channels. I think internet access should be protected for freedom of speech. Selling merchandise online though is not fundamental to that speech though and should not be protected. Similarly I don't think a domain name is a fundamental requirement (in the case of the Daily Stormer).
This would make a great piece of cyberpunk dystopian fiction. Humanity in a far off future finds its codified moral compass not in religious texts, not in the spoken words of religious leaders, and certainly not in books written by philosophers. But rather, in corporate contracts copy-pasted together by Employee #5 at some hyper-growth startups during the Early Years.
https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=13608777
So, I could argue that the fact that it is being discussed indicates that it may be a little ambiguous after all. It's worth noting that your final conclusion was that the symbol "screamed Nazi" when you saw it, and that you could understand it not being sufficient.
Organizations like Breitbart thrive on "reasonable" people's willingness to give them a tremendous benefit of the doubt. They're like a little kid who lies down on top of the covers and plays with toys when you tell them to "go to bed." And a lot of people who should really know better step up and say, "technically they did what you said, I see nothing wrong with that."
May I make a suggestion? Just entertain for a brief moment that you are the one deceiving yourself. And then go back on with your day.
I have considered what you say. But understand that I'm not calling them Nazis because of what's in their store. I'm just amazed that they don't even bother to hide it.
That said, we're talking about a site conceived by five Jewish guys (even if one not ethnically), which declares itself unapologetically pro-Isreal[1] and which is confirmed by the NYT[2].
Are you really sure those images are enough to declare them Nazis?
[1] http://www.breitbart.com/big-journalism/2015/11/17/breitbart...
[2] https://www.nytimes.com/2017/08/16/magazine/breitbart-alt-ri...
https://store.breitbart.com/collections/mens/products/e-plur...
Calling this a Nazi parteiadler is pretty absurd.
Don't confuse "I am in favor of small government" with actually being in favor of small government. The American right wing has been playing that stupid game for decades.
http://www.gettyimages.com/detail/illustration/american-eagl...
The phone companies may be regulated as public utilities but most of my friends don't use the phone company's voice services anymore. Instead they call on Facebook Messenger or Line or WhatsApp which are not regulated as public utilities.
I don't know where to draw the line. Kicking them off say youtube? Maybe. Kicking them off the entire internet? I'm not so sure. Allowing them to stay on the internet (if you agree banning them from the internet is going too far) requires some companies to carry their content.
Email and phone conversations are private communication. Breitbart is public communication. There is a difference.
Shopify is just one of many ecommerce platforms. There are simple roll-your-own ones as well. If they ban someone, there is no major impedements to getting their speech out still.
Right now all I see is shopify profiting from hate, not defending free speech. Brietbart can go set up opencart on a vps.
I think most people would agree that if you keep things private that even a private entity shouldn't expose that. But if you broadcast the information publicly, then you are now liable to be held to a different standard.
So if a group started holding advertising public WhatsApp calls where they'd discuss plans to exterminate minority groups then I think WhatsApp would be OK in canceling their account (assuming its consistent with their TOS).
I don't think messaging apps should be able to collude though. This should be at a case by case, company by company basis.
If ISIS had a Verizon phone number that they publicized, I don't think it'd be stepping over a line for Verizon to shut that down. But if it was just a normal phone line, not advertised to the public, then Verizon has no way of knowing what it's used for.
Likewise if ISIS had an email address kill_them_all@gmail.com and advertised that this was the ISIS email address, yep. It's time for Google to revoke that. But if it's just disc_golf_playa_69@gmail.com and no one knows it's ISIS, then no one knows it's ISIS.
Breitbart isn't hiding its hatred, and it isn't hiding its store. Shopify doesn't have to infringe on anyone's privacy to realize they're running a store that lets people profit from hatred and racism.
There's no way to ban someone from the Internet. But they can be banned from various corporate sites if the corporation wants nothing to do with them. Which is what has been happening.
Even common carriers are not strictly dumb pipes.
So right now things dovetail nicely into morally defensible stances, but there is no guarantee things will coincide this way in the future which is why we defend free speech in more absolutist terms (with special carve outs).
Not all of us live in USA. Free speech is a universal right, independent of the platform.
Now US government respects this freedom and executes it on it's platform, that's the public space.
Now, on the other hand, many US companies don't give you the same freedom. They don't allow the free speech on their platforms.
We should be thinking whether it's good or bad and don't muddle the discussion with the American-specific PoV.
I personally don't like to see companies having any morals. There's nothing courageous about it. I would like to see companies have ethics instead and follow them to the best of their abilities. Ours is the privilege of judgment.
Yes, absolutely. Corporations are people and don't need to take moral or political stances, especially when there is still so much work to be done just getting Corporations to behave at all ethically.
"Segregationists have again assumed their pedestals in the Justice Department, the White House and many other American temples. Paper alone won’t drive them out. Start throwing rocks." [1]
as hate speech?
If yes, should we ban WaPo?
If not, why not? Who decides? By what standards?
Private entities which are not de-facto monopolies (like Google) have the right to do as they please, but they should publish VERY clear rules, which will then apply to anyone, regardless of political affiliation.
[1] https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/made-by-history/wp/2017/...
That's what I keep hearing, and yet a company in Denver was forced by law to bake a wedding cake for a gay couple against his religious morals. Why does that not apply to internet companies?
The simple fact is that Shopify, as a business, supports Breitbart. This article presents an inflated sense of importance of their role in policing the world.
> To kick off a merchant is to censor ideas and interfere with the free exchange of products at the core of commerce. When we kick off a merchant, we’re asserting our own moral code as the superior one. But who gets to define that moral code? Where would it begin and end? Who gets to decide what can be sold and what can’t? If we start blocking out voices, we would fall short of our goals as a company to make commerce better for everyone. Instead, we would have a biased and diminished platform.
They are making that decision. Their decision is to act as a service provider that does not pass judgement on any users of their platform operating within the law. There is nothing wrong with this decision - it is a non-decision.
I'm more perturbed by providers that choose to take a side. Those providers are now implicitly morally approving of all remaining users of their platform.
They would have been better off not making a statement than making the one they did.
You claim that this argument is disingenuous, ie that the argument is not sincere. It seems sincere to me.
I think it's a pretty convincing argument. Free speech doesn't mean a whole lot if you can't buy pen and paper, or engage some web company to host your website, or sell merchandise (so this post argues).
That said -- there are products that Shopify does (and would) kick a user for selling. Shopify isn't neutral, in fact, they're saying Breitbart is acceptable.
No. Things that get banned almost always have significant political content.
Homosexual content (not necc. porn) comes to mind as a perfect example of "whole classes of goods and services" that are also very much political speech. "obscene speech" (see The Howl trial) is another famous example of an attempt to re-brand "political speech" as an apolitical "whole class of goods and services".
Taking some class of controversial goods and services and branding it as "not political" is just begging the question. It's saying "this thing is so obviously bad that discussion of its acceptability is beyond the scope of our current politics." IMO saying something is "beyond politics" is the ultimate political judgement.
If you look at list of banned goods and services, most of them are not politically related, but are related to liability, abuse potential and (probably) payment processor restrictions.
I'm not saying that banning whole classes of goods doesn't have an impact on free speech.
Yet there is still a fundamental difference between having a list of prohibited goods / services and removing a member selling allowed goods and services because you don't like their politics.
The first one is banning the sale of pornographic products on your platform, the second is banning the sale of (otherwise permissible) t-shirts by pornography companies on your platform.
If a guy says offensive stuff in a bar and keeps starting fights, sooner or later you'll have two groups of people. The ones who don't want to hang around with him any more, and the ones who are okay with his behaviour.
All of which, frankly, is pretty much covered by the obvious XKCD comic.
And yeah, there's plenty of grey in the world. But I'll let you in on a secret: even the grey stuff doesn't like Breitbart.
Free Speech is more than just a legal right, it is an important social institution. We impose stricter controls on government entities than we do on business entities, but that doesn't mean that business entities don't have huge effects of the freeness of speech in our culture.
>Refusing to do business with someone isn't censorship, _it's speech_.
It is censorship and it is also speech. Some types of this speech are not legal, for example: Refusing to do business with someone based on their race is illegal.
It's not entirely clear to me that we as a society have thought through the consequences of making political discrimination wholey legal.
Do we allow businesses to blacklist customers based on political affiliation?
Do we allow businesses to blacklist customers who support abortion or gay marriage?
Do we allow employers to fire you if you don't agree with them politically?
> No-one's campaigning to remove Breitbart's license to do business
You are campaigning to compel Shopify to say what you want and in doing so impinge on the speech of another. This assaults not just Breitbart's freedom of speech, but also Shopify's. While legal, this is also directly harmful the freeness of speech in our society.
And yes, some forms of speech can be used to close down other speech. Online harassment is an obvious example but I seriously doubt it's what you had in mind.
Incidentally, the answer to your above questions is: in many states, actually, they do. If that's something that concerns you, maybe campaign to make that illegal.
I became interested and downloaded a lot of them and proceeded to watch. There was nothing there! Everything he said seemed to be straight out of 90s/early 2000s policies and campaign promises. Some dude spat on another dudes face and got punched.
Now I'm wondering if I should read what is on Breitbart and Daily Stormer.
If it's not illegal or doesn't fit into one of a few categories that cause legal headaches for the platform (porn, guns, etc) you can sell it. If people don't like it they can just not buy it.
If you hate the presence of a particular seller so much then don't go to the flea market.
In this new world, companies need to recognize the importance of free speech when it's within their right to control the same. I laud shopify for acknowledging their power and place in the e-commerce world, and for doing the right thing.
If corporations are the new government, then they should live by Othello's saying - "I Disapprove of What You Say, But I Will Defend to the Death Your Right to Say It"
IMO this is a dangerous conflation.
Many large internet companies are monopolies. Anti-trust mechanisms should be used to force competitive market places. But there are substantive differences between being the far-and-away best option in a competitive market place, and the sorts of things we typically call utilities.
This comment on a story about Shopify is even more disturbing. Amazon or Facebook or Google... okay. But Shopify?! Nothing about Shopify is utility-like. Shopify isn't even a monopoly, let alone a natural one.
are you sure that this isn't just left wing propaganda trying to reduce the influence of conservatives? don't forget, all of this is just a simple power struggle, and we're the pawns.