• ℬ𝒶𝓃𝒶𝓃𝒶@communick.news
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    2 months ago

    I disagree since I think censorship can be desired when combatting hate speech. Maybe we just disagree how exactly we use the word ‘censorship’.

    • theneverfox@pawb.social
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      2 months ago

      No, the community needs to cyber bully them off the platform. They need to feel rejection for their words, not censorship. Censorship lets them frame themselves as the victim as they seek out a smaller echo chamber on the fringes. They need to learn their words will turn the community against them

      We still have to live with them. We can’t ignore them or silence them - we have to correct them

      • lad@programming.dev
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        2 months ago

        And what would happen when the community itself is built on hatred and welcomes hate wholeheartedly?

        • theneverfox@pawb.social
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          2 months ago

          What do you mean? It works the same way, the opinion of the community will pull you closer to the group consensus. Too much exposure will have horrible things you don’t really believe spilling out of your mouth

          Don’t go there, don’t spread word about it, don’t feed it in any way. It’s like flood water - pull others out of it if you can, but minimize your exposure

          As to shutting them down if you have the ability? Shutting down a cesspool is good - it fragments the echo chamber, and some members won’t make the migration. The only question is if I trust the one making that decision to remain impartial

          • lad@programming.dev
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            2 months ago

            Yeah, trusting someone to make right decisions is hard because this trust usually ends up being betrayed sooner or later.

            Regarding the first part, I meant that we as a community can’t put enough pressure on a bully to make em leave, if that bully is part of the community that supports em.

            • theneverfox@pawb.social
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              2 months ago

              Ah, but that’s the beauty of it. Why are they here? If it’s to troll, don’t give them what they want. If it’s for social interaction… Why are they venturing out of their echo chamber?

              Every interaction with a community pulls you slightly closer to the group consensus. You can fight it to some extent, but we’re wired to fit in with the tribe

              Social rejection is wired similar to pain in our brains - it’s far more salient, far more memorable and impactful, than normal interactions.

              The highest form of this is rejection by the community - it hurts most when everyone’s attention is on you and they all reject you. Even a single person quietly reaching out afterwards is like a lifeline - it stands out to you. It takes hundreds or thousands of “normal” interactions to counteract one extreme negative one

              A supportive community back home doesn’t counteract the impacts from an away game. Don’t go to their turf, let them come to ours. Do not feed them - we have better content, they’ll lose members to us, and if we do it right they’ll shrink until their echo chambers can no longer sustain themselves

              • lad@programming.dev
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                2 months ago

                Maybe you’re right and it could work. I’m afraid there’s always a share of sociopaths this will not affect, but this may be seen as impossible to fix anyway. What I am also afraid of is that the speed of changes is glacial in this model, and sometimes people are bullied into suicide in the course of mere weeks

    • SirEDCaLot@lemmy.today
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      2 months ago

      You are addressing the wrong problem. You’re focusing on the symptom rather than the disease.

      Fighting hate speech rather than hatred itself only strengthens the hatred. As soon as you say “you mustn’t say that” you validate the hatred and give it power. Look at any counterculture, positive or negative. Trying to suppress it only validates it, gives it legitimacy as being important enough for the establishment to want to suppress, and if the people who might support the hatred already don’t like the people who would suppress the hate speech, you’ve just poured fuel on the fire.

      The problem to be fixed isn’t hate speech, it’s hatred. It’s a tougher problem to solve, but a much more important one that you will actually get a productive effect by solving it.

      • ℬ𝒶𝓃𝒶𝓃𝒶@communick.news
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        2 months ago

        You make a good point. Hate must be addressed at its root.

        I see hate speech censorship as important for protecting the victims/vulnerable. How can we protect these people without this censorship?

        Do you have any favourite examples of how a society can fight hatred?

        • SirEDCaLot@lemmy.today
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          2 months ago

          how can we protect people without this censorship?

          We don’t, nor should we try to.
          Protecting people’s feelings from offense is not a valid activity in a free society. The second you start down the road of ‘we must regulate this guy’s words and actions to protect that guy’s feelings’ we become a nanny state full of people with paper thin skins. We accept that one consequence of free speech is that sometimes people will say things that are hurtful. We do that because the alternative is getting rid of free speech.

          Hate must be addressed at its root.

          I could not agree more. Fighting hatred with hatred only breeds more hatred. But that seems to be the standard strategy today, it’s okay to not just refuse to tolerate intolerance, but to be actively intolerant of those who themselves seem intolerant. It is just fighting bad with bad and the result is more bad.

          The way we fight the roots of hatred is with open discourse. The people who have hate in their hearts, we do not isolate them, we do not wall them off from society, we do not practice and encourage intolerance against them. We show them a better way. We make ourselves examples of doing better, not just against the people they don’t like, but against the people we don’t like.

          We try to build bridges and encourage communication. For all the people who say immigrants are lazy lawbreakers, we show them immigrants who are the hardest working motherfuckers there are and pay their taxes. For the people who think black people are a problem, we introduce them to black people who break their stereotypes.

          For the overwhelming majority of people who have hate in their hearts and intolerance and prejudice, those feelings are based on stereotypes.
          People don’t join the KKK because they start in a mixed culture and then conclude black people are a problem. They join the KKK because they have stereotypes they see reinforced in media and TV.

          There was a famous Black dude whose name I don’t remember, but he of his own volition managed to deprogram a whole bunch of KKK members. All he did was sit down and fucking talk to them. That’s it. Like sit down at the bar next to them and start a conversation. Many of the KKK members had never encountered a respectable well-spoken black person before (let alone one willing to talk to them) and were completely blown away because it broke the stereotype of a black person that they joined the KKK to fight against.
          A good number of them ended up leaving the KKK and giving this man their robes on the way out. So there’s this friendly black dude who has a big box of KKK robes that were given to him by ex-members he deprogrammed.

          That is how we fight hate. We fight hate with love, we fight intolerance with tolerance and open arms, we fight stereotypes with exposition, we fight ignorance with knowledge.

          Otherwise it’s like we are saying there’s too much stupidity in society so we’re going to prevent people with lower IQs from attempting school. It doesn’t work.

          • dXq9dwg4zt@lemmy.sdf.org
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            2 months ago

            There was a famous Black dude whose name I don’t remember, but he of his own volition managed to deprogram a whole bunch of KKK members.

            His name is Daryl Davis. For anyone not familiar, he has some great videos about this on Youtube/proxies.

            • SirEDCaLot@lemmy.today
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              2 months ago

              That’s absolutely the one! Truly great American. We could all learn a thing or two from him.

    • disguy_ovahea@lemmy.world
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      2 months ago

      Who would you have define hate speech in the US? SCOTUS?

      Many citizens may agree on the definition, but I wouldn’t trust our government to draw those lines.

      • ddh@lemmy.sdf.org
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        2 months ago

        Many countries have working anti-hate speech laws. It’s not really a big problem for freedom of speech in those countries.

        • disguy_ovahea@lemmy.world
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          2 months ago

          Those countries don’t have partisan polarization propaganda preschoolers writing their legislation.

          • Saleh@feddit.org
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            2 months ago

            While often better than in the US, you shouldn’t overestimate the state of democracy in other countries.

            A lot of the far right parties in Europe are successfully copying the polarization tactics from the US.

        • NostraDavid@programming.dev
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          2 months ago

          *Freedom of Expression

          We don’t have Freedom of Speech, but we do have Freedom of Expression. Important difference, even though it may freak out some Americans.

        • lad@programming.dev
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          2 months ago

          Except for the countries that have anti-hate laws that are deliberately vague and specifically used to jail anyone who is disliked by the government. China and Russia come to mind as examples, but I’m sure they aren’t the only ones.

          Besides hate-speech, I’m not sure how much should be censored really. China does a lot of censoring to ‘protect’ their citizens from everything, I’m not sure this would be a good thing even if that really was a goal.

          And protecting children from traumatising content looks like another good thing to do, but under that banner I usually see governments doing whatever they want without caring about children past using their image.