barracuda wrote:[
Unhappy is one thing, calling his house, making threats, calling him a pedophile, ruining his life, etc., is another.
Thanks for reminding me of something.
It's that stuff that really stands out to me.
By design, speech in general and political speech in particular are so well-protected as to be almost entrapment-proof, in the ordinary scheme of things. So in practice, they're effectively limitless rights, with only two exceptions: defamatory speech; and speech that constitutes some kind of actual danger or threat, per se (shouting fire in a crowded theater; harassment, etc: )
And it's actually not at all easy for anyone to just, like, accidentally to stray over the legal line for either one of those, just in the routine course of a conversation about something in the news. Because the law guarantees an additional extra bonus helping of latitude wrt what constitutes defamation when it comes to discussing the doings of newsworthy and/or public figures. And because real rather than rhetorical threats or dangers virtually never arise in any form when all people are doing is just talking about shit.
Basically, if two months ago, someone had asked me what the chances of people spontaneously crossing those lines while talking about conspiracies online were, I would have thought they was too little realistic possibility of that happening for it to be anything other than a ridiculously academic question.
Because at that point, I'd never seen anything that even came close to creating the potential for it.
Now we've got both. Defamation and danger. Out of the blue.
Maybe it's a coincidence. It doesn't look like one to me, though. Especially since it pretty much all starts with the harassment advisory about Ryan Lanza. I can just see a bunch of feds looking at the response to that and thinking:
"Could there really be so many people with politics we hate who can't tell the difference between breaking the law and freedom of speech well enough to know that's not a gag order? It's like a dream come true! Let's set 'em up."
Or something like that.
I should just give up, right? Sorry. I mean well. It's pretty damn unusual, though. Anomalous, even. You don't see it often.