Tags: bible, burning, intolerance, religious
Permalink Reply by Melanie Dawn Molina Wood on April 3, 2011 at 5:24pm to perform what act? Burning a book in general to protest something? Or burning a book for the sole and specific reason of inciting people to act out violently and possibly kill other people?
Because that is the difference we are talking about here.
Permalink Reply by Arcus on April 3, 2011 at 5:37pm People will act violently and possibly kill other people no matter the intent of the person who burns it. Therefore, any intent of the person burning must take into concideration as the highly likely outcome, and thus must inentionally cross this boundry.
If I justify to myself it as acceptable on a subject which clearly is more important than the well being of one mass produced book and fanatics going off in a frenzy, i.e. previous example, I will not have the right to do so because I will intentionally incite people to violence on a subject which must have more coverage, following your own logic.
Permalink Reply by Melanie Dawn Molina Wood on April 3, 2011 at 5:56pm People will act violently and possibly kill other people no matter the intent of the person who burns it.
That is not what I asked, though. Of course other people could react in any number of ways to what Terry Jones did. The ideal reaction would have been if other people did exactly nothing in response to Terry Jones.
But I am talking about what Terry Jones' intent was. Or to use you as you did in your example. If YOUR intent is to incite imminent violence with your speech, then your speech is not protected by the first amendment.
There is nothing that says that you must try to imagine all of the possible ways that others *might* react to your words/actions, but if YOUR PURPOSE is to get them to act out violently, then it is not protected free speech.
I seem to recall that you are Norwegian living Denmark (?), so perhaps the laws are different where you are. Terry Jones is an American citizen acting on American soil, so American laws would govern. And I maintain that under our laws, his act is not protected free speech.
Permalink Reply by Arcus on April 4, 2011 at 5:06am So if I incite to violence against neo-nazism while burning Mein kampf in front of the gates of Auswitch, I should not be legally allowed to do so?
I think the point of departure is that I wish to reserve my right to hate certain things and incite to violence if I believe it to be a danger grave enough to warrant it. If other people choose, by their own free will, to follow my recommendation, it is their choice and responsibility.
This was the whole point of the Nurnburg trials, even if those who hold power over you asks you to committ a crime, you are morally obliged not to do so. Those who ordered atrocities are judged because they held the power to see their orders fulfilled.
Terry does not hold any power to order muslims anything, they are fully and wholle responsible for their own actions because they choose to do them. Their leaders are responsible because they do not do nearly enough to curtail the violence.
Permalink Reply by Marshall on April 3, 2011 at 10:47pm
Permalink Reply by Marshall on April 3, 2011 at 11:03pm He's protesting against Islam, that should be obvious; there's plenty about Islam deserving of protest. Ultimately he doesn't have to be right when he protests and he doesn't have to be nice; but he does have to be afforded the right to protest against what he considers evil...as do we all.
You mentioned that he admitted that his goal was to incite violence. If true I think that would potentially make what he did a crime; however I would have to read his remarks before I came to such a conclusion. Would you, if possible, direct me to those remarks?
BTW-I do feel that I should apologize for my previous racism remark, it was total BS and I'm embarrassed by it in hind site.
Permalink Reply by Pope OoO (Out of Order) on April 3, 2011 at 5:02pm Terry Jones next stunt is going to be to put Mohammed on (mock) trial and burn him in effigy too.
Haha, oh no, I missed that juicy story.
Ok, how about if we ask Terry if he would consider burning a cross with a bloody (but dead) Jesus nailed to it, as a way to advertise the wonderful Christian version of martyrdom, and then mock up a resurrection!
Permalink Reply by Heiko Knipfelberg on April 3, 2011 at 4:30pm
Permalink Reply by Jesus_Was_A_Man_Or_Myth_Or_Both on April 2, 2011 at 11:46am More Detail about Pastor Jones
"Broadcasting live on a Coptic satellite channel, available throughout the Middle East, Jones and his followers put the Koran on mock trial, and eventually convicted it on murder, rape, and terrorism charges. Visitors to the church website got to vote for the appropriate penalty and overwhelmingly chose incineration. The Arabic channel broke off its live stream for the incendiary portion of the proceedings, but Jones made sure the scene was available on his website. Assistant pastor Wayne Sapp doused the book in gasoline and set it on fire with a stove lighter."
Permalink Reply by Jesus_Was_A_Man_Or_Myth_Or_Both on April 2, 2011 at 12:01pm
Permalink Reply by Ryan E. Hoffman on April 2, 2011 at 3:02pm Started by Holo Gram in Neuroscience, Cognitive Science, Psychology. Last reply by Daniel Rockwell 36 minutes ago. 6 Replies 0 Likes
Check out our new mobile/tablet version of Think Atheist! www.ThinkAtheist.com/m
© 2013 Created by Morgan Matthew.
