Haitian immigrants helped revive a struggling Ohio town. Then neo-Nazis turned up

Samvega@lemmy.blahaj.zone to News@lemmy.world – 476 points –
Haitian immigrants helped revive a struggling Ohio town. Then neo-Nazis turned up
theguardian.com

Subtitle: Springfieldโ€™s immigrant community was targeted by far-right extremists months before Trump shared racist rumors

51

You are viewing a single comment

You know what Nazis bring to your town? Garbage. I don't know why this is difficult. The Nazi symbol should be banned from all public use and Nazis should be arrested and held as enemies of the state.

enemies of the state

Arresting enemies of the state?

Well, the Nazis would certainly agree with that.

You're assuming they want to apply rules consistently and fairly. When the out-group is them, they'll whine about freeze peach until we tolerate their intolerance.

The Problem is that we shift the talking point from "we shouldn't arrest people for their political opinion" to "which political opinion should we arrest" which is exactly what the Nazis want

No they don't, this has been discussed to death and you are very wrong.

Fascism is not just another political opinion that involves genocide. It is a genocide threat that involves voting. If you're going to make a credible threat, expect physical defense.

If you're actually serious, please take a moment to consider that you are spreading Nazi propaganda.

Lovely concept, but that's not how it works. If we imprison Nazis for their opinion being "against the state" it's a short way from imprisoning communists. Afterall, communists killed more people than fascists, so we should also arrest them. Starting to see how this in the Nazis interest?

Them we get to the debate to be about "violent" immigrants or "vile" [insert enemy nationality]. Why should immigrants and enemies get better treatment than our own people? So they go as well.

I'll just leave this here: https://martin-niemoeller-stiftung.de/martin-niemoeller/als-die-nazis-die-kommunisten-holten

Don't be stupid: Don't normalize prosecuting political opponents. All it takes then is for them to get 1(one) election and the oppression will simply change to you. And then it's game over.

Instead build a societal agreement that political prosecution and other fascist methods are bad. So that when the fascists try to employ them, the population won't simply play along.

Yes, I assume all sovereign nations have laws against enemies of the state. Ours are specified in the constitution. The sentencing is laid out in or laws as well. Existing as a NAZI doesn't qualify, but acting as a NAZI very well might qualify you depending on the acts.

I don't know why this is difficult.

Those pesky 1st and 4th amendments to the US Constitution. They apply to everyone, not just those you agree with.

Hate speech isn't a matter of opinion. You're not special just because you have opinions.

You can't just scream at people to go back to Africa.

  1. You come off as incredibly racist and ignorant since those people are U.S citizens.

  2. You're not exactly defended by the constitution if you wave your gun at people who are innocent.

So pipe down.

King of teachers spouting false equivalence? We're fucked.

So where is the line? Because their exercise of their rights limits others as they are no longer safe to go outside. Your rights and freedoms end where mine begin... It should not be the right of the loudest, or right of the person most careless of others, should it? Is that what we want for society?

They do not apply to enemies of the state like the Taliban, ISIS or Nazis.

You want to deprive citizens of their constitutionally protected rights because you disagree with them, because you've defined them "enemies of the state". You're a nationalist fascist.

Good luck with that.

At some point speech becomes hate speech that actually hurts people. In Germany there are laws against that, I'm sure the US has too.

Fortunately, feelings aren't protected in the US. Hate speech can only be used to show intent in the commission of an actual crime.

Should've used the "fire in a theater" example with stochastic terrorism from a position of authority.

Why is it I need make your argument for you? Think about that one for awhile.

Shouldโ€™ve used the โ€œfire in a theaterโ€ example with stochastic terrorism from a position of authority.

How about the example of someone saying black immigrants are eating dogs in a debate carried by all networks and live on multiple streaming platforms?

I think I can say that I am living in germany, currently a country not under the government of national fascists, that has a law against so called "Volksverhetzung" which has been introduced quite literally to prevent some speech of the nationalist fascists, to prevent them from spreading their hateful ideology. Maybe you wanna think about that for awhile.

They already have thought about it - see the part where they're glad our rights aren't curtailed just because someone might say some words that hurt your feelings.

Germany can take their nanny state bullshit and fuck right off.

That's an opinion one can have, but it's different from calling everyone that might want a more restrictive policy a nationalist fascist

The prolitariat doesn't need the protection of governance from ideas. That's how we get Nazis. Study your history.

This isn't about ideas it is about calling for violence towards people. This isn't how you get Nazis this is the "you already have Nazis and need to do something about it"

Also, funnily enough, the proletariat or what's left of it, are the ones currently flocking to the right-wing extremist party here in Germany.

Nah bruv, as an american, the people are too dumb to not need some sort of protection from hate speech and ideas. A fact checker needs to be a mandatory public service at this point. I feel the same way about the homeless bum who shouts at everyone downtown that their participation in consummerism is destroying everything. If they called for violence, it would be a step too far.

If the people are too dumb to be trusted with an unrestricted marketplace of ideas, the they're too dumb to be allowed to vote for their own government.

If you believe in democracy, you have to also believe that the majority of people can be trusted with the information necessary to make informed political choices.

If the people can't be trusted to act in their best interests in an informed manner, then we might as well just adopt Plato's philosopher-kings system instead, and make all of the peoples' decisions for them.

I have a question for you. Do you think advertising works not just as an informative medium but as a manipulative medium as well? Do people have free will while shopping or are they completely following whatever ad is in front of their faces? Or is it maybe a middle ground between the two extremes that's actually the truth?

I believe that if we allow advertisements at all, we must do so on the assumption that the majority of people have complete free will while shopping, especially in the modern world where we have so many more ways of accessing and sharing information than has ever been possible. It is, however, reasonable for the majority to enact advertising protections that would benefit the dumb/manipulable minority.

The difference is that we can't do so for political information in a democracy, because the entity that enacts and enforces the supposed "protections" (i.e. the government) is exactly the same entity that is directly affected by the subsequent political choices of the people based on that information.

Once again, the question is, "Are the majority of people too dumb or easily manipulated to be trusted with the system?" If so, then we should do away with the system altogether and have a government of philosopher-kings decide how resources should be distributed.

As for what I personally think, about both advertising and government? Nowadays I go back and forth. When I was younger and more naive, I believed that people could be trusted with making their own decisions, but the older I get and the more I see how truly stupid people are, the more I question whether that's actually the case.

At this point, politically I'm still firmly in the camp of, "The people must be fully trusted with information to make their own political decisions, for good or ill," because to believe otherwise is to believe that democracy is not possible, and I'm not ready to make that step quite yet (and I honestly don't really want to).

What I do know is that there is no middle ground. I do not believe in "democracy" where the government restricts in any way the information that the people have access to when making decisions about that very government. That's already autocracy under the guise of "democracy", so we might as well stop fooling ourselves at that point.

The difference is that we canโ€™t do so for political information in a democracy

I think I see where I failed to communicate. The laws that germany enacted are not about information. They are for (or rather against) instigating hate and violence against groups of people. Which I wouldn't classify as 'political information'. I do get that that is a slippery slope and that this tool needs to be used with a lot of caution and oversight. But I think it is a necessary tool especially because of this:

It is, however, reasonable for the majority to enact advertising protections that would benefit the dumb/manipulable minority.

A manipulable minority that acts on these calls to violence is enough to deeply damage a democracy.

Once again, the question is, โ€œAre the majority of people too dumb or easily manipulated to be trusted with the system?โ€ If so, then we should do away with the system altogether and have a government of philosopher-kings decide how resources should be distributed.

An important thing to remember is that a large enough minority can really disturb a democratic system. We are seeing this right now in germanies eastern states where the AfD has won about 30% of the votes making any coalition between the other parties very unfavourable. No-one currently knows what the coalition talks will resolve to. The majority did vote for democratic parties but that isn't enough, it has to be an overhelming majority that votes for democratic parties.

Also: I'd argue that representative democracies are a lot more susceptible to this kind of flaw where parties have to resort to manipulation to get the votes of people. Other forms of democracy do not have that flaw as extensively. We do not necessarily have to get rid of democracy to fix or at least improve that flaw.

2 more...
2 more...
2 more...

This is why the GOP has been working hard for decades to destroy public education in the US. They want to make sure that only the rich are educated because the uneducated can be easily tricked into voting against their own interests. Unfortunately it's working.

It's mandatory in a functioning democracy for the public to be educated and well informed or it doesn't work. Unfortunately it's highly debatable whether the US still qualifies as educated, and the likes of Fox News and Sinclair are hard at work destroying the informed part.

All that said the ease with which misinformation spreads these days does need some kind of counter, otherwise we open ourselves up to Soviet style disinformation campaigns where the goal isn't so much to drive a particular narrative as it is to sow confusion and make people distrust all information. They drown the signal in noise, so everyone just makes decisions based on their gut instead of facts. Social media has given a false equivalence where any random person on Facebook is treated as just as reliable a source of news and information as actual reporters are. This is incredibly dangerous.

Very interesting "democracy or philosipher-king" point, though maybe another option in between is possible. I believe it is people's responisibility to self govern and that noone has the right to take that away. I don't want people to be told what to think, but I also don't trust them in our current system. I'm saying we need an apolitical tool for flagging lies to help people not accept everything that fits their current worldview. Also, on your point later in the comment chain, I firmly believe elected officials should be suspended and imprisoned if they call for violence and then someone else performs that violence. Rhetoric has power and using that irresponsibly shouldn't go unpunished. Majority rule with respect to the minority is my most important principle.

2 more...

And, that's exactly how we got so dumb.

Check out The Manufacturing of Consent. Or, if lighter reading is your thing, 1984.

Controlling media and having a fact-checker pop up are two different things. Let people spout their nonsense, but flag sources of misinformation as unreliable.

2 more...
2 more...
2 more...
2 more...
2 more...

You go tell that to the entire generation that had to fight and die to free us of the Nazi plague. Nazis have no place in this country and are an enemy to everything we stand for. There is Zero reason we should allow them any space to speak or live with us.

2 more...
2 more...

Sure the Nazis get 1st and 4th but BLM gets a police riot. If we didn't have those rights, they don't have those rights. There's no double standard here.

2 more...
2 more...