Jew-haters love misguided academics who lend them incidental support. They crave that kind of legitmisation.
A lot of them might not be Jew-haters if their concerns were treated as legitimate.
Jew-haters love misguided academics who lend them incidental support. They crave that kind of legitmisation.
Fuck off.
As James R has said, holocaust denial is part of a package. It's advocates aren't interested in truth or open debate.
Indifference, perhaps due to a lack of familiarity. Can you explain to me what the fuss is all about?
As James R has said, holocaust denial is part of a package. It's advocates aren't interested in truth or open debate but in minimising Nazi atrocities using lies, misrepresentation of history and any other tool at their disposal in order to gain legitimacy and popular support for their anti-democratic agenda. They want to use democratic processes in order to usurp them, exactly as they've done before. So the burning question is: should we allow them to do that once more?
I disagree with that. I don't believe that every person who questions the holocaust is automatically a Jew hater. That's not a fair assumption to make.
Since the holocaust is a fact, then why not encourage these so called deniers into an open debate and silence them once and for all, instead of taking away their freedom of expression? Afterall, fact is fact.
Jew-haters love misguided academics who lend them incidental support. They crave that kind of legitmisation.
What about those who advocate socialism, while minimizing the attrocities commited by Castro, Mao and Stalin? Why is Hitler such a monster when Mao and Stalin have killed more of their own people than Hitler ever did?
It's not a valid point. Holocaust denialism always has a political agenda. The facts are very simple. There was a holocaust. Denying it makes you suspicious.This is a very valid point, and one that often gets overlooked.
Another good point---if there is so much evidnece for the holocaust, then why is it even an issue? I find crackpots all the time who doubt the validity of GR, despite almost a century of experimental evidence to the contrary.
Socialism has nothing to do with Stalin, castro or Moa. Nobody denies the atrocities commited by these gentlemen.
It's not a valid point. Holocaust denialism always has a political agenda. The facts are very simple. There was a holocaust. Denying it makes you suspicious.
Denying it makes you suspicious.
The confusing thing about stalin was that he was rather indifferent to who he was killing. His own family or jews. It was all the same to him. As long as the killing kept him in control. For the nazis the genocide was purely a political ideology. They were targetting specific groups; homosexuals, mentally handicapped, gypsies, jews, slavic people.
Holocaust denial is a political statement pur sang. Denial of the genocide caused by Stalin can be interpreted in many ways.
Not being able to see the issue says enough about you.
I think it is a fair assumption to make - since most of them are. However, those with a genuine interest are free to prove otherwise. There are no laws against 'questioning' the Holocaust. It's a valid research topic. This thread is about something else.I disagree with that. I don't believe that every person who questions the holocaust is automatically a Jew hater. That's not a fair assumption to make.
I'd say he's misguided, has poor judgement and has perhaps underestimated the strength of popular opinion on the subject. As a university lecturer he surely has the sense to realise that there would be a backlash? That every action has consequences? He needs to take personal responsibility for his decision to attend such a controversial event. I understand from what I read that many of his students have problems with him, and wonder why that is. Maybe you can enlighten me?For example, there is a professor by the name of Shiraz Dossa who teaches at a well known university in Canada. Although he has no history in denying the holocaust, and has documented many times that he believes in it, he attended the recent conference in Iran out of his own curiosity. Before the man even returned to his country, the media in Canada was already making a giant deal about it by calling him a "nazi" and suggesting that he be expelled from his job. On what grounds is this type of vilification justified? I personally think that its absurd. This type of radical treatment in itself probably causes a lot of hate because people feel they are oppressed of some very basic human rights.
Because there's nothing to debate. No serious researcher is in a position to doubt any of the basic facts of the Holocaust because the genocide was uniquely well-documented as it occurred. Holocaust deniers - or 'revisionists' as they prefer to call themselves - therefore haven't got a leg to stand on. All of the questions they've raised have been refuted by the available evidence time and time again. For example, the Prussian Blue debate. And yet still they continue to raise the same old questions. Which makes one wonder whether their interest is purely academic or something else entirely. I'm all for freedom of expression but against giving a platform to people who consistently lie and misrepresent the truth in order to generate discontent and hatred against particular social groups. The Holocaust denial laws are an extension of the laws against hate speech. Understand them for what they are; understand that there is no academic debate worthy of the name, and that the only ones questioning the facts are those with dubious political agendas... and the laws make perfect sense.The fact that these laws exist definitely make a lot of people curious. Many might ask themselves why this issue deserves special attention and policing over other commonly known facts. Why the vehement effort to silence all critics? Is there a possibility that they don't want certain information coming out that could harm their cause?
Since the holocaust is a fact, then why not encourage these so called deniers into an open debate and silence them once and for all, instead of taking away their freedom of expression? Afterall, fact is fact.
This brings into play the question of national sovereignty. America is free to make it's own laws to protect the rights of it's citizens. Britain similarly. Now let's take a look at the countries where Holocaust denial laws exist:The point I was making is that, in America at least, some people put the flag on a pedestal---their reasoning is that the flag is a symbol of what America stands for, and because thousands have died for that, the flag should deserve certain protections. Twice we have tried to pass federal laws protecting the flag from desecration (flag burning), and twice the supreme court has stricken the laws down, based on free speech.
The point that the supreme court made was that, you may not agree with what is being said, and it may be horribly offensive to you and a lot of other people, but this doesn't mean that you don't have a right to say it.
Advocates of socialism generally don't go around persecuting minority groups unlike their right-wing counterparts. Far-left socialist parties aren't a threat to the political mainstream or the public at large. They're very much in a minority and their activities can pretty much be disregarded. What they do doesn't have any noticeable impact on the public consciousness. Very few of them would consider themselves 'Maoists' or 'Stalinists'. The ones who do are generally considered cranks even by their close political stable-mates.What about those who advocate socialism, while minimizing the attrocities commited by Castro, Mao and Stalin? Why is Hitler such a monster when Mao and Stalin have killed more of their own people than Hitler ever did?
I think I've already covered this. I only want to add that doubting Einstein doesn't have the social consequences that doubting the Holocaust does. Society has plenty of room for harmless cranks, but not those intent on spreading fear and hatred of minority populations.If there is so much evidnece for the holocaust, then why is it even an issue? I find crackpots all the time who doubt the validity of GR, despite almost a century of experimental evidence to the contrary.
You can be jailed for perjury.Hm... I have a doubt here. Is it legal to lie? (okay, ironically lawyers are the worst (best?) liars; they don't admit it though). I mean- if you lie, and admit in court that you spoke that statement (either while holding that it's true, or saying that it was a deliberate lie), can you be punished? I'm not talking about cases where you're responsible to a great deal (like if a doctor lied to his patient or anything).
And incidentally, what if you insist that it's true, even if it's something that's obviously not? For example if you said "1+1=3", and admitted in court that you said that, and still hold that it's true? Can you be punished for "lying"? What if it's a case where your statement resulted in a lot of bad things? Like if you said that taking an overdose of such and such a drug (you're not selling it or advertising it for profit or anything) would bring immortality, and as silly as it sounds, some people did believe you and did that and died. And you admit in court that you said that. Can the court punsh you for that? What if you say that you believe in it (but for perfectly understandable reasons, you don't wish immortality, so you're not taking it).
You'll probably be dismissed as a bit of a crank, until your converts actually start dispatching people. At that point you'll probably be in deep shit.And how about questions of faith? Is it okay to try and convert people to a faith that says human sacrifices should be made? You haven't actually done any, but you go around telling people this. Can you be punished for this?
So the question is, how can one reconcile freedom of expression with laws which explicitly prohibit expression of opinion?
Look it is great to have an opinion, however when something is known to be a fact, and the Halocaust is a fact, you're not allowed one any more. Opinions are for things you can't be sure of, believe me you can be damned certain the Halocaust happened.
At what point does it become ok to deny someone their freedom of speech based on pain and hatred?
To silence Holocaust deniers is to get rid of Free Speech.
Even Communists should not be out right silenced. If one cannot deal with them on a rational level, one must suffer for one's incompetancies.
Holocaust denial is illegal because they can use the same laws and attitude to silence people who have evidence that points to guilt on the part of other parties besides those named in the official stories.
the west? i thought we was talking about the EU.
Holocaust denial only serves those who are seeking to incite hatred.
spuriousmonkey said:These people can shove theirfree speechfascist motives up their arse.
As I have said on the other threads, the big problem with outlawing beliefs or opinions is that outlawing something is not the same thing as making it cease to exist. If you make Holocaust denial or any of the trappings of Nazism or antisemitism illegal, all you do is make the people who hold those beliefs and opinions go into hiding. They never have a dialog with us; they just keep talking to each other. At some point the president of some backwater country like Iran will invite them all over to have a festival in a place where the rest of us don't have access, and they'll start to feel like they've got legitimacy.
You want your cockroaches out in the open where you can keep track of them. You do not want them sneaking around under the linoleum.
Or, to quote Louis Brandeis again: "The best disinfectant is sunshine."
Socialists ought to be killed, not silenced.![]()
you are part of this SF community...you are socializing with people here...you are a socialist...
that means...you want to be killed.
The problem is that Holocaust denial is part of a package that seeks to incite hatred of Jews and other groups and to legitimise their persecution.
Let's put it this way, James. As long as you dismiss all information that you don't want to believe as coming from "conspiracy" sights, you are either dishonest, willfully blind, stupid, malicious, or some combination of those negative traits, so I don't take you seriously at all.
Indifference, perhaps due to a lack of familiarity. Can you explain to me what the fuss is all about?
Jew-haters love misguided academics who lend them incidental support. They crave that kind of legitmisation.
Their arguments have been refuted many times.
Sort of like affirmative action.
Sort of retroactive admission of guilt.
The law is there because people who find holocaust denial appealing are the worst scum you can possibly find, in the league with people like milosevic.
Sort of retroactive admission of guilt.
I don't think that "Germany" was responsible for the Holocaust---just a regime that was in power 60 years ago.