Even if their message leads to the death of people?
Joseph Mercola's antivax messaging must have resulted in the death of many people. Hard to estimate how many, but it could be tens, hundreds, it could be thousands of people.
If you believe that messaging which causes fatalities should be protected under freedom of speech, what would you do in cases such as the Heaven's Gate religious cult, where their crazy leader convinced his religious followers that they should all commit suicide, after which their souls would be picked up by an alien spacecraft hidden behind a passing comet.
Quite a few Heaven's Gate followers killed themselves because of this messaging.
Would you arrest the leaders of Heaven's Gate because of this, or would you allow them to continue to spread their messaging?
I always see Mercola as a crazy religious cult leader. If you look at the beginning of the video posted above, Murky-Cola has the crazy eyes of a cult leader.
Even if their message leads to the death of people. I'm that committed to free speech.
What's the alternative? The government becomes the sole arbitrator of what is and isn't true and decides what people are allowed to say publicly? Ultimately that is the only other choice.
Let me play you a little scenario here:
Let's say that a government agency is funding a type of research that is potentially very dangerous. Unfortunately, an accident occurs, there is a leak, and millions of people worldwide die as a result.
What are the chances that said government ever lets that information see the light of day? If they get to determine what is true and false, would they not be highly inclined to declare stories that the research they were funding caused the deaths as "misinformation", declare that it could not be disseminated publicly, and the average person would never hear this story?
Now surely this is just my fevered imagination run wild and would never occur in the real world ... but it does make you pause to consider the possibilities. Or at least it should.
Hip - I'll tell you what your problem is and why you have a blind spot in this area. Like a lot of smart people, particularly people with STEM backgrounds, at the end of the day you think the world is perfectible. That you could have some wise council of sages that could sit above it all and make wise and intelligent decisions that would lead to the best possible outcome. It's a very alluring idea.
But unfortunately, down here in the real world there are really no wise sages that make selfless decisions with the best interests of the most people in mind. Governments like every other aspect of human life are populated with flawed, often not very bright, error prone people that will put their own interests ahead of everyone else in a heartbeat. Nirvana is not of this world unfortunately.
Given that real world, freedom and liberty are really the only arrangements that I am aware of historically that lead to progress long term. But it is frequently a bloody, messy, unsightly process. I wish things were different but my wishes seem to have little influence over reality.
Edited by Daniel Cooper, 14 August 2023 - 06:53 PM.