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DeadNotSleeping said:
mantlepiecek said:
DeadNotSleeping said:
Every freedom requires limitations and restrictions, otherwise it could and would inevitably be used to violate the individual rights of another. Limitations on speech as they are works quite fine.

How can freedom of speech "violate" another person's rights? There is no way for that to happen. Unless you think someone has a right to hearing selective speech, which they don't.


Harassment, threats, violation of doctor-patient confidentiality, breach of contract, slander, in some cases perjury, abetting, the list goes on.  With unrestricted free speech it would be very difficult to enforce academic fraud policies, protect the public from blatantly false advertising, that sort of thing.  Being able to say whatever the Hell you want whenever you want has serious legal ramifications that play heavily against your favor and invariably violate your rights.  Rather than leave the entire populace open to such abuses, restrictions on speech actually protect our rights.  Every freedom and right has limitations and restrictions for this very reason.

Too much sense?

First of all, most of the examples you listed don't work against freedom of speech. By freedom of speech I meant the ability to voice yourself. When you lie about something serious, you aren't doing something wrong by lying, but you are doing something wrong by misleading. There is a difference here. You are still allowed to lie. Which is why I asked what I did in the OP.

Threats are once again, illegal because of your intention, not because of what you are saying.

Harassment through speech? How can one measure that?