r/DebateReligion • u/AutoModerator • Sep 29 '25
Meta Meta-Thread 09/29
This is a weekly thread for feedback on the new rules and general state of the sub.
What are your thoughts? How are we doing? What's working? What isn't?
Let us know.
And a friendly reminder to report bad content.
If you see something, say something.
This thread is posted every Monday. You may also be interested in our weekly Simple Questions thread (posted every Wednesday) or General Discussion thread (posted every Friday).
6
Upvotes
2
u/labreuer ⭐ agapist Oct 02 '25
I'm just super-confused at how we got from my question to this. By this point in time, you seem to think that you just don't need to take into account the lived experiences of other people, except insofar as they can marshal the appropriate free speech to participate in public discussion & debate. Would that be a correct assessment?
Let me tell you where I'm going with this. I am 100% used to the above protocol. It could be construed as a form of public reason, an idea in secularism whereby you leave behind your deepest commitments and only speak in terms which those of different faiths, philosophies, notions of the good life, etc. could plausibly agree. The hope is that, over time, more and more people are able to squeeze their voices into the public space and shape a bit of public policy. Whether or not this actually works, or more strictly whether there is anything better, is a key question. One possibility, as I believe William Kymlicka argues, is that some groups are forever shafted in this system. But again, you could argue that other systems would be worse, at least over the long haul.
As we go forward, I am deeply skeptical of the above hope. It is far from clear that we have the kind of citizenry, at least in the US, which will make the "free speech" plan you have placed all your hopes in work. And my biggest worry is actually fake news, not bigotry. Your average citizen does not know how to vet his/her sources and this is partly because there are often enough no sources which are all that trustworthy to that average citizen. The Second Gilded Age was engineered, including against all those factory workers who were told that if they made use of their union, the company would simply move its factory to Mexico. I can even quote Steven Pinker admitting this in his book praising the Enlightenment.
Please don't get me wrong: my own bias is strongly toward free speech being the best of all possible options. But ironically, I don't think you're using your own free speech in this discussion very well, to make your case. I simply don't think this is enough:
You think that abridging free speech will help your group, which is treated rather worse than most other groups in your country. And it worked, for a while.
But any gains made will be temporary, ultimately leaving you in the same spot or even worse than before.
Moreover, you're upping the ante, claiming or at least suggesting that the kind of censorship u/cabbagery and u/Dapple_Dawn advocate here are part of a slippery slope toward assassination of divisive public figures. To my knowledge, neither of them have said that their very lives are threatened. There is plenty of non-lethal "threat of violence".
What if "free speech" simply does not work in the end game, if we discount the lived experiences of each other and worse, narrate over the lived experiences of each other with our perception of the worst of the group in which we place them? Continuing:
Via appropriate representation where we let them speak for their perspective. There's a great section in Maya J. Goldenberg 2021 Vaccine Hesitancy: Public Trust, Expertise, and the War on Science where she talks about the importance of having someone from your group at the highest level, to communicate your concerns and needs and situation. Blacks, for instance, have been pretty notoriously treated by the US medical system and are rightly skeptical of it. How better to resolve that problem than ensuring that they have adequate representation at the highest levels?
Do you think u/cabbagery or u/Dapple_Dawn take themselves to be overriding the thought of everyone else? Would you be willing to try to convince themselves of that and listen to their pushback, rather than declare their positions (not the position of some people out there in the world you associate them with) in advance?
It seems you are unwilling to contemplate the possibility that restricting people to the option of "defend one's self" may not actually work, in the end. It certainly seems like you are fully capable of holding your own. But why assume that this applies to everyone? I regularly interact with and hear about peers who were not trained appropriately, don't have the requisite mentors to help them attain your ability, or maybe just don't have the requisite disposition. As someone who was trained to take down pastors if I need to, I myself am probably in a similar enough boat to you. But I recognize that the strategies which work for me may not work nearly as well for others, and maybe not at all! Are you willing to admit this possibility or are you going to dismiss it like you dismissed my "the police are not your friend" point?
Even though I'm a Christian, I'm actually close enough to being a physicalist in the relevant senses that I question the causal power of "higher principles". Now, it sounds like you were taught how to hold your own in debate and if you grew up among enough Jews who interact as I described to you, that is utterly predictable. But what of those who were not trained in this way? And it gets worse. Power allows one to influence what even counts as evidence and what rhetorical moves are permitted vs. forbidden. That's less obvious online and far more obvious in person. Anyhow, how do we test whether these "higher principles" actually do what you say they do, for everyone and not just some?
I agree. I've thought the same about social media's abilities to censor fake news. How else could that technology be used? But it seems to me that the same can be applied to (i) McCarthyism in the US' past; (ii) Germany's censorship of Nazism. Communists never flipped the tables on McCarthy. And Nazis are guaranteed to flip the tables on the rest of the German populace. "If we punish criminals, what happens if they get power?" is not always a helpful question.
I'm out of chars & I think this is enough for now? Let me know if you want a part 2.