Vox Wants Progressives To Support Free Speech for the Wrong Reasons
Eric Levitz argues that the left should take a stand against censorship—for practical rather than principled reasons.

Across the nation, college administrators are cracking down on pro-Palestenian speech. In Texas, police violently broke up peaceful protests, and one college even reportedly told students that they couldn't use the phrases "Israel," "Zionism," or chant in Arabic. At Brandeis University, police shut down a pro-Palestine protest because its president said it had "devolved into the invocation of hate speech."
While progressives have tended to support campus censorship efforts in recent years, an article in Vox by writer Eric Levitz argues that the left should embrace free speech—and that its push to censor speech in the name of inclusion and social justice was misguided.
"Should students concerned with social justice rethink their previous skepticism of free speech norms, for the sake of better protecting radical dissent? I think the answer is yes." wrote Levitz. "There is reason to believe that progressives would be better equipped to resist the present crackdown on pro-Palestinian advocacy had social justice activists not previously popularized an expansive conception of harmful speech."
Levitz's article also argues that rejecting censorship could lead the left to find more allies when their ideas are on the chopping block.
"In a world where right-of-center intellectuals had more cause for believing that their defense of leftists' free expression would be reciprocated," Levitz wrote, "it seems plausible that opposition to the Antisemitism Awareness Act might be a bit more widespread and its prospects for clearing the Senate somewhat dimmer."
While Levitz's piece is refreshing, its support for free speech isn't about adopting a new appreciation for the principles of free expression, regardless of political viewpoint. It's about adopting the best policies to protect left-wing ideas.
Save several paragraphs reminding progressives that debate is necessary for finding the truth and that "the more insulated any ideological orthodoxy is from critique, the more vulnerable it will be to persistent errors," Levitz's argument is pragmatic in nature. He spends most of the piece—correctly—arguing that if progressives had been willing to take a stand against censorship of right-wing beliefs, the current norms allowing for the censorship of pro-Palestine activists would not have been set in place.
However, if your reason to defend speech is purely practical and self-interested, it becomes much easier to indulge in exceptions to your free speech principles. Surely, allowing the censorship of the most offensive, unproductive viewpoints couldn't be used to justify the suppression of your own, much better, ideas, right?
Levitz even hints at such exceptions. "If adopting a permissive attitude toward campus speech entailed significant costs to progressive causes, then doing so might be unwise," he wrote, later adding, "Defending free speech and standing up for the disempowered may sometimes be competing objectives."
When your defense of free speech comes from a core, universal principle, calls for censorship are unthinkable. This is why, for example, it's so frustrating to see Levitz group the First Amendment nonprofit the Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression (FIRE) with a long list of "conservatives" who have spoken out against censorship of pro-Palestinian activism.
FIRE—and everyone else smeared as "conservative" for standing up against censorship—doesn't begrudgingly defend left-wing speech so that right-wing speech will stay protected—they're a nonpartisan organization that defends First Amendment rights because they believe fiercely in the importance of free speech.
Perhaps the biggest flaw is that Levitz's piece still doesn't make the core realization that there can be true, principled, defenders of free speech—those who truly think a nation with more ideas and more voices, even offensive ones, is better than one with fewer. Instead, he sees speech protections as a kind of truce, a decision from both the left and right to leave each other alone so they can both best further their political goals.
We would have a better, more functional world if more people—left or right—were willing to passionately defend the free speech rights of those with whom they disagree. However, getting to that world requires that people let go of the idea that censorship is ever a good idea, not merely that it's impractical.
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"students concerned with social justice rethink their previous skepticism of free speech norms..."
Retarded progressives push for radically illiberal policies they assume no one will ever use against them.
How...standard
It’s funny because it’s true.
“they assume no one will ever use against them”
Indeed +10000000.
Just like how they think endless ‘armed-theft’ is suppose to lift those in poverty until they realize their ‘armed-theft’ is what is keeping everyone in poverty. Playing the zero-sum resources game.
Perhaps the biggest flaw is that Levitz’s piece still doesn’t make the core realization that there can be true, principled, defenders of free speech—those who truly think a nation with more ideas and more voices, even offensive ones, is better than one with fewer.
Show me one of those principled defenders, and I’ll show you someone guaranteed to be attacked for supporting and failing to condemn whatever it is the attacker hates. Tolerant people don’t tolerate intolerance. No, they show their tolerance by attacking people they view as intolerant.
Liberating tolerance, then, would mean intolerance against movements from the Right and toleration of movements from the Left. As to the scope of this tolerance and intolerance: ... it would extend to the stage of action as well as ofdiscussion and propaganda, of deed as well as of word...The whole post-fascist period is one of clear and present danger. Consequently, true pacification requires the withdrawal of tolerance before the deed, at the stage of communication in word, print, and picture. Such extreme suspension of the right of free speech and free assembly is indeed justified only if the whole of society is in extreme danger. I maintain that our society is in such an emergency situation, and that it has become the normal state of affairs.--Herbert Marcuse
Any pretensions towards free speech by these people will be dropped the second they can use it to silence their opposition. They literally believe that anything they do is justified if it advances their political agenda. Marcuse in particular and the critical theory marxists of academia that came in his wake are quite open about this. They might couch it in $10 words, but it's not opaque unless they get direct resistance, after which they furiously attempt to deflect or play dumb.
Marcuse in particular and the critical theory marxists of academia that came in his wake are quite open about this.
Maybe marxists wrote it down, but I’ve seent that play used by passionate partisans of all political persuasions. Especially over the last decade or so.
And it happened when they realized the left's actual intentions.
They did it first...
It's not who starts the fight, it's who ends it.
No matter how much of your liberty you have to sacrifice if it means infringing on theirs.
When they're practicing the ethic of "power emanates from the barrel of a gun," as their thought leader said, not resisting them is suicide.
Now taking away the rights of others is resisting. Well who except a bad person will have a problem with resisting.
That depends. How will you end it?
That depends. What will get the left to back off?
Levitz is arguing to do...the EXACT thing the ACLU did.
Defend free speech...until you're in control.
I will not expend a moment of time defending the free speech or any rights of people who would happily oppress my rights. Fuck the lot of them.
At least you're honest about abandoning the moral high ground.
It is not abandoning the high ground. You confuse exercising rights with abusing rights.
Abusing your 1A right to eliminate my 2A rights is a perfect example.
That's now how I interpreted his comment.
Interpret it how you wish.
If you come out in favor of silencing me --- why would I have the slightest concern if your rights are stuffed?
Some people are allies. Some are foes. Treat allies like allies. Treat foes like foes.
People who demanded you not attend funerals, church, etc due to COVID can fuck the hell right off and any suppression of their rights that occur is simply karma getting them. I will not bemoan how unfair it is.
Seems a bit shortsighted. You should be concerned because if their rights are not respected, then neither are yours. Your stance here is not really any different from the people who don't care if Jan 6 people are mistreated because they hate Trump. If you don't care about the consistent protection of rights, then you don't really care about rights at all.
It's only short sided if the US doesn't disintegrate.
Afterwards, people will go their separate ways, and issues like these diminish.
I think you are confusing abusing your rights vs exercising them. If you are using your press credentials to convince a portion of the population to disarm another portion of the population, you should be silenced. Burnt to the ground if that's what it takes.
Abuse vs. exercise.
So the only opinions that are valid are yours and everyone else needs to shut the fuck up...
So, why should I back your cause over the people you think are your opponents? Seems to me both sides here are horrible people and the best thing to hope for is you all kill each other off and leave the sane people to fix the mess you all leave behind.
Don't try to enslave me and I won't try to kill you. Simple.
FYI - Positive rights are not a "cause".
Funding and installing speed bumps around the elementary school is a "cause".
If you come out in favor of silencing me — why would I have the slightest concern if your rights are stuffed?
Me today, you tomorrow.
If you'd silence me regardless, you losing your rights now is not a concern for me.
I've seen enough of a demand to pass laws that the people demanding their passage feel free to ignore.
How does one abuse a right? For something to be a "right" the exercise thereof must not interfere with another's rights.
For instance you have a right to own and carry weaponry. That act does not infringe on another's rights. There is no abuse of that right since the right by its nature does not injure anyone. If you use your weapon to shoot a person who is peacefully walking along that isn't abusing the right to own and carry a weapon.
Shooting someone is a crime which by its nature requires a victim who has been injured or suffered a loss by the action of another. Your rights to own and carry weapons have nothing to do with the crime that was committed.
So how is a person's right to speak freely, publish their ideas and/or practice a religion interfear with your ownership and carrying of weapons?
What crime of speaking, printing or worshiping have they committed against you?
What crime of speaking, printing or worshiping have they committed against you?
Withdrawing that right when it's convenient for their side. That plain enough?
Well, how totally partisan of you. Way to be no better than those you see as opposition.
It's an in-kind contribution. The moral high ground doesn't mean shit in reality.
When you don’t believe in freedom and tolerance, everything becomes a tool – or a weapon – to promote your beliefs and impose them on everyone. When you DO believe in freedom and tolerance, everything becomes a tool – or a weapon – to prevent tyranny, despotism and a never-ending desperate struggle for power. That is not just a matter of principle. Liberty is also a pragmatic approach to empowering the powerless, poor and marginalized and it works much better than Levitz’s cynical approach to achieve even his own stated goals for progressivism.
But they DO believe in tolerance--they believe that all left wing movements must be tolerated. That they also believe that all right-wing movements must be intolerated is not a contradiction in their mind. See the Marcuse quotes above. The double standard is necessary to bring about the communist utopia.
"THIS IS WHAT MARXISTS ACTUALLY BELIEVE"
It’s the Jim Jones socialist utopia movement on a much larger scale. warriors of utopian grandeur.
they believe that all left wing movements must be tolerated.
Only until it becomes expedient to turn on them. The Soviets and Nazis were collaborators in the plunder of eastern Europe, who had plans to attack each other. Hitler just happened to beat Stalin to the punch.
-jcr
Interesting that the end of the political spectrum that believes that all human interaction is based on power-dynamics would think this way. It think you're on to something.
Not clear to me, Rick, what that was addressing or who might believe that all human interaction is based on power dynamics, but my point is that libertarians do not believe in or attempt to impose our beliefs on everyone. Liberty depends on the vast majority of people already realizing and believing that tolerating people with whom you disagree in exchange for their tolerating you benefits both of you, and that your freedom not only depends on others allowing your freedom, but that they allow your freedom in exchange for your allowing their freedom.
It was not aimed at you, it was aimed at the end of the political spectrum that believes that all human interaction is based on power dynamics. I was merely making a snarky comment about this end of the political spectrum that... the Libertarian Publication *checks notes* of Record that at best, either downplayed (it's just like, college kids, man) or at worst, straight up aligned itself with.
I was merely being sarcastic about the fact that your comment seemed to be dancing around the edges of that as a meta concept.
Well Said. The USA is NOT a limitless 'democracy'; the very foundation of which [WE] mob RULES! with Gov-Guns. Champion 'democracy' is exactly how the power struggles began. The USA is a *Constitutional* Republic that limits 'democracy' precisely so Gov-Gun battles don't start.
TJJ2000 – Except that it no longer DOES limit democracy either in principle or in practice. One group uses its majority of the moment to impose just a little of their beliefs on everyone. Then another group uses its majority of the moment to impose some of theirs on everyone … and then more and more over time. Soon no one feels that they have any obligation to respect the others and it becomes a struggle for control over government power – which is where we are now.
^Well said +1000000000000.
Electing Al'Capone's and Hitler-wanna-be's (Supreme Law - lawless) politicians is entirely responsible for every division and every failing of the USA. There cannot be a USA without an honored definition of what the USA is.
Came here to say something much like this. The left is just dumb. There's no chance they would suddenly realize that hey, principled defense of free speech is good for everyone including us! It will always be a pendulum that dumbly swings whenever leftwing ideas are the ones being censored. And to be fair, there's plenty of that mentality on the right, too, though there it's a lot less explicable by their stated ideas.
According to Jordan Peterson, there are three qualities or risk factors strongly associated with leftist activism:
1. Being female
2. Low verbal intelligence
3. The “Dark Triad” personality type—Narcissism, Machiavellianism, and Psychopathy
Short blue hair, obese, and poor emotional control can overlap those.
Don't forget the freak show displays of tats and piercings.
-jcr
The blue hair is a symptom rather than a cause. Obesity—maybe causative, maybe a symptom. The poor emotional control is part of the Dark Triad complex.
The left is just dumb.
The mob is dumb. Some of their leaders aren't dumb, they're evil.
-jcr
True, Trump isn't dumb.
The right reason, of course, is FAFSA or whatever I've been trying to ignore.
Of course the quotation is sarcastic. Vox does NOT want progressives to support free speech. Vox wants progressives to stop shooting themselves in the foot by adopting the appearance of supporting free speech as a tactic.
Basically, he's admitting that tolerance and free speech isn't a principle, it's a tactic. He doesn't actually care about it, he cares about how he can use this idea to advance his interests.
Much better if he said that it was worth adopting this as a core principle and then incorporating it into whatever ideas and positions you're pushing for. But if you're just trying to score points, it's just another page in your playbook and you're not loyal to it as an idea.
Basically, he’s admitting that tolerance and free speech isn’t a principle, it’s a tactic. He doesn’t actually care about it, he cares about how he can use this idea to advance his interests.
Yep, and it's one to be abandoned whenever it isn't convenient anymore or hurts their political enemies.
It's why they aren't really equipped to deal with the right doing the same thing to them, and not giving a fuck about it like them, either.
That's kinda why there's libertarianism. The right (as the comments above ably demonstrate) also does not believe in free speech as a principle. The practical difference between their positions on this issue is that the right has never claimed to champion free speech or tolerance.
"the right has never claimed to champion free speech or tolerance"
BS.
GOP platform pg 9
"Democrats in Congress have also endorsed an anti-constitutional agenda of their own. Forty-eight Democratic senators, for instance, voted to amend the Bill of Rights to give government officials control over political speech. Democrats in Congress have likewise proposed bills that would limit religious liberty, undermine property rights, and eviscerate the Second Amendment."
"In a free society, the primary role of government is to protect the God-given, inalienable rights of its citizens. These constitutional rights are not negotiable for any American. We affirm that all legislation, regulation, and official actions must conform to the Constitution's original meaning as understood at the time the language was adopted."
The practical difference between their positions on this issue is that the right has never claimed to champion free speech or tolerance.
While the left's support of free speech has always been entirely situational. "It's okay when we do it" has always been their core principle.
All right, I'm going to take a different stand on all this. Emma Camp, you haven't got a clue what "principled" means.
First, the Voxer:
In other words, he's arguing that free speech has the practical aspect of getting more people to listen to each other. At least sorta. Or in other other words, he's arguing for a weak freedom of speech principle that more discussion is better, in a way.
Then the Reasoner:
In other words, she's arguing the same thing, that the principle at stake is freedom of speech.
Emma dear, you're wrong. The principle at stake is freedom, period. Self-ownership, maybe you've heard of it. Everybody has the freedom to use their mouth. Everybody has the freedom to use their ears.
In other word, freedom.
And rather than edit that and have to put all those blockquote tags back in the right places, I'll add here that freedom of speech is not a principle. It is a right guaranteed by the First Amendment, but it is derived from self-ownership, which can be thought of as either a principle itself, or derived from the self-evident right to control property as shown by us controlling our own body.
Well fisked. Good job.
Well, that misses the point that there is no such thing as an absolute Constitutional right. Free speech is a principle AND a Constitutional right. The problem creeps in when people start to wonder just what the limitations are on a particular right. Are convicted criminals allowed to maintain their right to keep and bear arms while serving time in prison?
Actually reading the 1st Amendment clears that up.
“Congress shall make no law” … “or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the government for a redress of grievances.”
Government doesn’t grant any rights. They are prohibited from destroying particular inherent rights (natural rights) as well as prohibited from legislating anything outside of the job description (enumerated powers).
A LIMITED government = a FREE society.
While progressives have tended to support campus censorship efforts in recent years,
LOL. Is this a “I know for a fact they didn’t do it until recently.” statement or a “For all I know they didn’t do it until recently.” statement? Maybe you mean "Since the Lincoln Administration... recently"?
Liberals have always supported free speech. Progressives are not liberals. It wasn't until progressives took over academia and media and every HR department everywhere that the free speech was seen as the Grand Enemy to be Defeated. Fuck progressives.
Traditional liberals may have been a bit too free with the taxpayer purse, okay way too liberal with other peoples' money, but they were always in the corner of the First Amendment, if not always be deed at least in word.
If you haven't noticed, traditional liberals are pretty much gone. They're not in the Democrat Party, they're not on the left side of the spectrum. They have been driven underground and out of sight. Thsi is not a good thing, as they have been replaced by the worst sort of Left wing authoritarian.
Progressives and conservatives are properly compared to each other. Also liberals and conservatives are properly compared to each other, but only if you use reasonable definitions for comparison purposes. Conservatives tend to want to avoid change except when absolutely necessary or for clearly good reasons. Progressives tend to promote change towards a vision of what they feel society and the world should look like. Liberals trust that most evolutions will tend towards the common good and want to allow it without particularly pushing specific changes or with a particular vision of the goal.
use reasonable definitions for comparison purposes
Yeah, re-reading later, it's still not clear to me whether "campus censorship efforts" refers to "student protesters/activists chasing off other disagreeable students" or "college administrators cracking down on student activists".
I will say the whole "liberals vs. progressives" argument doesn't hold the least bit of water because whether you consider Universities a place to drink beer with your frat bros. or learn an actual skill or trade, rather than just a place to shriek at people and burn bras, the 'conservative' as "Show up to class, learn something objective, useful, or objectively useful, then go out for beers afterwards." has been the named enemy of both the liberal and the progressive free speech activists for a long time.
Correction. Liberals have always supported self-projection. They destroy free speech all the while calling it 'protecting free speech'.
And boy do they do that endlessly, consistently and compulsively. If they mandate pronouns they're 'protecting free speech'. If they pass legislation to STEAL they call those against it greedy and criminal.
It is Self-Projection of one's own actions onto everyone and anyone else to deflect exactly what they themselves are really doing.
There can be no principled defense of any freedom where there are no principles.
The political left has one and only one principle: might makes right.
"Levitz's argument is pragmatic in nature. He spends most of the piece—correctly—arguing that if progressives had been willing to take a stand against censorship of right-wing beliefs, the current norms allowing for the censorship of pro-Palestine activists would not have been set in place. "
Both Levitz and Ms. Camp take the position that the Palestinian protest campus take overs were speech rather than trespass and disturbing the peace, which should result in arrests if necessary to remove them from the property. The campus protesters weren't censored, only the censored victims of people the Obama administration put into jobs to engage with media firms to censor
There is no equivalence between the campus protesters and the statist censors working in the government, but they both involve liberals engaging in the initiation of force against others. Something conservatives haven't done.
The Obama Administration did what? Ffs, it was actually three years into the Trump Administration when the "social media censorship" allegedly took place. We are now three years into the Biden Administration.
Or are you Donald Trump, confusing Joe Biden with Barrack Obama again?
Lol. “People the Obama administration put into jobs…”
Gee, maybe they were still in these jobs “three years into the trump administration”? Probably wasn’t high on the list of things to deal with until hindsight and the Twitter files exposed it.
Learn to read, idiot.
Indeed +1000000000.
Progressive/Aggressive Gov-Guns against those working 'icky' people is the only 'right' they know. Or more to the point; dehumanizing them so they can justify their 'armed-theft' of their labors. The party of slavery. The ideology of [Na]tional So[zi]al[ism].
It's as plain as day once all the *excuses* are ignored.
Sorry Emma, liberty can only advance through pragmatic means. That's because people don't give a shit about principles. We had sixty full years of principled adherence to the ideals of Free Speech, and it was all gone in just the past few short years. People don't give a shit about principles. Long running liberals who tattoed the First Amendment to their chests are not getting those tattoos surgically removed. The ACLU doesn't even care anymore.
Boaf Sides. We also have conservatives wanting overturn internet free speech, and perfectly happy banning any social media that dares mocks Der Trumpenfuhrer. A the same time they have trashed all the Goldwater/Reagan principles of small government and fiscal restraint. Not even conservatives give a shit about principles.
So we have to use pragmatic means, using pragmatic arguments, to get our free speech back. Because people don't give a shit about principles.
It's easy to cheer for restrictions on the liberty to do or say things you never planned to do or say. It doesn't affect you. Thing is, when the political pendulum swings the other way it's going to fuck you back. It seems obvious to me. Is it not obvious, or do people just not care that they will be harmed in the future as long as they get their licks in now. I don't get it.
“…..perfectly happy banning any social media that dares mock Der trump….”
Lol. Are you retarded?
perfectly happy banning any social media that dares mocks Der Trumpenfuhrer.
Who is doing this? Other than Ticktock I can't think of any social media any conservative has tried to ban.
This guy is going to get death threats, may have his house burned down, just for suggesting that debate can be good and that there is such a thing as "truth".
Either he has liberal values and he needs to find a venue where he no longer has to pander to whatever it is these people are calling themselves now, or he doesn't and he needs to go all in on the rampant idiocy that defines all post-modernist thought (I use the term thought inappropriately). There is no middle ground. They won't have you and we don't want you.
Well this is what happens when chicks get free speech. Amirite?
'Baby Girl, Don't Even Play!': Waffle House Chaos Ensues In Fiery Congressional Catfight
https://www.zerohedge.com/political/waffle-house-chaos-ensues-fiery-house-catfight
"Are your feelings hurt?" replied Greene.
To which ACO exclaimed "Remove her words down."
"Aww," Greene responded.
"Oh girl, baby girl," AOC shot back. "Don't even play."
Following a brief recess, Crockett called a point of order and asked House Oversight Committee Chairman James Comer (R-KY) if Greene's behavior was ok.
"I’m just curious, just to better understand your ruling," said Crockett. "If someone on this committee then starts talking about somebody’s bleach-blond, bad-built, butch body, that would not be engaging in personalities, correct?"
At this point Rep. Anna Paulina Luna (R-FL) jumped into the fray, demanding Crockett's words be removed - to which Crockett exploded into a verbal tirade against Luna, shouting and using profanity.
"Calm down, please calm down," said Luna. "You're out of control!"
When, exactly, did Congress turn into high school?
I seem to remember a string of articles in Reason in the last few years complaining that the left should chill on its anti-free-speech dogma because "it would be used against them".
That's consistently been the tone here, including from Emma. What bullshit criticizing a Vox writer for saying the exact same thing they do while somehow missing that the conditional defense of speech has always been part of Progressivism
Incurable TDS
Scato? Is that you?
Wait - VOX isn't bankrupt yet?
I know, right?
They must have found some big-daddy billionaire to pay the bills like Reason.
Like a grad school journalism major having mommy and daddy or the school pick up the tab.
“While progressives have tended to support campus censorship efforts in recent years, an article in Vox by writer Eric Levitz argues that the left should embrace free speech—and that its push to censor speech in the name of inclusion and social justice was misguided.”
Right now I’ll take it.
We’re right on the cusp of the establishment destroying speech and liberty and need every little bit of help.
Even though their antisemitism is detestable, beggars can’t be choosers.
“FIRE—and everyone else smeared as “conservative” for standing up against censorship”
Conservative isn’t a smear.
It is to Emma and everyone at Reason. I wish they were at least aware of their bias
Conservative isn’t a smear any more than socialist is, provided you’re a conservative or a socialist.
But it is a smear among libertarians (and it should be).
Humorously the Libertarian platform and the Republican platform largely read on a 1-to-1 pointer basis which is one of the reasons the Libertarian party can't get any fresh steam; it's not really any different. And frankly there's just as many LINO'S out there as RINO'S so it also fails to separate itself on that level as well. The party works better as just an adjective to the type of Republican politician.
Leftard BS propaganda tries to sell the idea that ‘conservative’ is all about ‘conservative dress’ but it’s actual party meaning is a ‘conservative’ (i.e. LIMITED) government. Same as Libertarians.
Now how would we look if we resorted to thinking that a principle was correct for any occasion simply because it has been reasoned? Leaders such as Hitler got in their heads that Germany had been losing land, which brought out his fundamental support for expansionism after taking over the government under NAZI revolution.
So, if we reason it, does that make it true?
No. Free speech remains straightforward for those who understand it. But our brand of free speech represents an American culture that was the product of classical liberal progress and by no means is it limited to American culture, although in the spirit of American liberty it surely must relate to a continuity that may be found in American culture.
However, having a brand does not make it exclusively ours; others may accept its rationale without contradicting its spirit.
Its spirit is not absolute. We know that free speech is not a good idea if, say, it would bring an avalanche and kill everyone in the spirit. Although if that's what they want to do as consenting adults, may they dig deeper until they see the light and feel the heat!
So ... Trapped in the avalanche of practicality, why not make room for free speech for practical reasons and help each other out by imploring that each one expound on behalf of what this premature burial in politically-inflated definition has wrought?
Surely it is not unreasonable to invite free speech on one hand and then find a fountain thereof on the other? However, having a practical reason is not necessarily a political statement but perhaps a diplomatic one.
Whilst politics busies itself with bloodying hand & reach alike, practical reasons may be welcoming by compare with political ones.
The crux of the debate over free speech is that some people believe Free Speech is a positive good and a necessity for a stable society, while others think that free speech is a temporary ceasefire to be exploited or abandoned for strategic advantage. And the worst of the second group think the correct behavior in a ceasefire is to use knives.
Vox has put himself in the second group, calling for free speech as a temporary ceasefire because he sees a strategic advantage to his side in doing so.
"We address ourselves, not to their humanity but to their self-love, and never talk to them of our own necessities but of their advantages. Nobody but a beggar chuses to depend chiefly upon the benevolence of his fellow-citizens." - Adam Smith
Wow, what a pile of reasons I should not vote for any Republicans.
And an equal pile of reasons I should not vote for any Democrats.