- Joined
- Jun 15, 2018
- Messages
- 94
@shipmeadow
I don't know which Germany you've been visiting, but they're keenly aware of WWII and will be one of the first to remind you of its horrors.
You will indeed find out that they're (rightly) not very tolerant of right-wing extremism but this is exactly because they're so keenly aware of what that brings; and not, as you mistakenly seem to interpret it as, because they're trying to cover up that past and hoping everyone will just forget what happened.
Criticising someone's idea or actions is not censoring or disrupting them, it's criticizing them. Freedom of speech does not make you exempt from criticism, and if your idea cannot hold up to criticism it's probably not worth much. You can hold as many terrible opinions
as you want, but you don't get to cry "freedom of speech!" and run away when someone calls you out on your bullshit.
Also, all criticism of ideas or actions hopes to change them, that's what criticism is for.
Now there are two possible reasons as to why the name was changed:
[ol]
[li]They figured that yeah, on second thought, casual out-of-context references to war crimes is a pretty bad look[/li]
[li]They think it's nonsense, but changed it anyway to keep their customers happy[/li]
[/ol]
Now in case of 1) that's criticism doing it's job: someone does or says something => issue is pointed out => idea or actions get adjusted. No censorship there, just someone changing someone's mind. In case of 2) that's appealing to the largest common denominator, i.e. capitalism; still not censorship.
Either way, they clearly did not feel very strongly about it; if they did then they would have bothered to defend their idea or, failing that, stuck to their own opinion anyway. No-one forced them to change their work against their will; it was simply criticized and they, for whatever reason, chose to change it themselves. No liberties were encroached upon, and in fact this is just the market of ideas in action. It's a market in action anyway.
It certainly doesn't give one any confidence there was some important point they wanted to make by choosing that name, or that anything of value was lost by changing it.
So you want Japs to stop sweeping things under the rug by following Germany's example of never mentioning anything about Nazis ever? Germans can't even look at a swastika without Merkel's gestapo kicking down their door.
I don't know which Germany you've been visiting, but they're keenly aware of WWII and will be one of the first to remind you of its horrors.
You will indeed find out that they're (rightly) not very tolerant of right-wing extremism but this is exactly because they're so keenly aware of what that brings; and not, as you mistakenly seem to interpret it as, because they're trying to cover up that past and hoping everyone will just forget what happened.
Censorship is used in modern context to mean impeding the free exchange of ideas.
Criticising someone's idea or actions is not censoring or disrupting them, it's criticizing them. Freedom of speech does not make you exempt from criticism, and if your idea cannot hold up to criticism it's probably not worth much. You can hold as many terrible opinions
as you want, but you don't get to cry "freedom of speech!" and run away when someone calls you out on your bullshit.
Also, all criticism of ideas or actions hopes to change them, that's what criticism is for.
Now there are two possible reasons as to why the name was changed:
[ol]
[li]They figured that yeah, on second thought, casual out-of-context references to war crimes is a pretty bad look[/li]
[li]They think it's nonsense, but changed it anyway to keep their customers happy[/li]
[/ol]
Now in case of 1) that's criticism doing it's job: someone does or says something => issue is pointed out => idea or actions get adjusted. No censorship there, just someone changing someone's mind. In case of 2) that's appealing to the largest common denominator, i.e. capitalism; still not censorship.
Either way, they clearly did not feel very strongly about it; if they did then they would have bothered to defend their idea or, failing that, stuck to their own opinion anyway. No-one forced them to change their work against their will; it was simply criticized and they, for whatever reason, chose to change it themselves. No liberties were encroached upon, and in fact this is just the market of ideas in action. It's a market in action anyway.
It certainly doesn't give one any confidence there was some important point they wanted to make by choosing that name, or that anything of value was lost by changing it.