North King
blech
- Joined
- Jan 2, 2004
- Messages
- 18,165
Your post makes no sense whatsoever. If Bush should not be muzzled, then there goes your argument for muzzling protesters. You can't have it both ways.
You read my post wrong.
Nothing gives Bush any special right to be heard. Nor do the protesters have any special right to be heard.
It's called "Freedom of Speech".
Any anti-Bush protester can say "I hate Bush" anywhere he likes. Why do you think those protesters try to hold their gatherings close to George Bush's gatherings? Because they're trying specifically to shut him up.
George Bush has the right to speak without being muzzled. And a protest is a muzzle. It's an attempt to drown out the other guy.
My position: You have the right to say what you want. You don't have the right to make the President, or anyone else, listen.
Can I assemble a protest on the Senate floor? Can we have a Fourth of July fireworks show inside an airport terminal? Of course not - no right is absolute, and the right to assemble to protest doesn't mean you can protest anywhere you like.I would have thought the freedom of assembly, and the fact that the representatives must listen to his constitutients, would account for that.
Can I assemble a protest on the Senate floor? Can we have a Fourth of July fireworks show inside an airport terminal? Of course not - no right is absolute, and the right to assemble to protest doesn't mean you can protest anywhere you like.
Additionally, democracy is a PUBLIC endeavor that requires people to communicate ideas with each other. Denying protesters the right to attend a speech is harmful to our democracy, because it denies the other attendees other points of view (and it denies the speaker the ability to see that there are people that disagree) -- this cuts part of the free flow of information that is vital to a functioning democracy. It's especially invalid when a speech is open to the public. As long as the protesters are not overly loud or belligerent, then they pose no disruption to a speech. However, I certainly see nothing wrong with protesters chanting whatever they want when other people are applauding.
-Drachasor
But they dont have a right to disrupt it. If you think the two are the same, your're wrong.
You're so cute when you pwn Mobby, Genny!Wearing an anti-Bush T-shirt when youre just their minding your own business is disruptive? Or even holding a book that criticizes the Bush administration and not reading it outloud disruptive?
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I agree with your point that the executive shouldn't have the powers or even abuse the powers that legislative have to designate areas and time to assembly. But I'm much more interested in the section that's quoted above. It is definitely a poignant argument, but regarding the claim that people need to hear other points of view at a rally or speech.. is that the official ruling and law, or just how you feel it should be? If it's the latter, I think an American version of democracy, rule by the people, and the First Amendment would still run just fine without the great potential of disrupting everyone's right to an unfettered assembly for the purpose of addressing specific politics, religion, or whatever by having two hostile assemblies in the same time and place. How people are "informed" is irrelevant, it's about their rights and their right to address things without being shut down by belligerent or nonbelligerent naysayers. So yeah, allowing a mini-protest to occur in the middle of someone else's assembly is a problem.