[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]
Re: Need a new word for non-violent-censorship
> I often have the same difficulty when speaking with
> Objectivists. They define "censorship" as "silencing the
> speaker by force", which is a fine and useful definition, but
> suppose we want to talk about a similar phenomenon which does
> not involve force? For example, the magnate who owns all the
> newspapers, television stations, bookstores and movie theatres
> in a small town decides that never again will homosexuality be
> publically mentioned in any of these venues. Force? No.
> "Censorship"? Not by _that_ definition, but what _is_ it?
"Monopoly", or editorial policy and it is solved by buying a press of
some kind, from a letter press to a photocopier, and printing all the news
he does, and doesn't.
> We need a new word, or else we have to continue using
No, we just need to use the words we have properly.
> "censorship" to mean both of those things. I sometimes use
> "violent-censorship" and "non-violent-censorship" in
> conversation.
"Violent-censorship" is when you [shoot beat kill] the speaker, "non-
violent" is when you imprison, or consficate the means of speech/replication of
speach, or otherwise "silence" without physcial force. Then you have censorship
by intimidation, which is a little harder to qualify. If I threaten to burn
your press if you talk about Crypto, or print Crypto algorythms, is that
censorship? IMO, yes. If you _choose_ not to discuss Crypto because you
understand (or are afraid of) the implications of it, that is NOT censorship,
any more than my refusal to discuss sports because I can't understand the appeal
or because I think that sports are generally a bad thing.
Choice is not censorship, removal of choice is.
Petro, Christopher C.
[email protected] <prefered for any non-list stuff>
[email protected]