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Censoring books. There's an app for that.
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You're flipping from one extreme to the other. Just because there is no right to offend does not mean that we should ban anything which might be offensive. It isn't a polarised choice between total freedom of speech or total prohibition.
As writers we can't write anything that we want. Most countries have laws prohibiting some written materials on grounds of libel/ slander, copyright, pornography, race hate and so on. We spend a lot of time and effort nuancing those laws and updating them as morale values change.
I'd call it "shades of grey" if that phrase hadn't been hijacked recently.
Because of that there has never been a de facto right to offend. It doesn't exist. It has never existed. What we have is a set of societal norms which are constantly being updated. In some countries and in some cultures those norms are fairly liberal. In others they aren't.
This app allows authors to use swearing in their books but gives those who don't like swearing to avoid seeing it. That sounds to me like respecting someone else's opinion instead of trying to force my opinion on them.


http://www.theguardian.com/books/2015..."
Hurrah!

It also includes the interesting Section 29JA
In this Part, for the avoidance of doubt, the discussion or criticism of sexual conduct or practices or the urging of persons to refrain from or modify such conduct or practices shall not be taken of itself to be threatening or intended to stir up hatred
which the government tried to repeal in the 2009 Coroners and Justice Bill.
The repeal failed and section 29JA remains. The section was extended to protect criticism of gay marriage by the Marriage (Same Sex Couples) Act 2013
I mention this because I think if we're discussing censorship, we really ought to have a sense of perspective as to what government has tried to censor


Struggling to think of an example of that happening in the UK since the late Mary Whitehouse's day

Just about every definition of freedom of speech that any nation has come up with has applied rules, limitations and boundaries. Just as there has never been a right to offend, so too there has never been an unlimited freedom of speech.
It is only in sloppy rhetoric that people throw around phrases like "right to offend" or "freedom of speech" as if they absolutes. They are not. They never have been. There have always been rules. Those rules and exceptions are constantly changing, but they have always been there.
Most definitions of censorship involve an organisation such as a Government or a church preventing people from seeing something they want to see. This app doesn't do that. It helps people to make their own decisions about what they want to see, which is a basic human right. The book doesn't change.

Again you and I are temperamentally at different ends of the spectrum on this one.

Struggling to think of an exa..."
That's true, but it's pretty common in certain US states.



People enjoy being offended.
Especially these days when exercising their 'right' to be offended by something gives them a free pass to the very top of the moral high ground.

People enjoy being offended.
Especially these days when exercising their 'right' to be offended by somethin..."
Absolutely true David


no it doesn't


It has never been expressed in legislation.
It has not been written down or discussed at length.
It is not implied by any writings or legislation on the freedom of speech.
It has never been agreed.
I love it when you say "there are no proscribed limits to FoE other than what is forbidden by law". In other words, there are limits on freedom of expression.
I cannot find a single civilization - existing or in the past - that has ever had an unlimited freedom of expression. Not one.
Something becomes a right when large enough numbers of people decide to adopt it as a right. The right to offend isn't in that category. It is an idea that was first expressed as recently as 2004 and that quoted sloppily in the aftermath of the Charlie Hebdo incident as if it was a fundamental right that could not be argued against.
The n word is fascinating because there is a convention that black people can use it where white people can't. That is exactly the sort of nuanced approach to freedom of speech that we have, not some ridiculous right to say anything.
This is not a difference of opinion. You are talking about two things - a right to offend and unlimited freedom of speech - that simply do not exist.

This is something we actually both agree on, although not in the choice of words as to how we express it. I guess what I'm trying to say is that outside of the line drawn in the ground by the law, there is no prescription or convention that holds as sacred.
You're correct in the respect that there is no formally established & defined right to offend. I need to find another word, but I uphold and sometimes assert my ability and opportunity to offend as an artist through my work and yes I see this being curtailed by people who react with guns and knives and death threats. Therefore my right to free expression (within the law) is being curtailed through threats of violence.
the language in the wake of Charlie Hebdo may have been sloppy (indicative that it's about time we had a serious public discourse on FoE, what it means, what its limits are) but you cannot get away from the fact that free expression was assassinated and murdered in cold blood and that is an assassin's veto. Journalism and art must retain an ability to speak to truth.
http://www.theguardian.com/books/2015...