"Should I Be Banned For Quoting the Bible?" Debating Free Speech on the BBC

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  • Опубликовано: 27 сен 2024
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    - NOTES
    An important correction:
    (TL/DR: my first response to Sean's last question was "there's research in both directions", which does seem to be true. But I then concluded by saying, "the studies actually show the opposite" when I should have said have said, "some studies appear to show the opposite". I wasn't speaking carefully and suggested that there is a consensus in the opposite direction. I had based this on work by Jacob Mchangama, but upon review think it at best shows that the results are inconclusive (especially in deducing a causal relationship between free speech and less social conflict and violence, as opposed to mere correlation). This is still a relevant observation, but did not warrant me saying that "the studies actually show the opposite". Also the study I cited on terrorism refers to offline free speech, as freedom online is difficult to measure accurately, and the link was found only in democracies, with the results in autocracies being mixed.)
    The study I cited can be found here: journals.sagep...
    I wanted to say that this study is only conclusive for offline speech, not online speech, and so may have not been a good study to cite in this context. The authors write that "the relative absence of precise data and open questions regarding how to measure freedom in the cybersphere means that whether freedom of expression in electronic media is different must remain an open question."
    It's also worth emphasising that the study found an unambiguous association between increased discursive freedom and reduction in terrorism in democracies, but the results in autocracies are mixed.
    Also, I think it was too strong to say "the evidence points the other way":
    I had based this on Jacob Mchangama's recent history of free speech in which he writes, "But while online expression may sometimes lead to real-life harm, it does not necessarily follow that placing restrictions on free speech is an effective remedy. On the contrary, studies suggest that, on the whole, freedom of expression is associated with less rather than more violent extremism and social conflict in democracies. The preventive effect of free speech on terrorist attacks seems particularly strong." (Mchangama, "Free Speech: A Global History From Socrates to Social Media", Hardback, p. 371)
    For the final claim he cites the study linked above, and for the more general claim he cites his own work which can be found online here: www.cato-unbou..., itself mentioning a then-upcoming study, now published and available here: www.dropbox.co...
    The study finds that "some of the most commonly expressed concerns regarding freedom of
    expression - such as its potential detrimental effects on social conflicts (including genocide), radicalization and terrorism - by and large are not supported by the evidence or the existing research literature", and that increased freedom of speech is associated with a number of societal benefits and less social conflict in democracies.
    My understanding is that, especially concerning online media, the evidence is unclear and the issue far from settled regarding the influence of free speech on hate crime.
    So, my first statement that "there's research in both directions" was accurate, but I said, "the studies actually show the opposite" when I should have said have said, "some studies appear to show the opposite".
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Комментарии • 2,5 тыс.

  • @CosmicSkeptic
    @CosmicSkeptic  Год назад +857

    Important correction: my answer to Sean's last question to me was too strong. The full details are in the description, but here is the TL/DR:
    My first response to Sean's last question was "there's research in both directions", which does seem to be true. But I then concluded by saying, "the studies actually show the opposite" when I should have said have said, "some studies appear to show the opposite". I wasn't speaking carefully and suggested that there is a consensus in the opposite direction, and said that the findings of the cited study are replicated across "pretty much any area of political violence". I had based this on work by Jacob Mchangama, but upon review think it at best shows that the results are inconclusive (especially in deducing a causal relationship between free speech and less social conflict and violence, as opposed to mere correlation). This is still a relevant observation, but did not warrant me saying that "the studies actually show the opposite". Also the study I cited on terrorism refers to offline free speech, as freedom online is difficult to measure accurately, and the link was found only in democracies, with the results in autocracies being mixed.
    I apologise for putting the point too strongly and not offering appropriate clarifications about the data.

    • @johnbrzykcy3076
      @johnbrzykcy3076 Год назад +37

      Hey Alex, don't worry about it. Your clarification shows that you ponder things you say and we all need sometimes to look back and make clarification of things we unintentionally spoke.
      Appreciate your scholarly concern. I hope someday I can be open-minded to correction ( whether by another person or by my own reasoning ! ).
      Respectfully from Florida

    • @johnbrzykcy3076
      @johnbrzykcy3076 Год назад +7

      @@Sammy_1992 I have a difficult time in the first place to understand "religious arguments". So "debunking" probably won't help me. However I'm open-minded to discussions regarding "religion", faith, and the existence of a loving God.
      Respectfully from Florida

    • @emaanserghini1919
      @emaanserghini1919 Год назад +10

      I appreciate your correction. I already linked you in Twitter a study that shows opposite results.

    • @Pablo-mt5oq
      @Pablo-mt5oq Год назад +9

      This should be pinned imo, it's a pretty important piece of info

    • @omaralhussain2330
      @omaralhussain2330 Год назад +25

      The fact that you took the time to add this says a lot and is genuinely refreshing - not many people with this level of integrity here. Thanks, Alex!

  • @willbishop5754
    @willbishop5754 Год назад +1760

    Feels like the first time in a long time i've seen a segment on the BBC where no ones shouting, nice work

    • @Antonov-225
      @Antonov-225 Год назад +101

      All you need is people with manners not like piers morgan

    • @allrequiredfields
      @allrequiredfields Год назад +19

      Well, when you've got 2 minutes to discuss a matter, it's hard for it to descend into chaos, much less arrive at any sort of reasonable conclusion. Alex was about to reply to something at the end that finally seemed to be getting at the heart of the matter until he was cut off. This interview was a waste of everyone's time.

    • @EnglishMike
      @EnglishMike Год назад +21

      A lot of this depends on the moderator/presenter. This presenter stayed neutral and posed a balanced set of questions designed to get everyone in the panel to defend their positions.
      Idiots like Piers Morgan just want drama so the clips will go viral.

    • @EnglishMike
      @EnglishMike Год назад +2

      @@allrequiredfields You could debate this issue for hours and not come to any definitive conclusion.

    • @Beer_Dad1975
      @Beer_Dad1975 Год назад +8

      @@EnglishMike Piers Morgan is no idiot - he just knows very well that he's an entertainer more than a journalist, and drama brings viewers - thus he encourages sensationalism and argument.

  • @lutherffs
    @lutherffs Год назад +2187

    I love how Alex keeps getting invited back to the BBC. It's inspiring!

    • @haukenot3345
      @haukenot3345 Год назад +174

      They are even calling him a commentator, as if this was what he regularly did for a living. Seems like Alex officially is a talking head! 😅

    • @DinkSmalwood
      @DinkSmalwood Год назад +28

      A bit masochistic don't you think?

    • @lutherffs
      @lutherffs Год назад +7

      ​@@DinkSmalwoodhow do you mean?

    • @ionasmith1998
      @ionasmith1998 Год назад +5

      @@DinkSmalwood what.

    • @HellonearthlABB
      @HellonearthlABB Год назад +5

      He'll get invited till he reads his script

  • @MrMixto_
    @MrMixto_ Год назад +1233

    Was that actually a TV debate where ideas got debated? I'm impressed

    • @jazzman2516
      @jazzman2516 Год назад +42

      There was hardly a debate to be honest. The women didn’t have a clue what they were on about.

    • @looeegee
      @looeegee Год назад +41

      Thankfully Pears Morgan wasn't invited otherwise it wouldn't

    • @ThcBanaman
      @ThcBanaman Год назад +39

      ​@@jazzman2516I think they had some good points even though I'm not agreeing with everything

    • @jazzman2516
      @jazzman2516 Год назад +41

      @@ThcBanaman they had some good points, but they had nothing to do with the discussion. You can tell that neither of them understand what free speech actually is, they’re just bringing their agenda into it. Especially the one who said that ‘racism, homophobia and misogyny are not free speech’, which is the dumbest statement I’ve ever heard. You should still be entitled to speak freely even if what you say may offend, and you can’t strictly police language with those labels anyway, as they can be arbitrarily defined. Who gets to say what’s racist, homophonic, misogynistic? There are many non-racist, non-homophobic, and non-misogynistic comments you could make that could actually be read/heard as such by certain people. Just look at Kathleen Stock as an example. Woke lunatics are not the arbiters of free speech, they are its enemy.

    • @ThcBanaman
      @ThcBanaman Год назад

      @@jazzman2516 If you give people the tools to get rid of democracy while using democratic platforms you failed, simple. Hate drags more hate, as German I'm glad we forbade denying the Holocaust. There's clear evidence the Holocaust happened, so yes you can have the 'free spech opinion' to not believe it, which is stupid. But if you watch the idiots, especially in the US electing Trump, not being able to formulate what's wrong with him, subscribing to the dumbest outdated ideas, some about centuries old and Refuted, you can't count on "public intelligence". So should there be limitations to free speech on specific topics, absolutely yes IMHO. Fight me bro lol

  • @MrMZaccone
    @MrMZaccone Год назад +399

    WOW! Alex's question about Leviticus didn't just get swept under the rug, it got rolled up in it, thrown in the trunk, and driven to the landfill with two in the back of the head.

    • @rexsceleratorum1632
      @rexsceleratorum1632 Год назад +59

      And it was a softball. He could have gone for the Q'n or the hadiths. The conservative peaceful person on the far right (take that as you will) might have blown a gasket, but why not

    • @Dan_Capone
      @Dan_Capone Год назад +40

      @@rexsceleratorum1632 I think it was bait to see if she said that the Bible was hate speech OR if she said religious texts should be exempt. In any case it would've been interesting to hear her response.

    • @pythondrink
      @pythondrink Год назад +33

      It pained me that they straight up ignored it

    • @rexsceleratorum1632
      @rexsceleratorum1632 Год назад +12

      @@Dan_Capone But as it happened, nobody in the group cared enough about the Bible to feel that they had to make a stand, rather than sweep the subject under the rug.

    • @diabl2master
      @diabl2master 8 месяцев назад +7

      Well, I wondered if they realised the relevance of Leviticus - it being the book with arguably the most vile pronouncements in the Bible

  • @sordidknifeparty
    @sordidknifeparty 3 месяца назад +84

    Alex: should I be banned for quoting the Bible?
    Everyone else: squirming uncomfortably and not touching it with a 10-foot Pole

  • @robertdeland3390
    @robertdeland3390 Год назад +689

    Great discussion. The host did a great job of letting all four speak their mind. I'm impressed.

    • @rowdy3837
      @rowdy3837 Год назад +57

      Until he tried to step in and deflect Alex’s question about quoting the Bible… The single best point made during this “debate.”

    • @ChubbyChecker182
      @ChubbyChecker182 Год назад +7

      ​@@rowdy3837indeed

    • @dahalofreeek
      @dahalofreeek Год назад +52

      @@rowdy3837 To play Devil's advocate, these are timed segments with a hard cutoff. The host has to balance extracting information from the guests with the ticking clock.

    • @keithnicholas
      @keithnicholas Год назад +28

      @@rowdy3837 I think the host actually did a good job, there was no point going down the path of a tangent like that into "what is hate speech". All that was needed was a nod in the direction of defining hate speech is problematic.

    • @letsomethingshine
      @letsomethingshine Год назад

      All 4 did a great job, host (the 5th person) was a "passive-income" participant in it all. I'd have to see how he handles people I know to be rowdy. He certainly wasn't even their coach that I would give him even 20% credit for how things went down. He was there though, so I'd give him 5% credit this episode (he can keep raking up credit if he keeps managing to have good shows).

  • @philvogelfilms
    @philvogelfilms Год назад +1644

    They kept asking "why don't social media companies do this?" Very simple: they make more money NOT doing that. Insane to expect them to self-regulate in a capitalist system.

    • @matt69nice
      @matt69nice Год назад +107

      Because the second you say anything anti-capitalist the right will pounce on you. When you're trying to have a civilised discussion with people on the right it's a fine line you have to tread in the interests of diplomacy

    • @CynHicks
      @CynHicks Год назад +31

      ​@@matt69niceNot here in the USA. The "right" thoroughly understands the need for a free market. We've been trying to bring big tech to accountability for quite a while but because at the moment those tech companies are benefiting the masters of those that call themselves "leftists" the people are split on it. However, it's the uniparty in DC that's most opposed.

    • @Chronically_ChiII
      @Chronically_ChiII Год назад +73

      @@matt69nice As a centrist, I have experienced way more good will to have a honest discussion about the limitation of capitalism with right-wingers than talking to left-wingers about the limitations of collectivism. In general, there is more vitriol on the left, *at least currently.*

    • @SavageHenry777
      @SavageHenry777 Год назад +29

      ​@@matt69nice I don't want to make anyone feel pounced on nor do i want to associate myself with the right. But using "capitalism" the way you do is spurious. Capitalism is a very basic and kind of loosely defined term. Are you suggesting that regulations or counterchecks on political/money relationships are needed (not really anti-capitalist), or a planned system removing voluntary exchange/contract and and seizing assets to be distributed without consideration of property rights? And no I don't mean to say that the latter is the same as raising taxes, I'm talking about a real revolution. If you are backing such violence, shouldn't you expect pushback?

    • @Hfil66
      @Hfil66 Год назад +11

      It is not about capitalism, it is that what is and is not allowed to be said is inevitably a political decision that should be taken by politicians. There can be arguments as to how much or how little politicians should be allowed to constrain free speach, but that does not absolve the politicians from having the ultimate responsibility for making such decisions. Unelected commercial bodies have no place making such decisions, it is for them to abide by decisions made by (and justified by) politicians.

  • @ricardocarrera2
    @ricardocarrera2 Год назад +527

    We experienced this in Mexico, under a single political party that ruled like a dictatorship for 70 years, controlling all media. However, as soon as the internet exploded in Mexico between 1996 and 2000, the party lost the election. We now have an autonomous institute that organizes elections. Free speech is invaluable. Instead of trying to prevent certain ideas from being shared, we should invest in education.

    • @justanotheropinion5832
      @justanotheropinion5832 Год назад

      The reverse is currently happening in America. Free speech has resulted in the wildfire spread of conspiracy theories, demonizing and crippling education. It’s empowered Christian nationalists to stomp out free speech.

    • @danielcrafter9349
      @danielcrafter9349 Год назад

      "They lost the election"
      "Free speech is unavailable"
      This isn't compatible - you DO have free speech - what you don't like is people having different opinions to you

    • @miguelzavaleta1911
      @miguelzavaleta1911 Год назад +18

      The internet helped PAN win the 2000 elections? First time I've heard this theory.
      La persona promedio no tenía acceso a internet en México en el 2010, olvídate en el 2000, hijo.

    • @adisproject
      @adisproject Год назад

      free speech doesn't promote education, far from it... It gives more power to idiots and actually promotes the uneducated (see the Covid debate or all the "crystal healing" stuff". People, for the most part, can't understand academic papers. They don't have the IQ or knowledge necessary. This is why they believe dumb FB conspiracies.

    • @roenlezma9361
      @roenlezma9361 Год назад +9

      Firstly, it amazes me how do you jump from the premise that having internet access led to the reform of a biased electoral institution (believe it or not, electoral process are always supervised even dictatorial regimes, haha). If a 70 year old regime was defeated, don't you think many other substantial geopolitical changes may have happened during the 80's and 90's of the last Century? Secondly, during that time there were no social media, no smartphones, and internet access was still very limited even as home service. That's why cybercafé were popular, and sorta profitable business at that time. And finally, freedom of speech is not necessarily a correlation of investing in education. Education is necessary to built criteria, coherent reasoning, and, yeah, an ideology. There are many and very educated professionals from the radical left and the far right for example (the recent circus) who cannot even debate, instead they resolve to spit insults to one another as arguments. So, it's not a matter of knowledge per se, but to strengthening and consolidating the bases on which freedom of speech can be effectively execirse in public spaces from the houses of representatives to universities according to values of respect, fair play, responsability and accountability. I too believe we're very far from there.

  • @jasonOfTheHills
    @jasonOfTheHills Год назад +36

    "if I may" - Alex O'Connor's proper version of "hold my beer".

  • @ChrisWillx
    @ChrisWillx Год назад +152

    My favourite bit was when you were talking

  • @markus6746
    @markus6746 Год назад +463

    This seemed like a very civilised debate. I like it

    • @sueyourself5413
      @sueyourself5413 Год назад +7

      On one side you have two people who have no idea what they're talking about. No idea how an algorithm works. And on the other, two who are sane. Not sure if civilised is the right word.

    • @Xsomono
      @Xsomono Год назад +9

      @@sueyourself5413 Honestly, something like turning off suggestions would be something governments could force social media companies to do. It's technically feasible and I can imagine that in this case it would have prevented the spread of misinformation. The question is only whether we as society think the pros outweigh the cons. Because while this might prevent speculative statements from spreading it would also strongly decrease the quality of internet search.

    • @israelgulley9104
      @israelgulley9104 Год назад +8

      @@sueyourself5413I believe you’re incorrect, their argument as I understand it is that algorithms like tick tock are designed to get people to keep clicking which and so you find an asymmetry of the things being promoted. When you try to change the algorithm so that it isn’t promoting certain things you aren’t censoring or taking away speech you just are evening the playing ground so that free speech can actually have the desired effect. That’s at least my understanding, where do you think I’ve gone wrong there?

    • @MichaelDeHaven
      @MichaelDeHaven Год назад +3

      ​@@israelgulley9104Exactly anger hatred and distrust of "the other side" are great ways to push engagement. Engagement equals ads, which equals revenue and profit.
      This is how I understood it. Now what to do about it, if anything, is a different point. But the point itself seems clearly valid.

    • @derricktalbot8846
      @derricktalbot8846 Год назад +1

      Sophie's recommendation of "regulation/ethical framework" was most appropriate I think. Those recommendations made are NOT speech. They are adverts, which are well within social norms to regulate. They are made with the purpose of driving traffic and views and clicks. If they WERE speech... then the answer is already clear... you treat TikTok and Twitter and and and as being held to Journalistic standards... and the Laws that regulate them.
      Was kind of hoping Alex would not join the sweaty guy in "Totally unlimited speech"... but rather slice off the rest of the cake and just stick to what she was talking about.... those recommendations. Restricting free speech is stupid and pointless... but "everything is speech" is ridiculous I think.
      The two women are talking about one thing... Sweaty Guy is talking about another thing entirely... and Alex is stuck simultaneously trying to defend free speech and make up the ground that Sweaty Guy is being a shitheel about (steps in pooh.... then walks around in your house as though everything is fine)
      The host sets up Alex to make the point on something he knows Alex cares about, The Chinese Striker, setting him up to kill the idea of' "no anonymity on the net"
      but again... he cant GET to Sophie's point because Sweaty Guy
      I still have NO FN clue what Alex thinks of those recommendations. I think they are NOT speech, and tight rules for them are fine.... what does Alex think about those specifically? I WANT TO KNOW SWEATY GUY, SO STFU!

  • @kingpin3000
    @kingpin3000 Год назад +86

    Wow, you've levelled up from RUclipsr to Commentator. Nice.

    • @whatis569
      @whatis569 Год назад +13

      Honestly I think he leveled up the BBC and not the other way round

    • @daniellamcgee4251
      @daniellamcgee4251 Год назад +6

      ​@@whatis569Both statements can be true.

    • @whatis569
      @whatis569 Год назад

      @@daniellamcgee4251 I agree they can be, that doesn't mean they are. You may be right though :)

    • @HarryNicNicholas
      @HarryNicNicholas Год назад +1

      @@whatis569 on the other hand he's wearing a suit and poncy shoes so i'd say he's going to sell out. dressing like jordan peterson doesn't get any brownie points with me. 😅

  • @onlyaladd569
    @onlyaladd569 Год назад +194

    Props to the moderator for his control of the conversation and for pushing back against everyone

    • @FoivosApostolou
      @FoivosApostolou 9 месяцев назад +17

      He didn't really push back on the side supporting censorial regulation. His push back was mostly focused on the free speech side imo

    • @Jester343
      @Jester343 9 месяцев назад +7

      ​@@FoivosApostolou 7:10 he did ask them a question to clarify on why SM companies don't regulate.
      And to be honest, if you call what he says 'push back' on either side then that's a bit confusing. He doesn't really push back on either side, he asks easily answerable questions or makes a statement.

    • @Jonathan-tw4xm
      @Jonathan-tw4xm 8 месяцев назад

      @@Jester343 what were you expecting?
      i just want to know what i can consider push back.

    • @Jester343
      @Jester343 8 месяцев назад +2

      @@Jonathan-tw4xm Challenging the point that a person is trying to make, not clarify.

    • @Jonathan-tw4xm
      @Jonathan-tw4xm 8 месяцев назад

      @@Jester343 Give me examples you would accept in this case.
      I'm trying to understand what the push back would be since I thought it was but you might be right

  • @owenclark8166
    @owenclark8166 Год назад +24

    Thank you so much for attaching the study you cited in the description. It is rare to find this, and is very helpful for those who want to look deeper into the problem.

  • @skinwakker
    @skinwakker Год назад +162

    This is why I can't stand television: whenever you start getting to the good stuff, time runs out. It truly is a shame as I've rarely seen a productive discussion that's lasted as short a time as you are allowed on television.

    • @crazyprayingmantis5596
      @crazyprayingmantis5596 Год назад +7

      Gotta run those ads, no time for talking it doesn't make $

    • @skinwakker
      @skinwakker Год назад +6

      @crazyprayingmantis5596 all too true. This is why I can appreciate set-up debates or discussions that range between an hour and three. Truthfully, with matters so complex, that's the kind of time we need to move forward

    • @Paul2377
      @Paul2377 Год назад +24

      @@crazyprayingmantis5596 This was aired on BBC1 in the UK, which doesn't show adverts. Sunday Morning Live is on for an hour and covers quite a lot of topics, so each segment is quite strictly timed.

  • @D4n1t0o
    @D4n1t0o Год назад +481

    This was actually a far more sensible, reasonable discussion than I expected for mainstream television to produce. Alex was thoroughly impressive.

    • @lingardinho2956
      @lingardinho2956 Год назад

      Npc

    • @D4n1t0o
      @D4n1t0o Год назад +8

      @@lingardinho2956 Eh?

    • @echiko4932
      @echiko4932 Год назад +15

      ​@@lingardinho2956ur more npc than op lol

    • @nadirakyildiz8857
      @nadirakyildiz8857 Год назад +2

      Although the chairperson made the default position about restricting speech. He called frazier and Alex as "these guys". I don't know if it ideological, unconscious bias or something worse

    • @travcollier
      @travcollier Год назад

      I wish they had gone a bit longer. That last idea was pretty good and sounded like a genuine point of sensible compromise.
      I would like to hear Alex's view on making the review/censorship which companies do internally more transparent and standardized.

  • @jabi3jabi3
    @jabi3jabi3 Год назад +113

    Anyone notice how quick the host made sure that it was only Alex's opinion when he brought up china 😭

    • @dannylad1600
      @dannylad1600 Год назад +11

      They might be watching

    • @BathoryBathHouse
      @BathoryBathHouse Год назад +7

      I was so confused by that. All he had said was that a player was their top goal scorer. He hadn't even named the player yet. Presumably some player was their top scorer???

    • @diabl2master
      @diabl2master 8 месяцев назад +6

      ​@@BathoryBathHouseEveryone is absolutely petrified of China. Haven't you seen? So much that the presenter knows his higher-ups would want him to pre-empt the statement at the first whisper of "...China..."
      So funny he said "his opinion" initially - as though speaking not to Alex but to Big Brother

    • @diabl2master
      @diabl2master 8 месяцев назад +5

      The irony of it, when they're on the topic of free speech!!

  • @lilJuJuboi
    @lilJuJuboi Год назад +8

    To expect social media companies to abide by a moral framework is honestly the dumbest thing ive ever heard

  • @Digggyyyyy
    @Digggyyyyy Год назад +30

    Gosh it's so nice to see a civilised debate where all sides get to talk freely. Great job by the host, hope this fella can host more discussions like this

  • @jakalair
    @jakalair Год назад +79

    This was uplifting on many levels, and interesting to me that no one jumped to give the "right" solution, but put forth information and ideas.

    • @konstaConstant
      @konstaConstant Год назад +8

      it didn't even seem like a debate! Healthy intellectual discussion and problem solving

    • @matimus100
      @matimus100 Год назад

      Prince Andrew loves this silly comment

  • @quietwulf
    @quietwulf Год назад +73

    It’s great seeing you move further into the mainstream media Alex. Thanks for sharing this.

    • @land2097
      @land2097 9 месяцев назад +1

      boomer media

    • @asherroodcreel640
      @asherroodcreel640 8 месяцев назад

      Meteoid

    • @craigman04
      @craigman04 8 месяцев назад

      As if you just saw this discussion and didnt think "maybe allowing everyone to spew drivvel and spurious, unsubstantiated, unregulated nonesense (i.e. the vast majority "content") isn't such a good thing" @@land2097

  • @ninjycoon
    @ninjycoon Год назад +12

    What we need is to teach the public to not assume every allegation has any weight to it and actually do the work to fact check it properly. Full transparency is required if we want to keep the truth from being suppressed.

    • @chrisengland5523
      @chrisengland5523 11 месяцев назад

      That's difficult. Ever heard of confirmation bias? What happens is that when someone hears something they don't agree with, they dismiss it as rubbish, irrespective of how sensible the argument is. And in contrast, when folk hear something that confirms their beliefs, they lap it up and take it as the absolute truth, irrespective of how weak the argument is.
      Social media recommendation algorithms feed on the second of those.

    • @smockboy
      @smockboy 8 месяцев назад +2

      @@chrisengland5523 "That's difficult." - Oh, well, best not to bother then.

    • @smockboy
      @smockboy 8 месяцев назад

      Sorry, that was overly facetious of me. Perhaps, and this is very much only a partial fix, but perhaps a mandatory, thorough education in the kinds of fallacious reasoning that we are all prone to - such as confirmation bias - with a particular emphasis on the political, societal and interpersonal impacts that not accounting for those biases can lead to is in order?

    • @ninjycoon
      @ninjycoon 8 месяцев назад +1

      @@chrisengland5523 I agree. That's still the solution.

  • @nizamdamanhuri933
    @nizamdamanhuri933 Год назад +6

    The problem with these daytime tv "debates" is once you start listening to long form discussions/debates on podcasts they sound simplistic. Example, when the woman claims implementing control in online media is easy (it really isnt) you really start to wonder at the quality of guests on the show.

  • @niceguy191
    @niceguy191 Год назад +35

    Very civilized discussion, and I kept just thinking as each person was talking "they're right" which really drives home the intricacies of the topic (far too complicated to properly hash out in a short TV segment of course)

    • @matt69nice
      @matt69nice Год назад +3

      Policy is an area where there aren't any wrong answers depending on what evidence and reasoning you base your policy on. For example, drowning migrants and asylum seekers in the channel might be an effective deterrent and reduce migration numbers. To most of the population the human cost is unpalatable, but most of the population is also anti-immigration, so you could argue that it's a good policy or a bad policy depending on how much you care about them drowning.

    • @nonna9699
      @nonna9699 Год назад

      @@matt69nice I would hope even the most staunch anti-immigration individuals would not endorse letting asylum seekers drown wtf

    • @kylezo
      @kylezo Год назад

      well, except the guy sitting next to alex, who appears to be a complete idiot

    • @DPAE-xc4ph
      @DPAE-xc4ph Год назад

      The two women on the right don’t truly know what free speech is. Free speech is the ability to say anything about everything and not face censorship of any kind. They say they support it but then say that social media companies need to remove posts and silence people.

    • @snuffeldjuret
      @snuffeldjuret Год назад +2

      girl on the right were not saying very good things though

  • @lostboy3080
    @lostboy3080 Год назад +33

    It's never no regulation or complete regulation. Nothing is absolute. There are boundaries and limits. For example, all social media does have some internal regulation, to ban content depicting violence like beheading people by terrorists or explicit pictures of children. That's a necessary regulation, that most people would agree on. It's not a zero-sum game, always.

    • @itheuserfirst3186
      @itheuserfirst3186 Год назад +2

      In the future, it could be just the opposite. Morals change over time. What you think is offensive today, a future generation might wonder, what's the big deal? Vice versa. Morals are just an opinion at a point in time. They're not real.

    • @TheEnmineer
      @TheEnmineer Год назад +2

      @@itheuserfirst3186 I disagree, I think that it is quite clear that morality can be tied to concrete factors. Objective morality could exist given enough accurate information about reality, even if only one moral principle needs to be accepted as an axiom (say, what is beneficial for the continuation of humanity as a species since we are talking about morals in human society).

    • @suppositorylaxative3179
      @suppositorylaxative3179 Год назад

      ⁠​⁠@@TheEnmineerDelusional.
      There’s absolutely no such thing as objective morals and we should stop pretending the human mind is some island of perfect logic and reason that can derive the ‘objective moral’ stance.
      Each and every one of us is molded by the society we live in.
      Why is explicit images of children wrong? What is a child? How is 17 a child but 18 isn’t? Why draw the line there?
      What’s so wrong with gore? We can show pictures of blood, but suddenly you add some pieces of human flesh and it’s off limits? Are you kidding?
      Half of these things you think can be described away with ‘objective morals’ are only deemed ‘bad’ because that’s what we’ve been conditioned to accept.
      Had you been born and raised in ancient Greece, you would scoff at the notion of 18 years of age being the age of majority.
      Hell, people 100 years ago invoked ‘objective morals’ to condemn homosexuality and interracial relationships.
      All these lines are but marks in the sand, all but guaranteed to be washed away by the tides.
      P.s if we’re going by what’s beneficial for the continuation of humanity to derive our morals, we wouldn’t arrive at getting rid of gore, child pornography, or any of those extraneous things. Those don’t anymore harm the continuation of humanity as they are a reflection of our modern sensibilities

    • @Cee_H
      @Cee_H Год назад

      I think people are blind to the fact that facebook and twitter is actually fun by usa government and fbi lol

    • @thejohnrahm
      @thejohnrahm 9 месяцев назад

      ​@@TheEnmineer for objective morality to exist, God would need to punish you for your sins. if there is no God to punish you for these "sins," then sins aren't really sins.
      you might think torturing slaves is bad. someone else might think torturing slaves is good. without God's judgement, it's just another opinion that you may/may not live to regret.

  • @hewasfuzzywuzzy3583
    @hewasfuzzywuzzy3583 Год назад +93

    Well, well, well... He sure as shit shut that direction of the conversation on free speech down when you brought up the bible. Funny how there's freedom of religion (not in all countries, and depending the country and the religion) but not freedom of speech when it comes to discussing religious speech or criticism of religious speech. Some religious speech is used as a form of hate speech, online, in person, and in the synagogues.
    Another great point and great video Alex!

    • @littlebitofhope1489
      @littlebitofhope1489 Год назад +5

      That was his point. You do realize what the verse he was referring to says, right?

    • @hewasfuzzywuzzy3583
      @hewasfuzzywuzzy3583 Год назад +7

      ​@@littlebitofhope1489I didn't quote the verse because I thought most people who know Alex and know the people in the circles he runs in would also be all too aware of all the problem passages in the bible, let alone in Leviticus.
      But since you're skeptical of me knowing what he's referring to or possibly referencing...
      *Leviticus 18:22 King James Version*
      22 Thou shalt not lie with mankind, as with womankind: it is abomination.
      *Leviticus 18:22 New Living Translation*
      22 “Do not practice homosexuality, having sex with another man as with a woman. It is a detestable sin.
      *Leviticus 18:22 New International Version*
      22 “‘Do not have sexual relations with a man as one does with a woman; that is detestable.

    • @Sui_Generis0
      @Sui_Generis0 Год назад +2

      Hitchens made the quoting bible point in his free speech debate many years back

    • @hewasfuzzywuzzy3583
      @hewasfuzzywuzzy3583 Год назад +1

      @@Sui_Generis0 I was thinking about mentioning that as well. I remember seeing a lot of those clips on RUclips. I've read and listened to a lot of Hitchens books as well. Hitchens was quite the sharpest and quickest at pushing back but also at making the points succinctly clear why religion is poison.

    • @erics1140
      @erics1140 Год назад

      Usually Agree with Alex's perspective but there are many studies that link hate speech as a precursor to violence. Obviously, nazi Germany comes to mind but there are many other examples including the current rise in anti semitism and homophobia in America to increased violence against these people.

  • @tommy_svk
    @tommy_svk Год назад +6

    Mate this was the best moderating in a debate I've seen in a long while (but that's probably because I watch controversial "debates" mostly). The moderator was excellent. No interrupting, no shouting over his guests. Just listens to one side, says "good point, what does the other side think?" and then listens to the other side. And he repeats that. Absolutely excellent. It also gives a feeling that he is willing to listen and change his mind, which is something that so many people seem incapable of doing.

    • @MaggaraMarine
      @MaggaraMarine Год назад +2

      I also liked how the moderator steelmanned all of the arguments. He listened to the argument and then restated the main point of the argument to the other side. I think this kind of moderation makes "gotcha" arguments less effective, which naturally keeps the discussion more civil.

    • @AdamJones381
      @AdamJones381 8 месяцев назад

      I thought the moderator did a job.

    • @baggelissonic
      @baggelissonic 21 день назад

      The moderator did a good job, but he was demonstrably not extremely knowledgeable on the topic, which is why he steelmanned many seemingly logical arguments even though they fall flat on their face if you have any knowledge on the subject.

  • @tacobell2009
    @tacobell2009 Год назад +45

    "Why can't social media companies just act right?" One word. G R E E D .

    • @Jonathan-tw4xm
      @Jonathan-tw4xm 8 месяцев назад

      your answer is too simple for a complex problem. its like your a monkey.

  • @MugRuith
    @MugRuith Год назад +73

    Here we had five thoughtful and serious people discussing an important topic...and the scary thing is that not a single one had any clear solution to the problem of the spread of disinformation and hate speech and the power of social media to manipulate the masses.

    • @JP-sm4cs
      @JP-sm4cs Год назад +36

      The solution is to remove "reccomended content" if people wanna watch something make them look for it. The line between entertainment/community and advertisement has never been thinner and that's a problem.

    • @BDnevernind
      @BDnevernind Год назад +21

      Hmmm I heard two solid ideas in there. One is regulate the antisocial algorithms, and the other was stop preventing media from telling the truth.

    • @derkatzenfuerst6077
      @derkatzenfuerst6077 Год назад +17

      ​@@BDnevernindexactly. Don't push viewers towards unhealthy content, allow as much free speech as possible, hold people accountable and challenge them if what they are saying seems harmful.

    • @crazyprayingmantis5596
      @crazyprayingmantis5596 Год назад +10

      ​@@derkatzenfuerst6077
      Who decides what's unhealthy content?

    • @derkatzenfuerst6077
      @derkatzenfuerst6077 Год назад +2

      @@crazyprayingmantis5596 Good point, that is another big question.
      Personally, I don't think there can be a clear answer, what might be educationial content for some, could be disturbing for others.
      While there is probably no perfect solution, it should be possible to establish a few basic rules. For example don't recommend adult content to young viewers, don't amplify content that is promoting hate against individuals or groups, self harm or extreme risks.
      (The TikTok blackout challenge would be an example).
      Provide a good mix of education and entertainment, recommend opposing viewpoints and point out bias or conflicts of interest, a bit like Ground News is doing.
      But as long as profit is the main motivation of social media platforms, this is probably not very realistic.

  • @dohpam1ne
    @dohpam1ne Год назад +129

    I love seeing all these TV appearances recently from Alex. It really gives me Christopher Hitchens vibes, but perhaps even sharper logically.

    • @hareecionelson5875
      @hareecionelson5875 Год назад +34

      I would say Alex is an improvement on Hitchens, less fallacies and more balanced in a discussion

    • @Dr.IanPlect
      @Dr.IanPlect Год назад +5

      @@hareecionelson5875 "I would say Alex is an improvement on Hitchens, less fallacies and more balanced in a discussion"
      - so, how did you conclude 'less fallacies'?

    • @joshboston2323
      @joshboston2323 Год назад +10

      @@Dr.IanPlect --simple: evaluate someone's logic on the basis of their logical fallacy making.

    • @Chronically_ChiII
      @Chronically_ChiII Год назад +17

      @@hareecionelson5875 Aye, Connor stands on the shoulders of Hitchens and improves where he was lacking.

    • @Dr.IanPlect
      @Dr.IanPlect Год назад

      @@joshboston2323 muted

  • @alisondaly5560
    @alisondaly5560 Год назад +200

    Well done to Alex.
    V naive to think that any government could be trusted to be a fair arbiter of truth when it's main aim is continuance and increase of power.

    • @derkatzenfuerst6077
      @derkatzenfuerst6077 Год назад +19

      You seem to be very critical of the government. One could almost assume, that you are trying to incite hatred against our democratically elected leaders!
      On a more serious note, Russia is the perfect example for this. Even expressing a wish for peace can be censored, just because the current government wants to suppress all criticism.

    • @tanaka173
      @tanaka173 Год назад +17

      ​@@johnmclawson3982When the government reserved the right to arrest you because they don't like your speech? Neither.
      I think people genuinely underestimate how dangerous a loss of free speech can be. The government deciding what is and isn't acceptable to say it's the first step to losing control of your government entirely.

    • @AntifascistAllDay
      @AntifascistAllDay Год назад +3

      Fraser quit simpin for Musk, its embarrassing.

    • @AntifascistAllDay
      @AntifascistAllDay Год назад +5

      You seem to be unaware of the rising fascism and increasing online hate speech.

    • @AntifascistAllDay
      @AntifascistAllDay Год назад +6

      @@tanaka173Ever hear of something called hate speech? Reasonable people can agree what speech is hateful or not, our problem seems to be a lack of reasonable people in control of our government because of capitalism.

  • @elijah_9392
    @elijah_9392 Год назад +3

    I was looking for who the individual on the far left (physically) was, then I realized that this is his channel lol.
    He speaks eloquently, confidently, yet respectfully. I respect that. He is not using charisma or a domineering approach to get his quotes accross. Rather, he addresses questions directly while acknowledging his source information and providing examples.

    • @johnbrzykcy3076
      @johnbrzykcy3076 Год назад

      I agree with you. Your comments about Alex are excellent.

  • @hayskig1226
    @hayskig1226 Год назад +9

    Speech you don’t like is free speech.

    • @OldGamerPapi
      @OldGamerPapi 3 месяца назад

      Wish more folks understood that

    • @criert135
      @criert135 3 месяца назад +1

      Exactly. I find the Quran and the Bible to be full of hateful and offensive speech. I would never argue that they should be banned.

    • @moralesj2239
      @moralesj2239 3 месяца назад

      @@criert135, hey can you provide one example of the Bible having hateful speech?
      And when we say hateful speech, I am assuming the example you provide will have one of several criteria needed to be called hate speech. And just to make sure we know what that is, hate speech is “abusive or threatening speech or writing that expresses prejudice on the basis of ethnicity, religion, sexual orientation, or similar grounds.”
      Please share when you have a chance

    • @AbsurdlyGeeky
      @AbsurdlyGeeky Месяц назад +3

      ​@moralesj2239 1 Samuel 15:2-3
      "2 This is what the Lord Almighty says: ‘I will punish the Amalekites for what they did to Israel when they waylaid them as they came up from Egypt. 3 Now go, attack the Amalekites and totally destroy all that belongs to them. Do not spare them; put to death men and women, children and infants, cattle and sheep, camels and donkeys.’”
      Commanding an ethnic genocide is hate speech under any reasonable definition. That's one example. The whole "murder men who have gay sex" thing is probably a better one, but I've gotta drop the Amalekites on Alex O'Connor's comment section.

    • @moralesj2239
      @moralesj2239 Месяц назад

      @@AbsurdlyGeeky I don’t know why God commanded entire peoples to be wiped out. However, I do know that the Amalekites and Israelites were at war with each other. It wasn’t based on ethnic targeting it was based on attacks made upon Israel. This wasn’t based on hate nor can it be hate speech. This was simply an act to ensure survival which was common for people with limited resources at that time as you can imagine.
      The good news is that God doesn’t exact punishment on anyone in the world today. He sent His one and only Son to die on a cross as payment to atone for our transgressions. No people are forsaken and can choose to believe that Christ is the savior and be saved thru believing. No Christian today believes that the Old Testament punishments could apply to us today after Christ paid the cost of our sins. So Christianity (the choice of living a Christ-like life) doesn’t look at any people and determine they need to be put to death. True Christianity does not support hate speech.

  • @theinternetoverdose
    @theinternetoverdose Год назад +12

    Glad to see you on a talk show other than Piers. You get to talk here without getting interrupted and shouted at. How nice.

  • @_moda-moda_
    @_moda-moda_ Год назад +15

    4:42 Host: That is a good point isn't it
    Alex: Yeah 😂😂😂

  • @baraharonovich2926
    @baraharonovich2926 Год назад +90

    Man Alex was spot on with that response. Hearing a Muslim speak about hate speech being banned is true irony. And giving the Christian bible as an example was perfect because it was both non-confrontational and confrontational at the same time.

    • @danielcrafter9349
      @danielcrafter9349 Год назад

      What a load of tosh you're insinuating!

    • @callum9999
      @callum9999 Год назад

      I think people like yourself are the perfect example of why hate speech needs to be controlled better. You don't seem particularly unpleasant - would I be right in assuming that you reducing a highly respected journalist and international aid worker down to "being a Muslim" (i.e. insinuating she holds a level of responsibility for what other people do just because she shares a similar faith) was unintentionally discriminatory? (Though I can't say I see the "true irony" even if we accept the premise that she's just "one of those Muslims". There's a big Islamic movement to stop the restriction of hate speech in the UK that I'm unaware of? Are you actually trying to say that you think Muslims say hateful things?)
      And no, that doesn't mean I support the police fostering their already fascist/authoritarian tendencies any further. You can address these things without locking people up.

    • @Paul2377
      @Paul2377 Год назад +13

      Agreed. I think he made a great point. Personally if someone started quoting the Bible at me on Twitter, I'd probably block them, but I wouldn't dream of trying to get them banned.

    • @pizzaboy4463
      @pizzaboy4463 Год назад +12

      He used the Bible as an example as it's an easy target, which underlies the fact the no on is allowed to criticise islam. The muslim woman has her way and wants to preserve it.

    • @wirbelchen5379
      @wirbelchen5379 Год назад

      @@pizzaboy4463 or whatever you want to believe

  • @Multihuntr0
    @Multihuntr0 Год назад +7

    I dunno if he was brought on to "debate free speech" and that's just what he prepared, but it was like watching two groups of people have two halves of different conversations. He spoke eloquently on why free speech is important, but didn't address the other guests concerns at all.
    The women were saying that there are some simple steps that social media companies could take to prevent obvious harms, and we should make them law. Alex responded by saying that free speech is important. That's a complete non-sequitur without the intervening argument that showing that what they were suggesting would impact free speech at all. Unless Alex has become a free speech absolutist while I wasn't watching?
    To me the most important thing said here was what Shaista Aziz (the lady on the right) said: "this is not as straightforward as it looks, and equally it is not as complex as the social media companies claim that it is". See: the Facebook papers. In which it was revealed that many of the procedures they put in place were shoddy and had no processes in place to make sure that they worked. Yes, not all problems can completely be solved, and there's edge cases where it gets hairy, but that doesn't mean there's absolutely nothing that can or should be done.

    • @baggelissonic
      @baggelissonic 21 день назад

      The woman on the left was trying to present this narrative that all problems can be fixed, which is why Alex, in his very limited time, tried to hammer down why that was ridiculous.
      When the woman on the right tried making more specific claims, the men on the left did in fact respond to those.
      They problem is that a lot of what the woman were talking about had a flawed basis and the men couldn't just ignore it.
      Take for example the claim that "removing automated search results is a 100% foolproof system since their only purpose is to clickbait people". The statement was so absurd and implied such a great misunderstanding of the entire topic and the way social media operates, that it was betteer to just start from the basics and try to reach a common ground.
      The issue thus lies with the fact that the 2 groups had the complete opposite of common ground. There was an inherent disagreement which needed to be cleared out at first.
      If you notice, it took over 10 minutes for the woman on the left to concede for the very first time that even well intended cencorship can have problems yet she still completely ignored that with her next point.
      It's like having a discussion, on whether video equipment should be used to regulate football matches, but one side was talking about american football 🏈 and the other was talking about soccer ⚽️. Obviously, they needed to first clear up and agree on some points, before continuing.

  • @carlbeeth
    @carlbeeth Год назад +81

    I do think making the social media companies liable for what they push in their recommendation engines would be a step in the right direction. This would still allow the users free speech but force the social media companies to somewhat rethink their recommendation system that frankly seems to push a lot of outrage content.

    • @gurigura4457
      @gurigura4457 Год назад

      No, because the moment the companies are in any way liable then they're going to be as careful as possible. Anything with even the slightest bit of potential to harm the company will be cut. Look how RUclips responded in the wake of Pewdiepie's bridge comment. It'd be like that but 1000-fold.
      Everything you see on social media is provided by an algorithm. There's no such thing as finding new content organically; Unless you already know when to find it then anything close to contriversial will be at best shadowbanned, and nobody will stumble upon it again.

    • @thecriticalgamer8462
      @thecriticalgamer8462 Год назад +13

      The recommendations are based on what people want to see though. No one at twitter or Google or Facebook are deciding what suggestions come up when you start to type something in, it's based on what other users are searching for. All the companies care about is making people stay on their sites for as long as possible and the way that's done is through engagement, all the recommendations are doing is reflecting what the users are currently engaged with. The reason extreme content is pushed is because that's what people are choosing to watch and search for. To change recommendations you would effectively have to monitor current trends 24/7 and if it was a trend they didn't like they would have to manually remove it. It's a completely impractical solution and wouldn't actually solve anything imo

    • @JP-sm4cs
      @JP-sm4cs Год назад +2

      Or you just have a neutral search bar with no suggestions as you type and make it so if people want reccomendations they have to create that list themselves.

    • @BDnevernind
      @BDnevernind Год назад +18

      ​@@thecriticalgamer8462It's like you don't even hear that you are saying. We all understand how it works, and people are saying the thing you wish to protect (addiction algorithms) are bad and not a matter of free speech since it's a company using others' speech against the interests of its own users, on behalf of ite customers (advertisers). More power and freedom to the people, screw the algorithms.

    • @thecriticalgamer8462
      @thecriticalgamer8462 Год назад +2

      @@JP-sm4cs it wouldn't make any difference. If it still searches key terms and presents recommended matches, they would still show content that may be untrue regardless of whether it appears in a search bar recommendation or not.
      Let's take the Huw Edwards example. For a few days there was rampant speculation on who was at the center of a scandal at the BBC so if you typed 'bbc scandal' even if there were no recommendations while you typed, all the content it then displayed would be people speculating on who it is. If you typed 'BBC presenter scandal', you would see videos with names of presenters in the titles, it's then on the user to decide which content to watch but the content presented would still be determined by key terms and what other users are putting on the platform. It literally wouldn't solve anything, it's just a silly suggestion to be honest.

  • @valmid5069
    @valmid5069 Год назад +6

    Cant wait for more content from your channel, Alex!

  • @geekexmachina
    @geekexmachina Год назад +19

    I often find these thing difficult t watch, as its very hard to work out the purpose for these shows given how very brief they are. As good and eloquent as you were I wonder what sort of an impact this discussion will have on peoples overall lives....

    • @SynphamyMusic
      @SynphamyMusic Год назад +3

      At the very least it's a great example to show people of what a civil discussion looks like without screaming obscenities and flinging your phone across the room because someone thinks differently.

    • @kj_H65f
      @kj_H65f Год назад +7

      ​@@SynphamyMusicimo thats a pathetically low bar though.
      Nowhere was any policy actually discussed, and I feel like they weren't even allowed to really go into detail on any one topic.
      What IS free speech? What IS harmful? Ought there be any laws at all with respect to speech? And even if we come away with answers to that, the philosophy is still only as interesting as it pertains to actual policy.
      Just seemed like a lot of disparate points being shared by different people with no real direction.
      The bottom line takeaway from this is "wow I guess there's a lot of debate on whether or not we should further regulate speech online." Thats... I mean I guess its good for someone tragically uninformed but its not enough of you want to actually come away with more of an idea of how to look at the problem or how to determine if there even is a problem to begin with.
      I don't know. I'm glad Alex is getting some airtime but I can't say I have a lot of praise for the BBC unless their goal is to entertain and make viewers feel informed. If thats the case they're doing a pretty good job.

    • @lukesaville6992
      @lukesaville6992 Год назад +2

      @@kj_H65f Yeah I would say the BBC wants to preserve some sembalnce of impartiality even in debates like these, and would rather encourage the viewers themselves to ascertain which points are more persuasive. And whilst It was quite a directionless, short form discussion which didn't really have room for proper cross-examining and conclusions, I don't fault it much for that - entertainment and informing should be what public broadcasting aims for.

    • @SynphamyMusic
      @SynphamyMusic Год назад

      @@kj_H65f Is not a low bar at all. Most of the people on twitter or Reddit are completely incapable of coping with any opposing view to their own.

    • @johnbrzykcy3076
      @johnbrzykcy3076 Год назад

      @@SynphamyMusic Thanks. Excellent comments regarding the example of a great "civil discussion". I'm a Christian believer and I tend to agree with you.
      Respectfully from Florida

  • @thegrunbeld6876
    @thegrunbeld6876 Год назад +1

    Dang! That is one elegant display of disagreement on TV. Now I want every debate to be hosted in this manner.

  • @dusty3913
    @dusty3913 Год назад +4

    Alex makes the most cogent point here: who decides and defines the character of the speech, and would a holy book that preaches hate be deemed acceptable by virtue of its historic privilege.

  • @mr.sniffles7268
    @mr.sniffles7268 Год назад +44

    After watching this debate, I can say with confidence I have no idea where I sit on this issue. You guys started mentioning sources and the interviewer was like "yep, time's up." I fell like if you all had another 10 minutes or so, we could have gotten somewhere

    • @tomm8120
      @tomm8120 Год назад +3

      Yeah I feel like it was a good surface level debate that could've invited a deeper discussion on the topic if given more time. Like you, I don't know what to think as of yet on the topic of 'free speech' on social media, but I value seeing these types of civil debates with guests from divergent sides of the discussion.

    • @Sednas
      @Sednas Год назад +1

      ​@@tomm8120it's quite simple in my opinion. If you regulate free speech, you get people like the 15 year old in Britain who was prosecuted (with charges later dropped due to the high publicity) for calling Scientology a cult.

    • @gaybowser4967
      @gaybowser4967 Год назад

      ​@@Sednas...what does this mean?

    • @Sednas
      @Sednas Год назад

      @@gaybowser4967 forgot two words

    • @baggelissonic
      @baggelissonic 21 день назад

      The right side had completely surface level arguements. If they continued, Alex would have probably demolished every claim by explaining how search engines actually work and also by mentioning the countless papers that direectly disprove the sociology claims they were making.

  • @exiledfrommyself
    @exiledfrommyself Год назад +8

    All these social media companies should have their own code of ethics where people are not being defamed. If they don't have a code of ethics then people should be allowed to sue the platforms for defamation.

    • @MrVvulf
      @MrVvulf Год назад +1

      I'd argue social media creates a " virtual town square".
      If you or I were to defame someone in a "real" town square, they could take us to court for slander.
      Right now, existing law allow you to sue someone who slanders you online. (So I agree with you, but so do existing laws).
      This should have been brought up in the discussion.
      I do agree, hesitantly, that the social media algorithms should not "suggest" names and associate them with potentially harmful stories simply because they work at an organization where allegations are a hot topic.
      The fix for that is probably to allow a defamed individual to sue the social media platform itself for slander.
      We might be surprised how quickly the social media sites would find a fix for their algorithms when they face 10,000 lawsuits.

    • @GigaBoost
      @GigaBoost Год назад

      No.

  • @looeegee
    @looeegee Год назад +9

    Man Alex I really respect and admire all the effort you do to have an unbiased and logical way of thinking in a time where many people dont like their ideas to be challenged and would rather follow their political agendas, blinding themselves from the truth.

  • @theyonlycomeoutwhenitsquiet
    @theyonlycomeoutwhenitsquiet Год назад +5

    Herding wildcat topics like this without fur flying is an absolute achievement in this day and age. Well done. I’m so glad decisions do not lie solely with me.

  • @tanthepostman245
    @tanthepostman245 3 месяца назад +2

    The classic “I believe in free speech but” line is my favorite.

  • @Keeks749
    @Keeks749 Год назад +5

    Hitch mkii is starting to assume its final form. All the heat, less of the fire. Keep it up Alex.

  • @PalaHz
    @PalaHz Год назад +6

    "O daughter Babylon, you devastator! Happy shall they be who pay you back what you have done to us! Happy shall they be who take your little ones and dash them against the rock!"(Psalm 137:8-9 NRSV)
    Basically being happy killing "little ones"

    • @arthurmartinson4370
      @arthurmartinson4370 Год назад

      Don't forget: Therefore kill all that are of the male sex, even of the children: and put to death the women, that have carnally known men. But the girls, and all the women that are virgins save for yourselves. (Numbers 31:17-18)

    • @johnlove2954
      @johnlove2954 Год назад

      Based

  • @KHABIB-TIME
    @KHABIB-TIME Год назад +2

    Around a thousand years ago Imam Muhammad Al Ghazali told story of a man walking in the jungle. A roaring lion ran towards him and the man ran as fast as he could to escape from it. He noticed a well in front of him and he jumped inside hoping to escape from the lion. As he was falling inside the well, he grabbed onto the rope and saved himself. The man was so relieved but when he looked down he saw a big snake at the bottom of the well. It had its jaws wide open ready to swallow him up. The man then looked up and saw two mice nibbling at the rope. A black mouse and a white were both chewing into the rope. The scary lion was still prowling outside the well. The man's heart was pounding as he wondered how he could escape from this. Then he noticed a honeycomb in front of him which had delicious honey dripping from it. He stuck his finger into the honey and put it inside his mouth. It was delicious and for a moment he forgot about the lion, the snake and the two mice chewing at the rope. Imam Ghazali explained that the lion is like the angel of death which is always looming above us. The snake was like his grave which all humans will face. The black mouse and white mouse were like the day and night which are always nibbling at our life (the rope). The honey was like this dunya (this temporal world) which with its momentary sweetness makes us forget the death and the eternal life.

  • @nattoasga2996
    @nattoasga2996 Год назад +3

    Very good job by the moderator trying to give voice to all of them

  • @KieranLeCam
    @KieranLeCam Год назад +25

    To the people in the comments, a civilised debate can be a sign we're not digging deep enough into people's beliefs, which will obviously ignite passions. We just can't allow, on the flipside, a debate to grow out of control. A healthy balance of pushing for answers, and respect for other people's boundaries is what debates need to actually tackle people's real fears, and hopes, and complex ideas.

    • @lingardinho2956
      @lingardinho2956 Год назад

      They’re all npc’s

    • @KieranLeCam
      @KieranLeCam Год назад +3

      @@lingardinho2956 it's the TV format that's the issue.

    • @johnbrzykcy3076
      @johnbrzykcy3076 Год назад +2

      @@KieranLeCam But what do you mean by "ignite passions". I like to hear discussions that indeed dig "deep enough into people's beliefs" but I dislike strongly confrontational debates and constant judgmental attitudes.
      By the way, I'm a Christian believer. I like how you said "respect for other people's boundaries..." Excellent.
      Respectfully from Florida

    • @KieranLeCam
      @KieranLeCam Год назад +3

      @@johnbrzykcy3076 if passion is tempered by understanding and love for your opposition, then it can reign free in all other respects. There is no judgment in Understanding. I hope your day is blessed! :)

    • @johnbrzykcy3076
      @johnbrzykcy3076 Год назад +3

      @@KieranLeCam Thanks for the great comments. What you said is something important to ponder.
      Blessings to you too.

  • @lukefreeman9564
    @lukefreeman9564 Год назад +11

    Hello Alex. How are you?

  • @samppawest
    @samppawest Год назад +20

    A killer example, Alex!

    • @HarryNicNicholas
      @HarryNicNicholas Год назад

      oddly ( and i didn't know i would quote this so i've forgotten the citation) but a religious group in the states got some books banned from the local library, but then another group (possibly the satanic temple, who do really good work in the community and actually act as a secular body) got the bible banned using exactly the same ruling, violence and sex (read ezekiel 23:14 then bear in mind they give this book to children.)

  • @409raul
    @409raul Год назад +3

    Love the host. Unbiased and gave everyone their turn to speak in a respectful manner!

  • @malteeaser101
    @malteeaser101 11 месяцев назад +1

    Who cares if something is hateful or hurtful? We should argue against these people and call them everything under the sun, but never ban them from saying it

  • @zaephou2843
    @zaephou2843 Год назад +4

    So happy to see you get more recognition 😁

  • @Im_that_guy_man
    @Im_that_guy_man Год назад +11

    would have loved to have seen the girl with the veil on to have answered alex's question. because we both know if you can't quote a homophobic line from the bible, surely that will extend to other holybooks :)

    • @andrewdouglas1963
      @andrewdouglas1963 Год назад

      They say truth hurts but as long as it's not foul language, should it really be censored?

    • @johnbrzykcy3076
      @johnbrzykcy3076 Год назад

      @@andrewdouglas1963 I'm a Christian believer and I don't think the "truth" that hurts should be "censored". I'm a sensitive person but I need to learn to respect people with other beliefs because "I don't know it all".
      Thanks for sharing. Respectfully

  • @JohanJonasson
    @JohanJonasson Год назад +6

    Well done. And a great segment.

  • @HarryNicNicholas
    @HarryNicNicholas Год назад +1

    if you watch a handful of audit videos what is painfully obvious is that neither in the UK or america folks have no idea what the declaration of human rights says or what the constitution says, they have listened with one ear and then made up crap with the chinese whisper to suit, i think an episode going through both would be enormously beneficial, everyone needs educating on what rights we actually have and have not.

  • @JustOccult
    @JustOccult Год назад +4

    This was such a good video. That Leviticus line was perfect

  • @sadekomar
    @sadekomar Год назад +12

    Alex: Even if we decide to regulate, we cannot trust a single person/entity to be the arbiter.
    Shyster: Yeah, but social media companies are like media companies and they need to make regulations.
    🤣🤣🤣🤣

    • @murph8411
      @murph8411 Год назад

      Everybody likes free speech limits as long as they aren’t having their views or voices limited. It’s all great while liberal, minority and feminist viewpoints seem to be in the ascendancy and any right wing views are being derided in a lot of the mainstream media but as soon as things start changing I’d bet that any censorship would suddenly become wrong in many people’s view.

    • @Schmidtelpunkt
      @Schmidtelpunkt Год назад

      @@murph8411 Don't you wonder why when it comes to hate speech, it is always the right whining, while everybody else only gets a problem, when speech is censored for no valid reason at all? Is it maybe because... only the right requires to narrow in on some enemy to make their propaganda work?

    • @GS44691
      @GS44691 Год назад +4

      @@murph8411 Yeah mate, like that famous liberal/minority/feminist 'Don't say Gay' bill we've heard so much about. Or the book banning/burning epidemic etc.

    • @bardoomguy
      @bardoomguy 7 месяцев назад

      @@GS44691 Oh no, gender ideology and CRT won't be as strongly pushed on kids. Very sad

  • @imextremlyhandsome
    @imextremlyhandsome Год назад +6

    Damn alex you killed it. Good job.

  • @tommysmith5479
    @tommysmith5479 Год назад +3

    Before watching this, I was an advocate of curtailing misinformation. And after hearing the thoughts of Alex and the man sitting next to him, I've genuinely changed my mind. However, there's no denying that once something false is in the public domain, it's hard to wipe that from people's consciousness - even if there are subsequently great videos/speeches/interviews/etc that present the truth.

    • @AdamJones381
      @AdamJones381 8 месяцев назад +1

      Glad to see that you are considering the free speech position. I would add that there are costs to Free Speech, like the one you mentioned. I think it is preferable to other option where their is a person or group in control of censorship.

    • @baggelissonic
      @baggelissonic 21 день назад

      Alex didn't have the time to fully express his opinion. He is not a free speech absolutist, he just wanted to be absolutely clear that cencorship doesn't magically solve all of society's problem. Obviously, some regulations should be at place (and there are already 100s of them, unlike what the women in the panel would want you to believe).
      Just wanted to make absolutely clear that Alex is NOT saying that being able to absolutely anything without repercussions is right.

  • @JohnDelong-qm9iv
    @JohnDelong-qm9iv 5 месяцев назад +2

    These debates show the stark contrast between male vs female attitudes toward issues.

    • @tulpas93
      @tulpas93 3 месяца назад

      😂

    • @andromeda4995
      @andromeda4995 Месяц назад

      Absolutely 0 sense of responsibility from women. Yeah you don't like something? Well go educate people about it or you're FREE to do a boycott for companies to implement whatever it is you want, instead of trying to get the government to do so

  • @TheBigMaxYT
    @TheBigMaxYT 3 месяца назад

    I love that the woman on the right only spoke up once to say “well, mean stuff doesn’t count as free speech” and was immediately shut down by the entire panel.

  • @MrMurkosullivan
    @MrMurkosullivan Год назад +5

    'Yeah! That's his opinion... urrggg' Hahahahahhahaha ..... its like we heard the direct feed from the scared producer screaming in his ear.

  • @CLaw-tb5gg
    @CLaw-tb5gg Год назад +7

    I think that people who talk about free speech put an astonishing amount of faith in the mob; if one wants to talk about history, relying on the mob to decide what's true and what isn't also hasn't tended to produce terribly positive results, on the level of mass hysterias, pogroms and witch-burnings. "The mob is the mother of tyrants", in the words of Diogenes.
    The central problem is that we live in a singularly narcissistic age in which every person is convinced they have all the knowledge they'll ever require already, everything they believe is completely faultless, and all they're interested in doing is yelling their point of view at other people. All respect for experts or intellectuals is dead, unless they happen to parrot what you already believe. And this creates memetic monsters, because there's no experts to check these people's nonsense. I dread to think where it'll all end.

    • @Chronically_ChiII
      @Chronically_ChiII Год назад +1

      The mob is dangerous but when we're talking about free speech, we aren't talking about burning cars or people.

    • @danielcrafter9349
      @danielcrafter9349 Год назад

      ​@@Chronically_ChiII- aren't you? Something about boats, and letting people drown?

    • @nodruj8681
      @nodruj8681 Год назад

      Wait you.. some that believes in establishment talking points is making a disingenuous argument to keep the silencing of dissidents.. I am truly shocked. Lefties never change.

    • @Chronically_ChiII
      @Chronically_ChiII Год назад

      @@danielcrafter9349 I'm not following.
      Are you talking about the migrant crisis?

    • @CLaw-tb5gg
      @CLaw-tb5gg Год назад

      @@Chronically_ChiII The vast, vast majority of the time when people say "free speech" these days they're not talking about actual free speech in any sort of political, philosophical sense as they might have done 20 or 30 years ago though. They might *pretend* they are, but herein lies the problem.
      "Free speech" as a phrase has metamorphosed itself infrto that same category of political bullshit occupied by words like "freedom" and "equality" where people's selfish desires are rebranded as something much more altruistic and humanistic; people who talk about "freedom" inevitably don't give a shit about or actively resist things like abortion or LGBT rights (freedom for me but not for you, apparently); people who talk about "equality" tend to be in favour of things like affirmative action, etc.
      People who talk about "free speech" pretty much always seem completely disinterested in anyone's speech but their own and anyone who agrees with them. Memorably, a free speech-head once told me that the Left shouldn't have free speech because it "doesn't apply to Marxist propaganda".
      It's even drifting past this into the realms of becoming basically meaningless, such as recently when a coffee company decided to pull its advertising from GB News because presumably they didn't want to be associated with the channel and the ever-tiresome Laurence Fox described the act as "an attack on free speech"(?). I'm not really sure how that works.
      For the average free speech maniac these days, "free speech" seems to mean "I get to say whatever I want, nobody is allowed to criticise me, and I am free of all consequences of my speech". Which is the exact opposite of free speech, given that *free speech is allowed to everyone else, including everyone to criticise you*.
      I really don't like Noam Chomsky, but he was bang on with this quote:
      "Goebbels was in favor of free speech for views he liked. So was Stalin. If you’re really in favor of free speech, then you’re in favor of freedom of speech for precisely the views you despise. Otherwise, you’re not in favor of free speech."
      If you don't want Communists and drag queens giving speeches to 8-year-olds, you're not in favour of free speech. You just want to be able to post the N-word on Twitter. That's not being in favour of free speech, that's just beign a jackass.

  • @kawasakiwhiptwo5821
    @kawasakiwhiptwo5821 Год назад +20

    The host did a great job.

  • @RetroGamerTy
    @RetroGamerTy Год назад +1

    When he brought up about connecting names to anonymous accounts, first thing I thought of was South Park and troll hunter. Great discussion

  • @huwpickering3685
    @huwpickering3685 Год назад +15

    When I consider that Alex is all of 6 months older than myself, I feel both inspired and humbled. That someone of my generation can be so clear-minded and articulate, and that the same person expresses a minority opinion so dauntlessly.

    • @johnbrzykcy3076
      @johnbrzykcy3076 Год назад

      I don't know Alex's age but I agree with you. He inspires me too although I could probably be his grandfather.
      Peace to you from Florida...

    • @azula3906
      @azula3906 9 месяцев назад

      How old is he?

    • @jamesdettmann94
      @jamesdettmann94 8 месяцев назад

      ​@@azula390624, born in March 1999

  • @zekdom
    @zekdom Год назад +12

    It’s amusing that the moderator told Alex, “That’s just your opinion.”
    Then later on, when the moderator was talking about a link, Alex cited a study refuting the link.
    In response, the moderator was like, “Okay…”

    • @diabl2master
      @diabl2master 8 месяцев назад +1

      Moderator said "that's his opinion" because Alex mentioned China and everyone is terrified of angering the Chinese Communist Party in some way so moderator pre-empts Alex's statement even before he's said anything

  • @martimfreecss8311
    @martimfreecss8311 Год назад +3

    This was a very nice discussion!

  • @Wickerless
    @Wickerless Год назад +1

    What respectful discussion, it was a delight to watch.

    • @KHABIB-TIME
      @KHABIB-TIME Год назад

      Around a thousand years ago Imam Muhammad Al Ghazali told story of a man walking in the jungle. A roaring lion ran towards him and the man ran as fast as he could to escape from it. He noticed a well in front of him and he jumped inside hoping to escape from the lion. As he was falling inside the well, he grabbed onto the rope and saved himself. The man was so relieved but when he looked down he saw a big snake at the bottom of the well. It had its jaws wide open ready to swallow him up. The man then looked up and saw two mice nibbling at the rope. A black mouse and a white were both chewing into the rope. The scary lion was still prowling outside the well. The man's heart was pounding as he wondered how he could escape from this. Then he noticed a honeycomb in front of him which had delicious honey dripping from it. He stuck his finger into the honey and put it inside his mouth. It was delicious and for a moment he forgot about the lion, the snake and the two mice chewing at the rope. Imam Ghazali explained that the lion is like the angel of death which is always looming above us. The snake was like his grave which all humans will face. The black mouse and white mouse were like the day and night which are always nibbling at our life (the rope). The honey was like this dunya (this temporal world) which with its momentary sweetness makes us forget the death and the eternal life.

    • @johnbrzykcy3076
      @johnbrzykcy3076 Год назад

      @@KHABIB-TIME WOW !! Excellent story. I like it. In fact, I should print out this story. I don't quite see how this story relates to the discussion about censorship and free speech. But I'm glad you posted it.
      By the way, I'm not Muslim but a Christian believer. Respectfully from Florida

    • @KHABIB-TIME
      @KHABIB-TIME Год назад

      @@johnbrzykcy3076 😀 Hello, I didn't have anything good to say so I thought I'll just share this instead. I am a Muslim and I believe in Jesus upon whom be peace. We believe in miraculous birth, we believe he did miracles with the permission of The One true God, we believe Jesus is the messiah and the mighty prophet. We love him, respect him revere him and submit and surrender our own will, to the Will of The One Creator who sent him. Thank you.

  • @zombiefireman
    @zombiefireman 3 месяца назад

    Great discussion. Your clarification on the free speech/social conflict studies is probably not as too strongly overstated as you cite yourself for, but kudos for checking yourself on that point.

  • @martin2289
    @martin2289 Год назад +17

    Um, the "lab leak theory" is not, as the guy in the yellow shirt asserted "on the balance of probabilities true" irrespective of what "most people" would supposedly say.

    • @matt69nice
      @matt69nice Год назад +6

      Some people can't help but blurt out their underlying intentions behind making a certain argument

    • @nodruj8681
      @nodruj8681 Год назад +2

      @@matt69nice You leftist really still coping on this issue? jesus christ let it go ahaha

    • @philvogelfilms
      @philvogelfilms Год назад +4

      Yeah, that was an odd little slip

    • @JP-sm4cs
      @JP-sm4cs Год назад +10

      Yeah the second guy on the left was just "I like freedom of speech because it let's me spread BS conspiracies"

    • @christophermonteith2774
      @christophermonteith2774 Год назад

      I'd say otherwise, but do explain why it isn't the most likely case, genuinely. The other options seem to be that it just happened without cause, or that someone ate some wonky meat and spread it as a result, or the far more ridiculous intentional cause conspiracy theory takes. So, yeah, a freakish accident does seem more likely, though wouldn't rule out a rapid evolution of some pre-existing virus, as that is a thing, but it doesn't seem as likely to just have happened without being detected and intervened

  • @markrodeo420
    @markrodeo420 Год назад +4

    Everyone is complementing how this discussion is being presented, but even though it’s nice to see a respectful discussion this fails in the way that mainstream news always has with these little segments. They have no time to get into anything. Alex asks the woman on the right if it’s hate speech to quote the Bible about homosexuality, and then they just move on without her answer. When these kind of debates were all you’d ever see, it was infuriating because people on both sides would always think they won. It always mfelt like they were subliminally telling everyone that every issue was some complex unsolvable problem there just wasn’t enough time to figure out.

    • @Paul2377
      @Paul2377 Год назад +1

      I think it's a fascinating subject with no easy answers. For example, I think someone quoting the bible to denounce homosexuality without aiming it at anyone in particular should be allowed under freedom of speech. But if someone repeatedly targets a gay person with homophobic bible passages I personally think that falls under harassment and not freedom of speech. But I know plenty would still say the latter is OK under freedom of speech.

    • @alexanderfreeman
      @alexanderfreeman Год назад

      Word. Even though I like how civil it remained, the format was poorly suited for exploring the issue at hand.

  • @Ma55ey
    @Ma55ey Год назад +6

    The hard thing is that those people who want tighter control on what people are allowed to say online, only really mean it for those people who disagree with them..

    • @hsmd4533
      @hsmd4533 Год назад +2

      You’re exactly right

  • @robcampion9917
    @robcampion9917 Год назад +2

    I find a lot of times when people think they are talking about free speech, they are actually talking about freedom of consequence.

  • @holdmusic_
    @holdmusic_ 8 месяцев назад +1

    "Who decides what is mysogynistic, who decides what is homophobic, who decides what is racist" has to be one of the most stupid things I've ever heard someone say

    • @tonyisnotdead
      @tonyisnotdead 4 месяца назад

      why is it stupid

    • @holdmusic_
      @holdmusic_ 4 месяца назад

      @@tonyisnotdead because it's the sort of statement a pseudo intellectual makes without actually saying anything, and idiots think it's clever. It's not exactly difficult to objectively define what is mysogynistic, homophobic or racist. It's called 'discrimination.' Fragile, poorly educated people want to be disgusting to everyone, so they're the sort of people who get triggered by stuff like this. Case in point.

  • @macdougdoug
    @macdougdoug Год назад +11

    Is Alex a free speech absolutist? I would like to hear an intelligent argument about the notions of freedom and responsibility.

  • @TheWayOfRespectAndKindness
    @TheWayOfRespectAndKindness Год назад +6

    The only way to stop hate speech is to make it non profitable. Don’t respond to it. When it pops up in your feed, don’t eat it. Just select “don’t recommend this channel” or the equivalent in whatever platform you’re using. I used to think “I have to respond to this.” It took me awhile to realize that I don’t have to respond. Think of social media as being a child; if you give it attention for bad behavior, it will behave badly.

    • @Paul2377
      @Paul2377 Год назад +1

      It's a great suggestion but I think you know as well as I do that sadly most people struggle to do that, and that's why click baiting videos and grifters/trolls exist. They want to make it so people feel they *have* to reply and few can resist the urge.

  • @Musix4me-Clarinet
    @Musix4me-Clarinet 3 месяца назад +1

    I do agree that the anchor worked hard to spread the time around. Good for him. I also agree that free speech is a complicated idea, but also that it does need at least some oversight. I think it is reasonable that individuals and companies who willfully disseminate misinformation, defame people, and spew hate speech, for example, can be prosecuted and _lose their right to "free" speech,_ at least temporarily, if not permanently.
    I've always believed that "free speech" was to protect your right to object to government rule. I've never equated free speech with a right to attack people publicly with malice and misinformation. You should have a right to express your views, but I should have a right to _not be attacked_ with unsubstantiated claims and misinformation.

  • @Epoch11
    @Epoch11 3 месяца назад +1

    You can label anything as hate speech. Speech should be protected no matter what as long as it is not a direct incitement to violence. It's about the protection of the speech that you hate and wish did not exist, rather than the speech you agree with wholeheartedly. I wish people would understand this.

  • @ZeldaKid5000
    @ZeldaKid5000 Год назад +30

    Felt like despite the presenter trying his best to create a dialogue between the two sides, each kept coming back to the talking points they really wanted to get out there.
    Alex's point about "who decides what is free speech" is a fair one, but I don't think he really tried to address the point about social media alogirthms, and what disastrous concequences their current unregulated state can create. Requiring social media companies to put a rule in place where public figures can't be linked to pedophillia scandals on the search results before it's verified is more than fair enough, and will not do anything to curtail people's free speech.

    • @furrycannon
      @furrycannon Год назад +1

      The algorithms question didnt need answering. Its a fundemental part of the internet, it knows what you're looking for and gives it to you. Its not speech and they would be no problem if we could have spoke the truth in the first place.

    • @ahampurushahasmi6040
      @ahampurushahasmi6040 Год назад +7

      The algorithms are automated based on searches of the person using the account and the searches among popularized searches. You cannot create a specific algorithm that exclusively bans certain forms of linkage because computers do not understand language in the same way humans do. For example, let us take your example:
      Say you want to a rule that forces a filter on any searches linking pedophilia to public figures:
      This is again done by automation to look for keywords.
      Think of searches that say "this celebrity NOT a pedophile". That is one exception to account for. Now think of millions of others that these filters would need to be applied to. What's more, algorithms do not only apply for specific scenarios. Filtering search results may actually detach users from relevant spheres of discussion, even if it is biased.
      Lastly, what exactly do you mean by "verified". This might sound like deliberate ignorance, but without an objective standard, how would you even expect social media companies to create an algorithm to account for this? Do you mean the result of a court case? What if the court ruled wrongly?
      Filtering any search result is tough because virtually no search exists in isolation. Information and misinformation are hardly ever isolated; social media platforms emulsify them. Restrictions access to "unverified" claims quite inevitably lead to the restriction of many verified ones; rather, the verification
      A rule does not make some thing or another viable.
      How about, instead of a filter that prevents certain searches from appearing, the posts with the links be flagged. That way people can at least know to take the post with a grain of salt.

    • @rorke6092
      @rorke6092 Год назад

      Social media is already hyper regulated and censored and the government itself has contacts in all big tech companies to pull down what they deem "misinformation", even within the US. Dozens of government agencies were literally telling twitter to take down or boost accounts based on its own whims and Twitter was complying. Not because they were legally obliged to do so, but because they are financially and ideologically aligned with the censorious aspects of US government. No, it is absolutely not fair to prevent the truth from spreading just because it hasn't been "verified" however you think that works in your little totalitarian mind. The government and social media should not be the arbiters or authorities of "truth". That caused countless deaths during COVID and is utterly incompatible and disgusting to a democratic society.

    • @rorke6092
      @rorke6092 Год назад

      your regime would be basically Pravda. Your regime would prevent us from discussing the atrocities committed during the iraq war or the lies the government told us leading up to it, because it's "disinformation" or "not confirmed" by the US government. Just say you don't believe in free speech. Don't pretend you have some special exception to free speech where actually we do need the government or social media to decide for us what is or isn't true and then censor us based on that.

    • @bengreen171
      @bengreen171 Год назад +2

      @@ahampurushahasmi6040
      I don't think that's the point she was making. The fact is that it's the algorithm that suggests the topic of the search - so all you need to do is stop it from giving people ideas they didn't already hold.
      People seem to think it's some sort of human right to have access to gossip. It's not.

  • @gajxo
    @gajxo Год назад +3

    Alex, I'm not convinced by your argument for free speech absolutism, which I understand basically as 'Since there is no objective arbiter of speech, then it shouldn't be an arbiter at all." (It sounds a lot like Christopher Hitchens' argument).
    Why is this a problem when in many other areas of life we do submit to limitations on our freedom based solely on the subjective will of the majority in our states. You can argue that this is wrong in principle, but it's practically impossible to avoid being limited by the society we are born into.
    So why should speech be the one area where we should care about absolute freedom?

    • @johnbrzykcy3076
      @johnbrzykcy3076 Год назад

      You make a valid point. I especially liked when you said " we do submit to limitations on our freedom based solely on the subjective will of the majority in our states."
      I'm a Christian believer but I highly respect the scholarly views of Alex. For me, "free speech" and "free will" are very complex issues. I think there is a strong correlation between free will and free speech. But does our subjective "free will" encourage the understanding of the issue of "free speech" ?
      What do you think? Respectfully from Florida

  • @naturealbums
    @naturealbums Год назад +11

    Alex being ultra nice quoting Leviticus and not the Quran/Hadiths as an example so as to be gentle on the muslim lady what a gentleman. I'm curious though how she would have taken it. You can literally get accused of hate/Islamophobia just simply quoting immoral text from Hadith/Quran.

  • @reverendayglow
    @reverendayglow 3 месяца назад +1

    Alex's question, "Should I Be Banned For Quoting the Bible?" seemed to be brushed aside with a complete non-sequitur. Maybe it was regarded rhetorically as a statement rather than a question.

  • @Munrubenmuz
    @Munrubenmuz Год назад +1

    Can't see how social media shouldn't be subjected to the same laws the press are.

    • @baggelissonic
      @baggelissonic 21 день назад

      They very much have laws. The women made it sound like it's a no rules zone, but that's 100% untrue. There are a lot of regulations and international laws that have very severe punishments if social media companies are not dilligent enough when moderating their websites. Regardless of whether the laws in place should reflect the speicifc regulations that apply to the general media, the narratice that there are no laws in place is absolutely asburd.

  • @RJGMorris
    @RJGMorris Год назад +8

    I always find the "who gets to decide what you can and can't say " argument flawed. It's like saying "who gets to decide what laws can and can't get passed". The government, obviously, and if they pass unjust laws we protest and vote them out.

    • @Rogstin
      @Rogstin Год назад +1

      Yes, fundamentally, it is just an issue of the balance between the individual and the community they are a part of. It's all very complicated because there are billions of us in thousands of communities and our political institutions are legacy ones that are slow to adapt and innovate.
      We just have to account for the flaws of reality when it comes to government at various levels.

    • @Paul2377
      @Paul2377 Год назад +1

      I think you raise a good point in the context of social media. Surely the site owner gets to say what can and can't be said because they make the rules that people agree to when they sign up.

    • @alexrdy1986
      @alexrdy1986 Год назад +3

      And what if the government gets to decide and it decides to ban speech against itself. How do you expect to vote them out?

    • @RJGMorris
      @RJGMorris Год назад +3

      @@alexrdy1986 What if the government makes a law that bans the act of protesting? That would be a bad law. But just because they have the power to pass unjust laws, that does not mean they should not be able to pass any laws. If you say they don't have the power to pass unjust laws because there are checks and balances to prevent that, then I would say the same about your question.

    • @suckieduckie
      @suckieduckie Год назад

      You fundamentally misunderstand what is meant by that. People say stuff like we have to censore hate speech!
      Who gets to decide what is hateful? Critical theorist Robin Di Angelo has written in her book 'white fragility', which was recommended by absolutely everyone in the wake of George Floyd, that if a white person and a black person have any interaction it is not the question IF the white person is racist, but WHERE.
      That would mean that if it's up to Robin Di Angelo, white people should not be allowed to interact with black people online because that would be racist and therefore hatespeech.

  • @alanwebb9438
    @alanwebb9438 Год назад +3

    He deflected the bible quotation point reallll quick 😂

  • @nadirakyildiz8857
    @nadirakyildiz8857 Год назад +3

    Thus is the danger of censorship:
    At 5:39 the journalist says "I believe in free speech but X Y Z is not free speech".
    So she decides what free speech is and criminalised the rest of society who fall outside her definition.

  • @X-Bones
    @X-Bones 6 месяцев назад +1

    Alex got interrupted constantly while the opposition got way more speaking time and even got the final word. I think the debate should be less about free speech and more about if we should care what mainstream outlets have to say about it.

  • @jc_alpha
    @jc_alpha 7 месяцев назад +1

    10:33 “Let’s be clear. Racism, misogyny, and homophobia is not free speech, and everybody knows that, quite frankly.”
    Ugh, it’s so frustrating to watch dumb, shallow-minded people speak 🙄

  • @william7696
    @william7696 Год назад +5

    Alex is getting so much better on these shows the more he does them

    • @johnbrzykcy3076
      @johnbrzykcy3076 Год назад

      I'm a Christian believer and I tend to agree with you. Respectfully

    • @william7696
      @william7696 Год назад

      @@johnbrzykcy3076 lol k

  • @sauachhi8471
    @sauachhi8471 Год назад +10

    Love your videos. Keep up the good work. Lots of love and appreciation from Bangladesh😊❤❤❤❤❤❤❤👏👏👏👏👏👏😘😘😘😘😘

    • @faridayasmin1701
      @faridayasmin1701 Год назад

      hey there fellow bangladeshi, glad youre learning

  • @andrewprahst2529
    @andrewprahst2529 Год назад +1

    I've been conditioned to "find the unreasonable person" in the beginning bits of any discussion, but I wasn't given that person this time around.

  • @claws_3200
    @claws_3200 6 месяцев назад

    Ah yes, I hated it when a search bar made up lies, trashed my reputation, ruined my prospects, and killed my family.

  • @langedarm1775
    @langedarm1775 Год назад +5

    i feel like no matter what argument youre gonna give those ladies, their answer is: why dont these companies follow my specific ideas?
    e.g. if you were to ask them 'do you want to reduce defamation on the internet' they'd probably answer yes.
    but when you then tell them that a study has shown that their made up regulation will increase defamation they just ignore it and repeat 'why arent they regulating yet'
    they just told you why...