Two big reasons my generation hates free speech - YouTube

Channel: Rebel News

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If you didn't know by now, let me tell you. I'm a free speech absolutist.
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That means I believe in the freedom of expression, association, and, of course, speech, for anyone and any idea.
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There are certain limitations odd place, like defamatory speech,
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that leads to individuals having severe economic burdens.
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These economic burdens would have to be proven in court, of course.
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But besides that I think you should have the right to say whatever you want to say, to anyone at all.
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"I know not what course others may take. But as for me, GIVE ME LIBERTY! OR GIVE ME DEATH!"
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Let me put it this way. If you want to call me a nigger (so hate speech) I will defend your right to say that.
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If you don't want to serve me food because I'm black (so association)
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I'll defend your right to do whatever you want to do in your private business.
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If you don't wanna call me by my correct pronoun, like these triggered snowflakes here,
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I will be offended, but also, I will defend your right to call me whatever the hell you want.
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Furthermore, I mean, who cares if I'm offended!
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That doesn't mean what you're saying is wrong, and it doesn't mean I should work to silence you.
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But sadly that's the kind of world we live in.
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Vast amounts of people agree with loosened limitations on the freedom of speech.
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For example, it is commonplace for young people to censor their own peers.
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According to the Pew Research Center, up to 40% of young people think its okay to limit speech that is offensive to minorities.
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They have been pulling data that goes all the way up to 50%, a whole half of young people,
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which is stupid, because that just makes people want to say more offensive things.
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Plus, what if a minority says offensive things?
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Like, what if I called someone a nigger.
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Or..or like, what if I said Asians make for bad drivers?
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Don't I, as a racist, deserve to be slapped with hate speech charges too?
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If you still don't believe me; if you think for some reason that young people are more enlightened,
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check out this clip of me talking to normal, young Canadian university students.
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Do you think university campuses, such as the university campus you're on,
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should stamp out hateful and offensive speech?
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>>Yes, because it's their responsibility to keep students safe.
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>>I agree.
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>>I think they should. I think universities should be a free space, where, uh,
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no hate should be allowed.
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>>It should be a safe space for....
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>>Safe space for anyone to come to. Hey, when you're coming to school, like, you don't expect to be, like,
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treated badly or anything. You're just here to get an education, man. And that's what....
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>>Do you think the Canadian government should stamp out hateful and offensive speech?
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>>Yeah. I think every organization too. It's not only school or government.
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>>They should legally stamp out hate speech.
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>>Yeah.
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>>Uh, so like if someone says the n-word or something that is offensive they should stamp it out?
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Even if it's not necessarily violent.
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>>If it's like, a black person saying it, then that's their choice, but like I don't think white people should say it or, I don't know.
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Yeah, if you're not.
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I guess everyone has a right to say what they want, but like, especially in, like, school spaces and stuff, that's supposed to be a safe space,
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so I don't think it's really okay.
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>>Unfortunately, these young people don't strongly believe in the fundamental freedoms that separate us from totalitarian countries.
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Ironically, back in the day (1960s, the groovin' 60s), it was young people who led the free speech movement.
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Now young people turn their backs on what others have fought for.
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You might be wondering who taught them this.
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It wasn't their parents. The parents were the ones who fought for free speech rights when they were young, after all.
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It was the universities, especially the humanities and social sciences,
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that taught them to think this way about free speech.
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Postmodernism is the academic branch in which all of this derives from.
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Postmodernism is the idea that everything, including value systems, should be questioned.
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This kind of thinking could be useful for the arts, as such concepts like aesthetic beauty is subjective.
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However postmodernism thinking expands to the sciences, too.
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The empirical quest for the truth of the natural world.
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The not-so-great postmodernist thinkers question the certainty that objectivists had on our perception of reality.
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But unlike the stoics, or epicurists, postmodernists have no interest in adequately replacing science.
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Instead, postmodernists want to replace objectiveness with their own thoughts, their own subjective thoughts.
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Think of infinite genders, for an example.
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There are mountains of evidence that points towards gender, and even gender expression (so fashion)
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being connected with biological sex.
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But there is no scientific evidence that there are three genders, or sixty genders,
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yet activists angrily try to convince people that their made-up genders exist.
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The reason why they do it is because postmodernists have brainwashed them
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into thinking that their subjective versions of reality is equivalent to the objective truth.
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Now, as Jordan Peterson explained to me in an interview,
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postmodernism is inherently nihilistic.
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It leads you nowhere, because the very purpose of postmodernism is to constantly question reality.
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If you're constantly questioning reality, and getting no answers, well, then you're stuck in an existential crisis.
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A kind of cosmic pessimism.
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However there are two kinds of nihilists.
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There are passive nihilists (they usually kill themselves),
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then there are active nihilists.
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And these people tend to adopt personal, all-encompassing ideologies like Marxism.
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The majority of postmodernist thinkers were active nihilists.
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But not only were they active nihilists, they were Marxists.
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That's not a coincidence, by the way.
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The reason why postmodernists tend to be Marxists is because at the root of Marxism is personal identity.
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Of course, the personal identities are used for wider political movements and activism.
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And for postmodernists, a people who have questioned everything away - even their objectiveness, they've questioned it away -
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what is truly left for them?
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Wh...what is truly left for them on this earth?
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Their subjective, personal identities they've built around themselves.
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Therefore, these people have nothing else to live for, no other beliefs to hold,
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no other purposes in life besides what they've subjectively created.
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And they fight for that as they try to fight for Marxist power struggles.
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That is all these deluded people ever do.
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Now, do all these people who echo anti-free speech rhetoric think this way?
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Mm...perhaps not.
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But this is the bedrock, the fundamental basis, the philosophical basis where all these people derive their ideas from.
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If enough people think like the postmodernists, the nihilists, and Marxists do - let's say 5% of people think this way -
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we get a whole lot of censorship.
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It's not that they necessarily think we're inherently dangerous people.
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It's that they literally think us dissenting against their ideas is us dissenting against who they are,
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their fundamental being as a person.
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And therefore, it's hate speech to disagree with them.
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To disagree with them is tantamount to a crime.
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>>[Chanting] Yo black boy, you're a fascist.
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>>I'm not - you think I'm a fascist, but I'm not a fascist. I disagree with fascism.
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>>...on the right wing. Left wing people cannot be fascist. Look in the fucking dictionary you idiot.
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>>I consider myself a classical liberal. I consider myself a -
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>>I don't give a shit how you identify.
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>>I'm not a white supremacist, they think I'm a white supremacist.
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>>[Chanting] Fuck white supremacy.
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>>Guys, I'm not a white supremacist, I promise you.
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I promise you.
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At the end of the day, I might not believe in what you're saying, but I will defend your right to say that,
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because, in a truly open and free society, we should have the right to say,
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pretty much whatever the hell we want to say,
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as long as we're not directly harming others.
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Free speech is more than just a legal, or philosophical, or political term,
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it's a principle to way of life.
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Free speech is a matter in which you conduct yourself,
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it's a matter in which you treat others.
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I used to be proud of my generation.
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Now I can't be anymore.
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We're no longer tolerant, we're no longer an accepting generation.
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Instead, we're a generation of active nihilists, driven mad by our good-for-nothing Marxist identity politics.
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I'm Jay Fayza, from therebel.media.
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If you want to intellectually battle those who are against free speech, like and subscribe to therebel.media.