Originally Posted by
Stavros
I agree with this, but would ask if, in US law, any action can be taken if harm is caused from public statements, be it harm of a temporary nature, or even death. I assume intent would have to proven, that the speech act which caused it might not itself be the causal factor if the person making it can plausibly claim they meant no harm. Given the ease of transmission of Covid in 2020 and 2021, it seems a flimsy argument when multiple 'gatherings' in the US and elsewhere resulted in infection at great emotional and financial cost to the victims. From Murdoch's point of view, all publicity is good publicity if it gets people clicking, and the more outrageous it is, so much the better. But doesn't that mean his culture of vugarity and lies is creating the permissive envronment in which potentially harmful speech can take place? The Germans, for example, have laws that prohibit speech acts and other public acts which defend or promote National Socialism, and for good reason.
I guess the law is the pivot, and that it is hard to prosecute -did Trump's speech on Jan 6th encourage citizens to attack and invade the Capitol building with the seditious intention of halting the certification of the election? The language is sufficiently vague to make prosecution hard, even though the intent to stop the work of Congress was established almost as soon as the results were first announced and rejected by Trump in November 2020. And his entire campaign against that election has caused harm, including death and suicide -and even if it can't be proven in Court, I think the court of public opinion, other than a minority of fanatics, holds Trump responsible.