xie_xie_xie
22 January 2007 @ 10:30 pm
Censorship  
For those who stubbornly seek freedom, there can be no more urgent task than to come to understand the mechanisms and practices of indoctrination. These are easy to perceive in the totalitarian societies, much less so in the system of 'brainwashing under freedom' to which we are subjected and which all too often we serve as willing or unwitting instruments. -Noam Chomsky

Disagreement is not censorship.

Criticism is not censorship.

Debate is not censorship.

Fair opposition is not censorship.

So, what is?

Having your viewpoint, writing, art, criticism, opinion or other expression silenced by force, by unfair opposition, by threats, is censorship.

If someone tells me they'll kill my child if I speak at a political rally, or fire me, or burn down my house, I'm being censored. If the government passes a law depriving me of my right to say what I think about something, I'm being censored.

If someone removes my post from their website, I am being censored, although it's the website owner's right to do that... nonetheless, I'm being silenced.

However, freely expressing your opinion, forcefully and well, with documentation, even ruthlessly and brilliantly ... IS. NOT. CENSORSHIP.

It's the OPPOSITE of censorship. It's the CURE for censorship.

The remedy for speech you don't like is MORE SPEECH.

It's a complete reversal of the meaning of the word "censorship" to say that those of us who express concerns about someone's written work are "censoring" that person. No one is being censored... well, except us, who have repeatedly had our posts removed from the feedback section at Midnight Whispers, where someone made the accusation, in a sneaky way, that speaking out against a story is censorship of the author of that story.

It is a subtle and dangerous message, to say that someone's criticism of your speech is a form of censorship, because whether people do it to themselves or have it forced on them, silence is silence. 

One person's right to express herself doesn't outweigh mine. If she has the right to write her story, then I, or anyone else, have the right to critique it. Freedom of expression is a double-edged sword.
 
 
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[identity profile] silent-seas.livejournal.com on January 23rd, 2007 08:10 am (UTC)
Oh, I know it is. I meant that I haven't witnessed much of it directly.

Words lose their meaning when their misuse isn't challenged. If someone thinks being "censored" is just another word for "being disagreed with," then what word do we use for REAL censorship?

Great point. This makes me want to read 1984 and Ellison's Invisible Man again.

Like you, Bunny, and others said, this fandom is one of the places I'm comfortable speaking my mind, and I want it to stay that way for all of us.

SUN.
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[identity profile] xie-xie-xie.livejournal.com on January 23rd, 2007 08:15 am (UTC)
Here, have a drink from the mug of love!
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[identity profile] silent-seas.livejournal.com on January 23rd, 2007 10:05 am (UTC)
It's been a rough night. I was feeling all kinds of squicked and disappointed and tired, and then I saw this comment.

I'm just realizing that there's a mug of love. A portable, useful reminder of the true B/J love that is real and forever and hot for all the right reasons. The Wives (Alice?) made the mug, and I iconized it.

I'm back in my 'fandom = happy place' mode.

*takes a drink from the mug, sends you good karma, and runs off to bed*
:-)
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[identity profile] xie-xie-xie.livejournal.com on January 23rd, 2007 10:13 am (UTC)
Goodnight!

And thank you for our lovely icon!

Xie
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