Thursday, June 25, 2009

Freedom of Speech vs. Censorship on Facebook: A Community Concern


After a long day at work, I log onto my Facebook account and I see a group invite for a Petition to remove “Soldiers are not heroes” from Facebook. I quickly read the synopsis which is opposed to this separate group, “heroes,” whose basic belief is that we are too big into hero worshipping our soldiers and in opposition to the current wars that are going on.

I went to click on the link to confirm my membership, but something inside me hesitated. I’m sitting there with my mouse over the “Confirm Membership,” button and I start thinking, isn’t this censorship at its basic level? Just because we may not agree with something, does that give us the right to have it removed? Do we have the right to pressure Facebook to remove it just because a larger majority feels that this group is inappropriate?

All questions are loaded questions and really there is no right or wrong answer. It’s an opinion. And, as citizens, we ALL have a right to an opinion and we ALL have a right to express that opinion. Whether it is in regards to the wars, politics, sports, or a Facebook group.

The question is not whether we should petition Facebook to remove the “Soldiers are not heroes” group, but whether Facebook should remove it. Facebook does have the right to remove this or any other group if they feel like it is in violation of its user agreement. But the question is: Is it?

In Facebook’s own Facebook Principles, it talks about total and complete equality for everybody. Here is an excerpt:

· Fundamental Equality
Every Person - whether individual, advertiser, developer, organization, or other entity - should have representation and access to distribution and information within the Facebook Service, regardless of the Person’s primary activity. There should be a single set of principles, rights, and responsibilities that should apply to all People using the Facebook Service.

In reviewing Facebook’s Statement of Rights and Responsibilities, the only clause I found that they even could use was under the “Safety” section:

6. You will not post content that is hateful, threatening, pornographic, or that contains nudity or graphic or gratuitous violence.

After I hesitated, I did review the “Soldiers are not heroes” website, and the answer is “No” It is not in violation of any of those mentioned above and I do not believe that it should be deleted. Nor do I think that we should take it upon ourselves to ask Facebook to remove the group because we do not agree with their beliefs.

I may not personally agree with their message, but it is neither hateful nor threatening. It is an opinion from a minority group of people that have a legal right to have an opinion to express themselves as much as we do.

And this is not even the worse group out there. I believe it has gained more attention due to the current wars. But the following also have groups on Facebook (and I cringe even posting these and have do so only based on the criteria I noted above) these groups (fingers cramping):

Anti-Jewish Internet Defense Force
KKK
Neo Nazi - white power
F*** Islam (8 of those groups, I didn’t post the link due to the explicit nature of the titles)

So, what do we do? In my opinion, we tolerate. We expect people to respect our opinions. We must remember to respect theirs. Keep in mind that they probably disagree with us as much as we disagree with them. So we have to, take that step back, take our finger off of that mouse and let them have their say. It may take a hard swallow and a shudder down the spine, but what’s good for the goose is good for the gander.

Freedom of speech and freedom to peacefully assemble is one of our most significant and most cherished rights that we as Americans have. That is one of the things that make our country so unique. That also means that we will be exposed to beliefs and opinions that we do not agree with or like. There has always been a delicate balance between what is appropriate and the right of free speech and right to peacefully assemble. For over 200 years, we have been able to find that balance; with a few bumps in the road, of course. However, when we start asking to remove groups that we don’t agree with, that balance can topple and those bumps can turn into potholes quick.

Now that is a scary path that I don’t want to go down.

by David Grimes

Source: YuBlog

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