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moviePig <never@nothere.com> wrote:I "recited" nothing. I (deliberately) posed a hypothetical.On 4/3/2024 2:10 PM, BTR1701 wrote:Well, any law can be repealed, decision overturned, and constitutionOn Apr 3, 2024 at 8:36:11 AM PDT, "moviePig" <never@nothere.com> wrote:>
>On 4/3/2024 5:50 AM, FPP wrote:>On 4/2/24 5:52 PM, moviePig wrote:>On 4/2/2024 1:16 AM, Adam H. Kerman wrote:>BTR1701 <atropos@mac.com> wrote:>Mar 27, 2024 at 3:58:45 PM PDT, moviePig <never@nothere.com>:>3/27/2024 6:57 PM, BTR1701 wrote:Adam H. Kerman <ahk@chinet.com>:BTR1701 <atropos@mac.com> wrote:Why is it that burning the American flag is protected speech,
but if you
burn an Alphabet Mafia rainbow flag, you can get arrested for a
hate
crime?>You mean a flag that does not belong to you, not your own flag.>No, I mean any rainbow flag. If you go buy one yourself, then take
it to
an anti-troon protest and burn it, it's a hate crime.>But if you buy an American flag and take it to an Antifa riot and
burn
it, protected speech.
...>The former action is one of hate, the latter is one of protest.https://ibb.co/0FpvG4S>
moviePig is unparseable here. Is he stating that protestors protest
against their friends and not their enemies? I'm so confused.
I'm here to help.
>
In general, people who burn an American flag do so in protest of their
own government's actions and policies, while those who burn a rainbow
flag do so to express their hate of queers.
If you own it, you can burn it.
But not at a gay-pride march under laws against hate speech.
There are no laws against hate speech in the United States. If any legislature
should pass such a law, it would be unconstitutional.
...until some future SCOTUS rules differently.
amended, but your statement wasn't that of a future wish but as an
(fallacious) recitation of the status quo.
Les messages affichés proviennent d'usenet.