Talk About Tolerance, This Is Tolerance
While such actions by the ACLU have not always been popular over the years, and this one was not popular with many Americans, as veterans' groups, among others, also protested, as I recall, such legal challenges bring focus to various decisions, along with the accompanying discussions, sometimes very heated discussions. Democracy is not easy, and I suppose all of us at one time or another would like to stop someone with whom we disagree from expressing contrary opinions. The question is always, "how much freedom do we want?" There are limits to freedom, as for example, we don't have the right to shout "fire" in a crowded theater, just for the hell of it. Ah, that's not a direct quote.
For Jewish attorneys to defend the right of Nazis to march tells you just how much these attorneys appreciate the law. It certainly doesn't mean they liked Nazis, but they loved the law. To be quite honest, I'm not sure I could do such a thing, but this is how you defeat the crazies and the anti-democracy elements. We can't be so insecure that we are afraid of differing viewpoints. Talk about tolerance, this is tolerance and a respect for law which should earn respect from all of us; of course, there are those racists and haters out there ...
* These are my words, not the court's words, but this was essentially the argument.
WORD HISTORY:
Hate-This word goes back to Indo European "khedo," which had the notion of "strong emotional feeling." This gave its Old Germanic offspring "hatojan(an)," which became the more specific "to hate," in Germanic. This gave Old English (Anglo-Saxon) "hatian," which then became "haten," before the modern version. The noun was derived from the Old Germanic form "hatiz," which then gave Old English "hete." Other Germanic languages have (noun then verb): German "Hass" and "hassen," Low German and Dutch "haat" and "haten," West Frisian "hate" and "haatsje," Danish "had" and "hade," Icelandic "hata" (same for noun and verb), Norwegian and Swedish "hate" (same for both noun and verb, with the ending "e" pronounced like "ah").
Labels: ACLU, American Civil Liberties Union, American Jews, American Nazis, English, etymology, Germanic languages, hate, legal system, Nazis, respect
4 Comments:
that is some story but I barely rememeber it. just didn't pay much attention back then
I seem to remember this, but I'm not sure. Sure is tolerance, if ever there was tolerance. The Nazis wanted to kill all Jews. I'm pretty sure I wouldn't be able to do what the attorneys did.
I do remember this a bit. The ACLU may not always be popular, but they help defenbd out freedoms, especially for causes we might suppress otherwise. I don't always agree with the4m myself, but I rerspect them.
At the core of the argument is if you are unwilling to stand up for someone else’s rights to express views, even those views you find offensive and disagree with, then it is only a matter of time before you find yourself on the wrong side of public opinion. Your rights are preserved by quarantining the rights of those you disagree with as much as those you agree with. I grew up in Park Forrest in the 1960’s and 1970s, so I remember the debate within our community. I’ve always been inspired by Mr. Joseph’s actions. I can’t imagine the pressure he received from the Jewish community at the time. It really should be taught in ever university in their country.
Sadly, higher education seems to have abandoned some of the most important lessons about our rights in favor politically focused immediate outcome. Higher education faculty is no longer inhabited by deep thinkers or altruistic defenders of rights. They prefer the socially engineered outcomes.
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