"No Free Speech for Fascists" | A Lawyer's Case for No-Platforming

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- VIDEO NOTES
David Renton is a barrister and historian. He is the author of "No Free Speech for Fascists", discussing the history of, and the case for, "no-platforming" fascist speakers (and only fascist speakers).
- LINKS
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- TIMESTAMPS
0:00 Introduction
2:42 No Free Speech for Fascists
7:08 Is Donald Trump a fascist?
13:59 Why no-platform fascists?
23:13 Can this apply to the left?
36:15 Is no-platforming itself fascistic?
47:32 When no-platforming backfires
54:43 Why does no-platforming only apply to fascists?
59:08 Free speech
1:06:49 Outro
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Пікірлер: 1 600

  • @TheFranchfry
    @TheFranchfry Жыл бұрын

    I think the “thanks for being here” inside someone else’s home trend is great.

  • @Ixnatifual

    @Ixnatifual

    Жыл бұрын

    Can't have these guys roaming the streets, spilling tea and dropping biscuits everywhere.

  • @ShutUpWesley

    @ShutUpWesley

    Жыл бұрын

    ​@@Ixnatifual Jesus f.cking Christ😂 Somehow your comment had me giggle quite a bit. Well Played🖖🏻

  • @macdougdoug
    @macdougdoug Жыл бұрын

    So a fascist can only be defined as a fascist once it has obtained total freedom of action? Odd.

  • @randyprice5392

    @randyprice5392

    Жыл бұрын

    And apparently we’re suppose to ignore it and deny it’s happening until it’s at your doorstep. It’s a mistake to ignore what’s happening in the states.

  • @macdougdoug

    @macdougdoug

    Жыл бұрын

    @@randyprice5392 I think he's saying (a bit later on re: rock against racism) not that we're supposed to ignore fascists, rather invite them out for a beer. (problem is of course that I end up believing in flat earth and jewish pedo cannibalism by the end of the booze up)

  • @Stikibits

    @Stikibits

    Жыл бұрын

    Fascists take control once the public sphere stops being objectively truthful, so fascists can freely spread their propaganda. Think Murdoch/Reagan gutting the USA's Fairness Doctrine, so Fox could freely lie to Americans...and the world.

  • @TheMilli

    @TheMilli

    Жыл бұрын

    I can recommend relistening to the part at 31:16. Here he argues that Fascism, even during the time when it is a fringe movement, is violent in a way that other political tendencies aren't, and that it can be recognised at this point, long before it gets any political power.

  • @Stikibits

    @Stikibits

    Жыл бұрын

    @@TheMilli Fascists take control the moment the public sphere stops being objectivily truthful. It's at that point fascsits can freely foist their lies, propaganda and corruption. It's an objective public sphere that keeps all tyrants out of our lives and out of power, as the tyrant have to lie, propagandize and corrupt to have their way.

  • @trafficcone5449
    @trafficcone5449 Жыл бұрын

    This was an interesting conversation. I really appreciate the interviewers even handed line of questioning, and I say that as a left leaning viewer. The interviewee presents some ideas that really needed that push back and clarifying questions. My big issue with the ideas proposed here is that the interviewee's concept of fascism still feels incredibly nebulous, despite how much time was spent attempting to explain it. He motions towards "super violence", and violence that explicitly targets political opponents, but he never lays out what he views as tenets of fascism, or critical criteria for when speech should be suppressed. I'm sure he goes into more detail in his book, but it really seems like something that should have been a priority in the interview, especially since he bemoans colloquial usage of the term. It's disappointing that after an hour of conversation, I still don't really know who he means should be no-platformed. I don't find myself agreeing with his ideas, but I'm interested in looking more into his writings.

  • @LukeMcGuireoides

    @LukeMcGuireoides

    Жыл бұрын

    I'm beginning to see these people who insist that fascism is esoteric, over complicated, far away and sophisticated as straight up fascist enablers. I'm already seeing actual fascists adopt these obfuscating and deceptive bad faith talking points. Whether or not they give a damn, they're playing into the hands of very sinister and wicked people. I suspect this man is a far right bad faith actor. He's a Trump apologist for crying out loud. And finally, I'm very disappointed in Alex for practically uncritically providing this man with a megaphone. He really is just signal boosting this man and his dangerous ideas. I mean, he not only claims but insists that the American republican party is center right. I've never heard anything so preposterous from a British person, much less what I assume to be a serious writer. I sure hope Alex isn't trying to cultivate a right wing audience for clout or financial reasons. I mean, this rebranding is off to a horrible start, imo.

  • @Philusteen

    @Philusteen

    Жыл бұрын

    I respectfully disagree, mainly on the grounds that fascism is inherently nebulous in that it can be constructed in different ways, but there are hallmarks of a political movement that can be rightly looked upon as fascist. Authoritarian leadership by a demigogue who uses violence to quash dissent, for example. Is it right to call Trump fascist? Not really, because the US had the benefit of military leaders who would either fight against his wishes or, in some cases, just not carry them out. Between Trump holding up the bible (he's never read) in the middle of a police-state show of force in Washington, to his endorsement of organic paramilitary groups and local violence, to his 2016 seed-planting of rigged elections and his subsequent attempts to rig elections - there comes a point where a reasonable person can see a fascist-in-waiting.

  • @mateokenyon3311

    @mateokenyon3311

    Жыл бұрын

    ​@@Philusteen you are fully right, fascism can't be defined and that's how it often takes root. you can't define fascism but you can look for identifiers such as those outlined by Umberto Eco which are really useful.

  • @Philusteen

    @Philusteen

    Жыл бұрын

    @@mateokenyon3311 excellent point! Eco is a great resource.

  • @trafficcone5449

    @trafficcone5449

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Philusteen The fact that fascism is nebulously defined is besides the point, because he is clearly using it in a specific context. He wouldn't be criticizing other people's use of the term if himself didn't have his own conception of what it means. That's what I took issue with - not that he didn't give *the* definition of fascism, which is indeed hard to pin down, but rather that he didn't give *his* definition.

  • @97dnpatil
    @97dnpatil Жыл бұрын

    fascinating to see a healthy debate in the comments within just 10 minutes of an hour-long video being uploaded

  • @rauminen4167

    @rauminen4167

    Жыл бұрын

    Yeah, because the first 10 seconds of the video deliberately tickles the fancy of either the fascists trying to silence people by calling them fascist or the normal people understanding this.

  • @MrMyers758

    @MrMyers758

    Жыл бұрын

    If something egregious is said within the first 10 mins, most people won't wait 50 mins for no reason to make their counter that they'd likely have forgotten about. Not everyone watches and comments in the same way as you.

  • @Sahtoovi

    @Sahtoovi

    Жыл бұрын

    @@rauminen4167 You're just showing that you don't know what fascism is. Fascism is not when someone wants to silence people. Fascism has an actual definition and you aren't any better than the people using it as a buzz word about anything they don't like.

  • @thomascromwell6840

    @thomascromwell6840

    Жыл бұрын

    @@rauminen4167 Says the conservative who supports policies like book bans, shutting down libraries, laws like bans on trans people, and forcing women to bear children against their will. On the matter of free speech, he supports banning teachers from discussing that gay people and trans people exist. Not to mention the curbs on the right to protest, and the race selective voting restrictions. I personally think that's all pretty fascist but according to him this is what "normal people" support.

  • @rauminen4167

    @rauminen4167

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Sahtoovi Of course it has. The lucrative merger of big corporations, the news media and The Party. That said, silencing people is in fact fascist, so not entirely sure what you're getting at. Yes, marxists too were silencing their opposition - but that's just another similarity.

  • @akshayrathore2882
    @akshayrathore2882 Жыл бұрын

    1 hour video and I still couldn't figure out more than the title.

  • @Kwizii

    @Kwizii

    Жыл бұрын

    Same! I felt a bit silly because I saw all the comments praising the conversation and I mostly felt that he didn't answer the questions in a understandable/meaningful way and my opinion and knowledge on the subject didn't budge (I was hoping it would at least open new lines of thought)

  • @radcyrus

    @radcyrus

    Жыл бұрын

    Exactly feeling the same way, I think the guy had nothing more to say other than to say to his friends on the left, "hey guys let's be a bit more sneaky about how we silence others" he wanted the left to love him and the right not to hate him for holding stupid views that people nowadays hold, unspoken views like "anyone who is not on the far left, must be on the far far right"

  • @chesterdonnelly1212

    @chesterdonnelly1212

    Жыл бұрын

    I think I can help. A hundred years ago some fascists came to power in Europe. Then some even worse (racist) fascists came to power in another European country. This was really bad for just about everyone. We need to prevent something like that happening again. Fascists stand against every one of our British values.

  • @mrpappa4105

    @mrpappa4105

    Жыл бұрын

    Same.

  • @AndreMonthy

    @AndreMonthy

    Жыл бұрын

    Same. I think its because he keeps on trying to use vague and subversive language to justify why he should be able to ban free speech and no one else.

  • @kentsilvain7329
    @kentsilvain7329 Жыл бұрын

    Anyone else find it weirdly creepy that every time Alex asks him about the possibility of those on the left abusing this technique or possibly being hypocritical in its use, he spins into a long deflection about it? Or that "people who think they're left wing" comment? Like I get that he's super partisan, so you don't really want to acknowledge that your side could ever be morally wrong, but that's something else

  • @howlrichard1028

    @howlrichard1028

    Жыл бұрын

    Definitely got the same impression. Every time his answer was "but what I'm trying to say in my book..." Dude, just answer the question.

  • @Mrguy-ds9lr

    @Mrguy-ds9lr

    Жыл бұрын

    Nope, the honest people caught that, couldn't miss it. The left has no power, what!?

  • @leonais1

    @leonais1

    Жыл бұрын

    He similarly painted everyone who disagreed with social media moderation as right wing extremists, giving another story about Tommy Robinson.

  • @Jacob-yb3hz

    @Jacob-yb3hz

    Жыл бұрын

    He quite literally said at one point that he doesn't think any left wing group should be deplatformed. This may be the most blindly partisian person I've ever seen.

  • @kentsilvain7329

    @kentsilvain7329

    Жыл бұрын

    @Jacob-yb3hz for real. Like come on man, even if you don't believe it, that's like the most obvious 'is your position consistent?' question ever.

  • @ParadoxProblems
    @ParadoxProblems Жыл бұрын

    Is it just me or did he never answer the question of whether it would ever be justifiable to deplatform a left leaning group that was begin to exhibit behaviors indicative of fascism. He seemed to just say "people would want to start silencing them" without mentioning if they were right to do so or not. This seems weird coming from someone who seems to be unabashed in his idea that fascism should be silenced.

  • @MinimaAmoralia

    @MinimaAmoralia

    Жыл бұрын

    But how can a left leaning group, which is essentially about egalitarianism, be a fascist, which is by definition anti-egalitarian? If you try to stick with a parsimonious definition of fascism, then left fascist is a contradiction in terms. This is of course not to say that the left leaning groups cannot be tyrannical

  • @TBOTSS

    @TBOTSS

    Жыл бұрын

    @@MinimaAmoralia National Socialists.

  • @mrg7405

    @mrg7405

    Жыл бұрын

    ​@@MinimaAmoralia fascism is inherently left wing though

  • @thomaspreece2997

    @thomaspreece2997

    Жыл бұрын

    I don't think he was defining fascism as either specifically right or left but neither did he fully define it (untill very near the end where he indicated that people carrying out practices he identified as fascist namely silencing an opposition via violence are fascist regardless of political persuasion, but that liberals could not carry out these actuons and still be liberal) despite alex trying to get him to. I feel they were somewhat talking past each other throughout because of this lack of clarity over the terms.

  • @leonais1

    @leonais1

    Жыл бұрын

    Bingo. Alex asked the guest questions in order to clarify and explain and the issue was evaded. We might be more forgiving if this man was not an author on the topic. He seemed in denial of problems on the left wing, seemingly assuming totalitarianism would push a regime into facism despite post-war China being a contrary example.

  • @heavynov
    @heavynov Жыл бұрын

    I'm surprised that somebody who has endeavoured to publish a book on the topic cannot seem to muster an argumentation for their positions other than "tactical reasons" and optics. The irony of expressing a wish for a "principled argument" that is to apply only to the other side on top of that is baffling. Also interesting that actual political violence and intimidation tactics form the left have not been mentioned, as neither have the inherent potential of plenty of subset ideologies for it or historically realised potentials thereof. Then again, your guest did admit to being a far left actor himself. Trying to pretend that the left has less cultural capital, political influence or power today than any other time during this gentleman's lifetime seems absurd, but what I think is worse is the poisoning of the well through attribution of dishonesty to those who disagree with his assessment. 34:23 the communists did not just ban anti-communists, they banned anarchists, liberals, fascists, conservatives, religious people..... No analogy at all. None.

  • @user-mt4bh5sm5o

    @user-mt4bh5sm5o

    Жыл бұрын

    What influence does actual left have in the US? Democratic party is right wing. You are full of S

  • @grapetoad6595

    @grapetoad6595

    Жыл бұрын

    After the great depression there were record levels of unionisation. After that, the influence of the left has pretty much continuously decreased, to the point where capitalists are more wealthy than they have ever been by exploiting their workers as much as possible. Like Jeff Bezos causing his workers to have to use bottles instead of going to the toilet.

  • @Mrguy-ds9lr

    @Mrguy-ds9lr

    Жыл бұрын

    My hero ace! I laughed at that statement as well! He seems to have some good points, but saying that is either purposefully deceitful, or incredibly blind! But you saved me the labor of pointing that out.

  • @MrMantis0

    @MrMantis0

    Жыл бұрын

    In addition to this, I found myself wondering if David was describing fascism or communism when he was first explaining that fascism specifically crosses the line to outright violence towards it's political enemies. He went on to explain that there is a racial element to fascism, which appears not to be present in the communist utopian vision. However, I do know that during Stalin's reign in the soviet union, being a member of the bourgeoise was enough for you to be found guilty of (or arrested and tortured until you admit to being guilty of) a crime against the state. As the labour camps demanded more and more labour, the standards for what counted as bourgeoise broadened to the point that just being a non Russian was enough to land you with a sentence in the camps. So honestly, I find it increasingly difficult not to include communism in any critical discussion of fascism, as the two ideologies are just so damn similar.

  • @user-mt4bh5sm5o

    @user-mt4bh5sm5o

    Жыл бұрын

    @@MrMantis0 Bro, labor camps accountered for a tiny fraction of soviet production (2%), it had nothing to do with increasing demand for it. The purpose of it was to reeducate bourguise. Many of those camps were actually serving their purpose, thats why you never heard about them and only heard of a couple

  • @lvincent8843
    @lvincent8843 Жыл бұрын

    Can anyone provide a timestamp when "fascism" is properly defined?

  • @StraitShot

    @StraitShot

    Жыл бұрын

    They never properly defined Fascism ever. I was literally shocked that such a fundamental question goes unanswered. If people can not define "fascism". Than can we get a comparison between tribalism or early America to "Fascism"? Is the industrial revolution and a strong federal government required for "fascism"?

  • @bolt7

    @bolt7

    Жыл бұрын

    The closest thing he affirms is that fascism is when you use mass violence against political opponents and suppress *all* other positions. And that it's on the extreme right. I'm not exactly sure why it is by definition on the right, as left vs. right was disappointingly never well defined in this conversation.

  • @radioactivedetective6876

    @radioactivedetective6876

    Жыл бұрын

    In case u r intetested, fascism can be defined as a populist form of palingenetic ultranationalism. That's Roger Griffins definition. The few other key definitions by major political theorists more or less say the same thing, with some additional features. I like Griffins coz it is very concise and precise. There are other features, but that's the core commonality used for categorisation. And, authoritarianism is not fascism. Suppression of speech & espression, by itself, is not fascist. It is not value judgement, it is about categorisation.

  • @willguggn2

    @willguggn2

    Жыл бұрын

    @@radioactivedetective6876 I like Griffin's concise description of fascism as well, but Renton seems to disagree. To him only someone openly using (physical) violence against the opposition can be fascist. So they either need to be stupid or already hold total power and reign freely to be called fascists, which is a weird standard imo.

  • @lvincent8843

    @lvincent8843

    Жыл бұрын

    @@radioactivedetective6876 The definition of fascism you provided is appreciated but the reason I asked for a time stamp for the point in the discussion when fascism was defined was because I was curious if the person advocating for violence against fascists ever bothered to define fascism and I had lost patience about half-way through waiting for what should have been established before the discussion began. Even with a definition it is extremely irresponsible to advocate for violence against people who claim or have been accused of holding a clearly defined label, but the level of extreme irresponsibility is far greater when advocating for violence against people who are designated with an undefined label or are designated as holding belief in an undefined idea. If violence against people who hold undefined ideas can be justified than this principle could be applied to justify violence against anyone. I was hoping to hear a clear definition to engage with the merits or dangers of advocating for violence against people who hold ideas based on that clear definition. The beginning of the discussion mentioned that the misapplication of the term fascism is often used to smear people or justify violence. As important as that is to recognize, by failing to provide a definition any discussion of an ill-defined concept called fascism merely perpetuates the misunderstanding and misapplication of the term. This is egregious when the discussion is on the justification of violence against people who hold this idea as there is no limiting principle to apply when attaching ill-defined labels to people whose rights we are being told can be violated with force.

  • @glenjennett
    @glenjennett6 ай бұрын

    The thing is, you can't define hate speech itself as a reason to call someone a fascist, so it can't be used to make a case for fascism. In the US, hate speech is protected under the Bill of Rights since hate speech is still free speech. So, then how else would you determine that someone is a fascist? There are atrocities done towards certain people in the US by the government, such as taking children from the parents of people crossing the border from Mexico and holding those people for an indeterminate time, but I don't know if that would qualify as a fascist action. There is also a lot of homelessness and people driven into poverty that is ignored by the government. That irritates me to no end and I wish I were in a position to do something about, but again, I don't think that would classify as a fascist state. So, then exactly how do we define a fascist and when do we decide to start limiting free speech? Once we start limiting free speech for certain people, we are going against the very principles upon which the US is established and it can lead to a slippery slope where we are tempted to widen the margin to start limiting other types of speech until essentially anyone who speaks out about any topic is oppressed and afraid to speak at all out of fear of being arrested or put to death.

  • @garethevans3600
    @garethevans3600 Жыл бұрын

    Utterly reasoned unreason. A complete othering of one side and a complete leniency to the other. The case was poorly made and just shows that attempts to ring-fence "free speech" are always undermined by the simple question of "who do you trust to decide what is free speech".

  • @nirad8026

    @nirad8026

    Жыл бұрын

    See "Repressive Tolerance" by Herbert Marcuse

  • @fuckamericanidiot

    @fuckamericanidiot

    Жыл бұрын

    ​@@nirad8026 See woke scripture #7

  • @BingleFlimp
    @BingleFlimp Жыл бұрын

    The issue is that the idea is held solely on the belief that the definition of who is a fascist will not change in the future for the convenience of someone's political opponents.

  • @akakico
    @akakico Жыл бұрын

    I was never quite certain of David Renton's was trying to communicate. There was a degree of Alex and David were talking past each other. Politely, so it doesn't stand out in any blatant way. David never seemed to want to engage on how his concepts applied to modern circumstances. Also David feeding his arms through his sleeves was adorable. 56:39

  • @MrBriddon1

    @MrBriddon1

    Жыл бұрын

    56:39 Defensive

  • @AlanWinterboy

    @AlanWinterboy

    Жыл бұрын

    Largely agree, though I thought Alex was trying to get to a deeper point than Renton was articulating.

  • @WTH13SERIOUSLY

    @WTH13SERIOUSLY

    Жыл бұрын

    Yeah I started looking at comments cause halfway through I was still just confused by his answers that felt like non answers to me. Glad you said something.

  • @Rave.-

    @Rave.-

    Жыл бұрын

    ​​@@WTH13SERIOUSLY it's at the 30m mark that I stopped the video to look for this comment. He has quite an outstanding bias blinding him to the conceptual picture Alex is trying to paint. Also my feedback in general is that if he doesn't consider the left to only have influence because it's "online and not in reality", he's giving me big boomer vibes and he needs to move into this decade. These atmospheres are increasingly less distinguishable and there's more and more crossover.

  • @nuesschen4525

    @nuesschen4525

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Rave.- thanks, that’s exactly what I was thinking. I’m even on the 30 min mark

  • @twoshea749
    @twoshea749 Жыл бұрын

    From the title of the book to this man’s inability to define either his “side” or his opponents - or even the definition of fascist is the picture of irony - irony that projects its own sin onto its perceived opponent and wishes to annihilate it - in this case using actual fascism(using the state and corporate power to control speech) - to defeat perceived “fascism”

  • @Markielee72
    @Markielee72 Жыл бұрын

    I was with David all the way up to him claiming to be able to read the minds (by extension the motivations) of those with a different political viewpoint to himself.

  • @TBOTSS

    @TBOTSS

    Жыл бұрын

    "A Fascist is someone I deem a Fascist" David Renton.

  • @Markielee72

    @Markielee72

    Жыл бұрын

    @TBOTSS yup. This has always been my issue with people that claim to know when free speech should be restricted. My question is, where is the line where acceptable speech ends and more importantly, WHO gets to decide this?

  • @mmhmm9271

    @mmhmm9271

    Жыл бұрын

    Do you have any proof that he can't?

  • @Markielee72

    @Markielee72

    Жыл бұрын

    @@mmhmm9271 do you have proof that reading minds is even possible?

  • @MCHD15

    @MCHD15

    Жыл бұрын

    He said Tommy Robinsons actions were incommensurate with somebody who believes in free speech. He did not claim that Tommy Robinson is a fascist, or that he can read Tommy's mind.

  • @kenhiett5266
    @kenhiett5266 Жыл бұрын

    The number of times Mr. Renton articulated his intent to treat the two sides of the political spectrum quite diferently in regards to scrutiny or 'no-platforming' exposes his premise.

  • @IosefDzhugashvili

    @IosefDzhugashvili

    Жыл бұрын

    He's very clear he is speaking about FASCISM, not right wing politics. He specifically says Trump is not a fascist - you can sleep tight.

  • @kenhiett5266

    @kenhiett5266

    Жыл бұрын

    @@IosefDzhugashvili If you think we're not going to use that word when referring to left wing extremism that fits the definition, think again. We caught on to the lefts attempt to dominate language a long time ago. Nice try, though.

  • @snappingbear

    @snappingbear

    Жыл бұрын

    @@IosefDzhugashvili Only the dullest of dullards would dare claim Trump was a fascist or even an extremest. Leftist politicians on the other hand, the case is much easier to make.

  • @jakemetzger9115
    @jakemetzger9115 Жыл бұрын

    Like I said on the previous clip, I don't think he's paying much attention to stochastic violence here. He breaks down "violence" into "actual" violence and "threats of violence", but these are not clean categories, as threats themselves can be stochastically manifest as actual or concrete. Then he further states that by "actual" violence he wants to talk about "imminent" violence, violence that isn't "several steps away". But this either relegates stochastic violence to mere threats, which is ridiculous, or could potentially include stochastic violence only in the case that a figure is the most *proximal* cause of the stochastically violent effect. In our Jan 6 committee hearings, there is widespread and compelling reason to say DT was a key, proximal cause for the violence and deaths attempted against our presidential vote. I get the distinction he's trying to make, but trying to square it with his comments about DT just being some mean old right-wing figure is just baffling. His niche definition either fails to capture what we intend to talk about in our political discourse, in which case he cannot say that we are *wrong* in our application of the word, or he does intend to talk about what we otherwise mean about fascism, in which case his exclusion of figures like DT (and potentially Erdogan and Bolsonaro) is just too coarse to account for the varieties of political violence we see today. I just get the feeling that his category of fascism is fed too much by fear of slippery-sloping away from what he thinks is the clearest acceptable cases for no-platforming rather than considering fascism as a category to be intrinsically slippery, as is pointed out by Eco and Paxton for example, because it problematizes an otherwise clean solution to the platform problem. But, I'll give him a read anyway and hope it gets better in writing.

  • @patrickbarnes9874

    @patrickbarnes9874

    Жыл бұрын

    Stochastic violence is a way for midwits to feel smart while committing the logical fallacy of equivocation so that they can make up rules for others to follow that they themselves can violate whenever they like. What you do is use the loose definition of violence when it comes to other people, but use a strict definition when it comes to yourself. If someone calls you a jerk, that's verbal violence. Since they've been violent to you, you're justified in smashing them over the head with a club. You equivocate on the term "violence". This is the founding philosophy of antifa, it's how they justify their constant assaults and vandalism as "defense". That 80 year old lady carrying her groceries home from Walmart isn't wearing a BLM t-shirt, and blacks were kept as slaves before, and discrimination is just as bad today as it ever was, it's just invisible now, and this lady could be wearing a shirt protesting it but she isn't, so she's tacitly supporting it, which means this lady is a slaver and deserves to be hospitalized with head injuries. That's how the minds of folks like Jake work. When it is stripped of the flowery nonsense, you can see very easily how intellectually and morally bankrupt the concept of stochastic violence is. Some people on January 6 committed vandalism. They were amongst a larger crowd who protested. They were amongst a larger crowd than that who heard Trump speak. Therefore Jake concludes that Trump is guilty of the attempted violent overthrow of the government. That's the level of intellectual discourse going on amongst leftists these days. It's pathetic.

  • @lvincent8843

    @lvincent8843

    Жыл бұрын

    What is a death attempted against a presidential vote mean? No one has been charged with murder or attempted murder during the Capitol riot. The only people who died were people among the crowd of rioters. The January 6th Committee was a show court, a spectacle of hand-picked testimony unconstrained by rules of actual courts and without any presentation by a defendant. Donald Trump held a protest at the Capitol to challenge the election results which he claimed to believe were the result of voter fraud. There is no law that prohibits someone from expressing a belief that an election result was manipulated. There is no law that prohibits someone from protesting and petitioning the government. In fact there are protections that prohibit the state from interfering in the right to protest. The protestors at the Capitol exercised their legally protected right to protest. The subset of protesters who engaged in violence, vandalism and trespassing are individually responsible for the crimes they committed and should be tried individually with evidence for the specific crimes they are being charged with presented for the prosecution and defense to present legal arguments. This is the rule of law. What is your argument for upending the rule of law, a mechanism for justice that has been fine-tuned over centuries? So that you are unconstrained to punish your political opponents? The restriction of political persecution was one of the main motivations for the construction of a rule of law based on due process.

  • @OurNewestMember

    @OurNewestMember

    6 ай бұрын

    So then you're arguing for mind reading, so that the selected fascism enforcers can stop pre-crime early in the benign (but of course proximal!) phase of thought and words? You know, that sounds like less stochastic authoritarianism and more actual authoritarianism 😅

  • @jakemetzger9115

    @jakemetzger9115

    6 ай бұрын

    ​​​@@OurNewestMemberI didn't argue for anything other than that Renton's definition of fascism, at least as presented here, is objectionably narrow compared to other experts in fascism and common discourse on the topic. The choices are to double down on Renton's definition (in which case we need some meaningful account for why things like stochastic violence are don't count as genuinely fascistic) or to acknowledge that Reston is being idiosyncratic. Given that you objected to neither of those things, likely because neither require mind reading, I'm not sure what you're trying to say.

  • @OurNewestMember

    @OurNewestMember

    6 ай бұрын

    @@jakemetzger9115 interesting. I found the scope also bothersomely narrow but I think problematic for different reasons. My objection to stochastic violence is that enforcing it necessarily implies taking action with increasing uncertainty about the intent and effect of the violence (hence the reference to the "mind reading" that would be required to carry out this approach in practice to enforce "violence" which has not quite yet manifest). It's the typical objection of "how do we trust who determines what is a threat, and who gets to use force to stop the threat?" My complaint about the narrow scope is that I don't think regular people care nearly as much about whether some authoritarianism is left or right, nationalist, collectivist, etc. So the focus on fascism is irrelevant to the bigger picture of use of force and public safety, etc. However, of course he is allowed to write a book specifically on fascism, even if I find it a missed opportunity. But it sounds like you're saying his definition of fascism itself is...too restrictive? I think you mean specifically the part about ("actual"?) violence being the key defining part (because it does not include proximal violence and maybe even incitement to violence?).

  • @moderndayheretic
    @moderndayheretic Жыл бұрын

    The irony of the title is amazing.

  • @gabrielethier2046
    @gabrielethier2046 Жыл бұрын

    I'm curious whether the author would make the same case for Communists advocating for a violent revolution and a one party state

  • @miniciominiciominicio
    @miniciominiciominicio Жыл бұрын

    fascinating. thanks for these discussions

  • @gringodude67
    @gringodude67 Жыл бұрын

    Cuthulu swims, but he always swims left.

  • @lysergidedaydream5970

    @lysergidedaydream5970

    Жыл бұрын

    Its been a long time since ive heard that. Has Yarvin done anything new recently?

  • @65firered
    @65firered Жыл бұрын

    The inevitable problem is who decides who has free speech, also decides who is a fascist. The difference between a fascist and a "fascist" is ultimately decided by them. This problem isn't an easy one to solve and might not even be possible to solve. So the question becomes is this a problem that can be avoided or solved at all? At the very least it's an interesting thought.

  • @sigigle

    @sigigle

    Жыл бұрын

    I agree, it's a slippery slope.

  • @cheesi

    @cheesi

    Жыл бұрын

    It's tricky for sure. Peronally my thought is that while it's difficult to pin down what and who is fascist, you really still better try if the alternative is just letting them go unopposed.

  • @HoratioKJV

    @HoratioKJV

    Жыл бұрын

    ​@@sigigle God's divine authority should decide that.

  • @65firered

    @65firered

    Жыл бұрын

    @@cheesi I don't think opposition and removing free speech are quite the same. If anything I think allowing them to speak is a weaknesses for them, as it allows them to be confronted directly.

  • @65firered

    @65firered

    Жыл бұрын

    @@HoratioKJV Might as well use a coin flip.

  • @DanWorrall
    @DanWorrall Жыл бұрын

    Only a man could claim that the threat of misogynistic violence is not real and present.

  • @OurNewestMember

    @OurNewestMember

    6 ай бұрын

    Lol sexist

  • @-Gorbi-
    @-Gorbi- Жыл бұрын

    A very relevant topic to and a productive use of skepticism, thanks for making this

  • @Skapo
    @Skapo Жыл бұрын

    I'm 15 minutes in and can already tell this guy doesn't know what he's talking about. He's obviously not actually paid much attention to the situation on the ground out here in the states.

  • @chesterdonnelly1212

    @chesterdonnelly1212

    Жыл бұрын

    They’re mostly talking about Britain and Europe.

  • @ReapermanUK

    @ReapermanUK

    Жыл бұрын

    @@chesterdonnelly1212 I find watching this after the uk this morning started a police state, funny as fuck, the guys stupid

  • @Zangelin

    @Zangelin

    Жыл бұрын

    Why does it always have to be sbout americans?

  • @StuntpilootStef
    @StuntpilootStef Жыл бұрын

    I wonder what David would think of stochastic terrorism, whether that would be no-platformable.

  • @baconsarny-geddon8298

    @baconsarny-geddon8298

    Жыл бұрын

    I'm betting he would, with the exact same meaningless disclaimer of "but I don't just mean the FAKE stochastic terrorists; only the super-duper-REAL stochastic terrorists..." (which would all go out the window, the nano-second he got the chance to use such a law against his political enemies- "Stochastic" or not.) Left OR right-wing, this is how authoritarians operate. Nobody STARTS OFF by saying "I want to silence anyone on the other side of politics to me..." But you don't use insanely vague, murky, notoriously- hard- to- precisely -define labels like "facist" (or, it'd probably be the equally- meaningless "Cultural Marxist", if he was coming from the right), if you only intend to target GENUINELY dangerous people (but... we ALREADY have laws against inciting violence, don't we?

  • @mrg7405

    @mrg7405

    Жыл бұрын

    There is no such thing

  • @StuntpilootStef

    @StuntpilootStef

    Жыл бұрын

    @@mrg7405 I think considering your firm dismissal of the entire subject, you're not only perfectly aware what I'm talking about, you also know perfectly well how it can happen and therfore know it really does exist.

  • @mrg7405

    @mrg7405

    Жыл бұрын

    ​@@StuntpilootStef it's a nonsense term to push the equally nonsensical ideas like the idea that words can be violent

  • @StuntpilootStef

    @StuntpilootStef

    Жыл бұрын

    @@mrg7405 This is easily refuted by the mere existence of assassins

  • @wessexexplorer
    @wessexexplorer Жыл бұрын

    Lots to think about and it was enlightening to hear someone who genuinely believes there is a a principle that can be applied to all here, not just against those he disagrees with.

  • @innovationatwork199

    @innovationatwork199

    Жыл бұрын

    You speaking of David or Alex? For a while I thought David was headed toward your point but as Alex kept prompting David to clearly articulate it…that point never materialized. Or did I miss it?

  • @Max0Effect

    @Max0Effect

    Жыл бұрын

    I do think this should be the goal of sceptical insights.

  • @hotdiggityd
    @hotdiggityd Жыл бұрын

    The idea that violent authoritarianism is purely a tool of the right and not of the left is obscene.

  • @jimmyobrien8738

    @jimmyobrien8738

    Жыл бұрын

    Both the far right and far left can bring about tyranny, don't let each fool you into thinking only the other one can and not them

  • @TeikonGom

    @TeikonGom

    Жыл бұрын

    🎯

  • @thecakeredux
    @thecakeredux Жыл бұрын

    You know why I'm opposed to fascism? Because of things like prohibiting free speech. I'll defend anyone's right to speak, even that of those who will try and censor others. Hence, even David Renton's.

  • @mateokenyon3311

    @mateokenyon3311

    Жыл бұрын

    if the reason u oppose fascism is because of free speech, and not its advocacy for violence towards groups of people based on inalienable factors then you need to look inwards bro.

  • @Zer0Spinn

    @Zer0Spinn

    Жыл бұрын

    @@mateokenyon3311 🤓

  • @thomascromwell6840

    @thomascromwell6840

    Жыл бұрын

    You're defending misinformation and hateful rhetoric knowing full well that society is not prepared to fact check everything and that hateful rhetoric gets traction from social media. To support the right of fascists to exist in private places and communities on the internet is to support fascism itself.

  • @notloki3377

    @notloki3377

    Жыл бұрын

    @@thomascromwell6840 i support rhetoric you hate. i don't support threats, but just because you hate something doesn't make it wrong.

  • @shanedsouza189

    @shanedsouza189

    Жыл бұрын

    Free speech unchecked is exactly how fascism spreads. Then one day your freedom of speech is taken away, and you will wonder why.

  • @RickonAndShaggydog
    @RickonAndShaggydog Жыл бұрын

    The first line of defence against bad ideas becoming reality is the ability of the individual to discern these ideas as bad. In order for this to happen, individuals in society need to be able to understand the idea in the first place. Nobody can understand a set of ideas if it is censored. Never underestimate the ability of an educated population to rationalise what is right and wrong. It is what has allowed Western democratic society to flourish in the first place!

  • @NKiwi2903

    @NKiwi2903

    Жыл бұрын

    Agreed. We need this, and also education that helps even children identify the pros and cons of certain ideas without the schools indoctrinating them into any political camp. Use moderate right and moderate left ideas and highlight the pros and cons of both sides.

  • @setlerking

    @setlerking

    Жыл бұрын

    You can’t debate ideas that fundamentally do not care about debate. Fascists and fascism are perfectly well discussed without including them. Allowing them to debate aka platform them you aren’t debating them, you’re giving them opportunities to propagandise

  • @RickonAndShaggydog

    @RickonAndShaggydog

    Жыл бұрын

    @@setlerking You don't need to debate them. You need a population of people who can reason and think for themselves. That's my point. If a fascist has a platform to speak then good! Let the rational thinking individuals amongst us see and understand their backwards ideas.

  • @KT-pv3kl

    @KT-pv3kl

    Жыл бұрын

    ​​@@setlerkinghe same can be said about socialism. the point however is by censoring and excluding them you are admitting that you don't want a free and open society you only want it to be free for ideas and opinions that you yourself agree with.

  • @RickonAndShaggydog

    @RickonAndShaggydog

    Жыл бұрын

    @@NKiwi2903 Indeed. The best decision I made in school was taking philosophical studies. Being taught the ability to think rationally and understanding how to form an argument has proved an invaluable tool in my life and is something that should be taught to our children as part of general curriculum.

  • @stephenphillips6888
    @stephenphillips6888 Жыл бұрын

    What a dreary book his must be, offering, from what I can see, little to even those who agree with his fundamental assumption that the only real threat to free speech comes from the right. I don’t know how Alex kept his patience with this slippery character.

  • @Br0teas
    @Br0teas7 ай бұрын

    The most important voices are the ones we disagree with. It is important for both parties, for education but more importantly to keep them in the public domain and not in hiding where they will become more extreme in their views. An hour in, no true Scotsmen

  • @Kai-Made
    @Kai-Made Жыл бұрын

    Two thoughts...1. When ideology, rhetoric and talking points are rooted in racism and "power-over" philosophy...they should not be allowed to go about their spreading of such filth easily. This is my opinion. BUT 2. It could be easily argued that by allowing at least some of this stuff to be on open platforms, we could potentially use it as a way to interface with this stuff and correct people instead of driving them into the clandestine underbelly of the web. Shine light on it and disinfect so to speak. I am not sure #2 would hold up though, it has been my experience that once people lock into this crap, they are stuck there for as long as they want, no matter how much you reason with them.

  • @Sahtoovi

    @Sahtoovi

    Жыл бұрын

    Our education systems have to teach people to use actual critical thinking properly. It's interesting how the higher someone's education level is, the less likely they are to be far right or fascists... I wonder why

  • @notloki3377

    @notloki3377

    Жыл бұрын

    using bacterial metaphors for human beings is a dark road to go down, friend.

  • @Sahtoovi

    @Sahtoovi

    Жыл бұрын

    @@notloki3377 lmao what

  • @notloki3377

    @notloki3377

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Sahtoovi think about it, you're putting somebody else on the other end of a binary opposition and then attributing to them the aspects of the worst possible parasites. It completely removes the possibility for dialogue.

  • @Sahtoovi

    @Sahtoovi

    Жыл бұрын

    @@notloki3377 What dialogue? I doubt that the people whose ideologies are pretty much based around oppressing minorities don't care about dialogue. You are doing the extremely centrist move of "we must have a civilized talk with them". Tell me, how did we defeat fascism in ww2? Spoiler: it was not with polite conversation.

  • @hunter_lite
    @hunter_lite Жыл бұрын

    The issue is cyclic and historical. Those interested should check "A Critique of Pure Tolerance" the 1965 book by philosopher Robert Paul Wolff, sociologist Barrington Moore Jr., and philosopher Herbert Marcuse.

  • @SnakeAndTurtleQigong
    @SnakeAndTurtleQigong Жыл бұрын

    Thanks so much!

  • @Steventrafford
    @Steventrafford Жыл бұрын

    Good conversation. I am swayed by his arguments, need to ponder on this more

  • @TheFluffyDuck
    @TheFluffyDuck Жыл бұрын

    So easily exploitable. Just label your enemies fascists, so they dont have a platform. Oh wait, that already happens. So dumb.

  • @yinoveryang4246
    @yinoveryang4246 Жыл бұрын

    Intellectual fascism is where people are so sure of their opinions that they believe they have the right to quash those of others. They believe this because they’ve not learned one of lifes most fundamental lessons: That life is a process of re-evaluating your opinions as your wisdom and experience increases. The immaturity of this position also fails to understand repeated lessons of history, and how the motive to direct and skew the debate, is always intended to be self-serving.

  • @radioactivedetective6876

    @radioactivedetective6876

    Жыл бұрын

    Fascism is not authoritarianism. Suppressing other voices, terrible as that may be, is not fascism. Political theory has very specific definitions for fascism.

  • @nirad8026

    @nirad8026

    Жыл бұрын

    @@radioactivedetective6876 Ok, so if a right wing government comes to power, decides to strip away gay pride online, bans pro-lgbt content everywhere (from government offices, malls, youtube, tiktok, media), are they fascist? No element of palingenetic ultranationalism, zero political violence against the opposition. I bet you would call that fascism. It's just that when a leftist bougie intellectual wants to ban speech, that's fine.

  • @UNCIVILIZE
    @UNCIVILIZE Жыл бұрын

    On Trump, it is a weak argument to say don't deplatform him because it's not possible (as opposed to on principle). Just go on principles that fascists should be de-platformed, and make the case as to whether he should be or not.

  • @madmax2976
    @madmax2976 Жыл бұрын

    The title here seems a bit misleading. Not platforming people does not equate to eliminating their free speech, it only means owners of a particular platform won't allow the party to engage their free speech on that platform. Of course they can always create their own platform - even if it's just standing on a corner holding a sign.

  • @AizenIsKubo

    @AizenIsKubo

    Жыл бұрын

    This is such a dumb Leftist argument I hope one of these days people actually challenge this idiocy. Giving away FS to corporations when corporations ARE the street corners...... I hope people that are sane Leftists start debunking this nonsensensical statement.

  • @dannynyman9681

    @dannynyman9681

    Жыл бұрын

    Sort of like Parler?

  • @baconsarny-geddon8298

    @baconsarny-geddon8298

    Жыл бұрын

    So you support effectively having to PAY MONEY for your right to free speech?!? (Or at the very least, pay to BE HEARD) So, it totes wouldn't be a "free speech" issue at all, if KZread and/or Twitter, Reddit, FB etc all decided to ban any user who promoted abortion right? Or who opposed racism? Or who promoted acceptance of LGBT? Those companies would be acting totally within their rights, and not limiting "free speech" at all, right? Or, is it ONLY "not a freedom of speech issue", when the corporations are silencing your political ENEMIES? I'm black, and gay. But I would never support large sites like YT, Twitter, etc de-platforming even the worst white supremacists or homophobes (unless they directly threaten violence, in a way that would get ANYONE banned) ...Because I've got enough life experience to know that once a precedent like that is set, minority groups will ALWAYS end up getting harmed worst, with the least right of reply. No government stays in power forever. Whatever laws/policies you want to impose on THE OTHER GUY, will eventually end up targetting YOUR side, when the pendulum swings the other way... I know it's a cliche, but if you don't support freedom of speech for those you disagree with MOST, then you don't support free speech AT ALL.

  • @jonahtwhale1779

    @jonahtwhale1779

    Жыл бұрын

    No-platforming means withdrawing an invitation to speak because you disagree with them.

  • @three_owl_night

    @three_owl_night

    Жыл бұрын

    That reminded me of Billboard Chris; standing and holding a sign didn't end up super well for him. Pretty sad.

  • @zoukatron
    @zoukatron Жыл бұрын

    Alex, I was very impressed by your moderate and measured approach, by your careful and clear push back on many things he said. This other guy though... Wow. I am impressed by how much he tries to wriggle. He never really defines fascism as an ideology, only as a set of behaviours... And a lot of those behaviours have also been pretty common in communist regimes... He seems to say that, once left wing groups start becoming violent, they have then become fascist themselves... The implication being that they are then right wing? As an actual liberal, I have no problem lumping fascists and Nazis and communists and the same box as people I would really rather did not exist (but would certainly never advocate their de-platforming), but he does seem to be in denial about things, both the nature of violence that many left-wingers can be capable of in the name of left-wing ideologies without actually turning into ideological fascists, as well the institutional power currently held by left-wing ideas (I say ideas, rather than left-wingers, as it is not always clear what ideology a person in a position of power has, but it is clear and an institution can embrace an ideology if it garners power to that institution). His position on no-platforming right-wingers because certain right wingers do not actually believes in free-speech surely means he should expect those of us and an opposing position to no-platform him on exactly the same basis.

  • @d.o.m.494
    @d.o.m.494 Жыл бұрын

    Trump wasn't anything except for his own ego.

  • @deeznutz8320

    @deeznutz8320

    9 ай бұрын

    A better president than Biden thats for sure Less wars less crime less inflation etc

  • @MissMentats
    @MissMentats Жыл бұрын

    I like to imagine this interview is taking place in Alex’s house, this is drawing room. A few hours ago, he had breakfasted on kedgeree in his breakfast room alone after rising so early. Then after some thought, he had chosen not to receive his guest in his library or receiving room but the drawing room; he doesn’t want to seem overly formal in these modern times. Perhaps later, after he has finished his work, he’ll allow the nanny to bring the children to sit with him for an hour and find out how their studies are coming along. Possibly even arrange to take tea with his wife. He’s in a generous mood today.

  • @MissMentats

    @MissMentats

    Жыл бұрын

    …. I have no real idea where that came from

  • @ethanstump

    @ethanstump

    Жыл бұрын

    We all have skeletons, some of us are upfront about it, others hide it until it bursts. Yes, it's clear that this guy has had immense privilege in his life, but if you listen to the ideas he's getting across, he actually doesn't want that to continue. Let's listen to the ruling class traitors, rather than just say "they are ruling class." I still listen to Marxists and socialists as an anarchist, even with understanding the blood and terror of the past even among these groups.

  • @paulishism
    @paulishism Жыл бұрын

    David gives me real Hope Not Hate vibes.

  • @kropotkinbeard1
    @kropotkinbeard1 Жыл бұрын

    Great job interviewing. Not sure about your guests definitions though 🤔

  • @macdougdoug
    @macdougdoug Жыл бұрын

    Mr. Renton sounded familiar, but I was confusing him with Mark Renton

  • @joannware6228
    @joannware6228 Жыл бұрын

    "I do not seek to understand in order that I may believe, but rather, I believe in order that I may understand." -St. Anselm of Canterbury

  • @williamlennie
    @williamlennie Жыл бұрын

    That felt like Renton was separating fascism from all its defining characteristics except the violence, then saying anyone who engages in such is a fascist. Hence, he can't think of left-wing groups enacting the same violence because they would, by definition, not be left-wing anymore. I do understand that his book is meant to be more like a guide to effective deplatforming, rather than reasoning why fascists are the only group who should face as such. It was alarming however that the "perfect" version of no platforming a fascist would result in "complete public support for you doing anything you like against them". I could not discern any underlying principle in Renton's position, only that he really disapproves of fascists and so supports their deplatforming.

  • @radioactivedetective6876
    @radioactivedetective6876 Жыл бұрын

    Alex, how are you coping with the mental health issues? I hope u are feeling better. Do take care and reach out to your loved ones whenever u feel like talking. You are so special, surely your frieds and family will be eager to be there with you in whatever capacity u need them. You don't need to do this alone. And don't hesitate to seek medical help. It is tough, but certainly u'l beat this.

  • @HFTROU
    @HFTROU Жыл бұрын

    "No free speech for Communists." A common sense case to no platforming. 👈

  • @endloesung_der_braunen_frage

    @endloesung_der_braunen_frage

    Жыл бұрын

    Lol you think that every based anti fascist is Stalinist?!

  • @deeznutz8320

    @deeznutz8320

    9 ай бұрын

    ​@@endloesung_der_braunen_frageTake based away cornball thats rightwing slang

  • @lindseyroy1629
    @lindseyroy1629 Жыл бұрын

    It’s already against the law to insight a riot. A person isn’t responsible for how other individuals respond to their statements, unless they explicitly advocate for violence.

  • @BlueHawkPictures17
    @BlueHawkPictures17 Жыл бұрын

    Very interesting seeing Alex, who has a mind of a philosopher, grapple with the deeply political mind of David.

  • @OurNewestMember

    @OurNewestMember

    6 ай бұрын

    It was painful and disappointing. But credits to Alex for his patience and persistence.

  • @aintnoslice3422
    @aintnoslice3422 Жыл бұрын

    David seems to have a very "it could never happen to me" approach to the left.

  • @-Gorbi-
    @-Gorbi- Жыл бұрын

    The problem with fascism - it was an ordered, organized intimidation of political enemies to promote a clear ideology. The problem with the modern left - it is a chaotic, unorderly intimidation of political enemies to promote a vague and severely confused ideology.

  • @eagleboy3912
    @eagleboy3912 Жыл бұрын

    After watching the video and reading a lot of the comments, it seems quite clear that 1) there needs to be clearly criteria for what is fascism and 2) we need a term form Left-wing Authoritarianism like we do for Right-wing Authoritarianism (aka Fascism). We could go the easy route and use the same format that the term Fascism got with its origins being from the fascisti word associated with Mussolini's party and so we could use Bolshevikism due to the bolshevik word associated with Lenin's party.

  • @patrickkilroy6512
    @patrickkilroy6512 Жыл бұрын

    29:00 Renton literally just finished saying that any argument in favour of free speech must be "mirrored", i.e. applied to both left and right, and that this is the only way to make a principled argument. And then responds to a question of the left potentially becoming "fascisitic" and requiring censorship like right-wing political violence with "Well I would never advocate the no-platforming of leftist views". Total dodge, total hypocrisy. It indicates that the thesis of his book is not being made on a principled basis, by his own definitions. He keeps using words like "mistake" when it comes to Leftists violating principles and behaving unethically. The kiddy gloves are on for leftists, but the gloves come off for the right. Stalinism was every bit as evil as Nazism and Fascism. Never treat the left as in any way more fundamentally benign than the right. They are not. We have already seen both the Left and the Right behaving in equally violent and immoral ways in the same country: it happened in Weimar Germany. Both the left and the right used tactics or terror and violence to try and wage a political war. It's very frustrating to see, as he is otherwise a very moderate and palatable leftist. But the absence of principle, the favouring of purely consequentialist ethics, and mostly pragmatic reasoning makes it impossible for me to accept his thesis as someone who is not on his team. It's a parochial argument, when it ought to be universal in its terms.

  • @ShukakuTheCrazy1
    @ShukakuTheCrazy1 Жыл бұрын

    Wait, did he just call the gop a center right party,

  • @gregoryyoung1758

    @gregoryyoung1758

    Жыл бұрын

    I really felt he asserted up front Donald Trump was not a fascist, then went on to inadvertently prove Donald Trump is a fascist.

  • @jimtomo9207

    @jimtomo9207

    Жыл бұрын

    Donald trump was a classic Liberal

  • @mrg7405

    @mrg7405

    Жыл бұрын

    ​@@gregoryyoung1758 well that would be hard to prove since Trump is far from a fascist

  • @adamlefevre6016

    @adamlefevre6016

    Жыл бұрын

    Donald Trump didn't actually have any ideology other than narcissism. He'll go in any direction that will give him enough praise and attention to fill the empty void in his heart. The problem is that a lot of fascist ideas are bubbling up in the GOP, and he will gladly go along with them in order to follow the applause.

  • @leonais1

    @leonais1

    Жыл бұрын

    @@jimtomo9207 He was also a nationalist (MAGA) as well which might be why he gets associated with facism.

  • @jakedoy1
    @jakedoy1 Жыл бұрын

    Seemingly can't figure out the difference between an opponent and an enemy. Opponents are to be defeated, enemies are to be destroyed. Our failure to distinguish the two will be our downfall

  • @kevintyrrell9559

    @kevintyrrell9559

    Жыл бұрын

    An opponent is a person who is simply in opposition to you or your position. They need to be engaged with and talked to through discourse and most importantly in good faith. An opponent does not necessarily mean you harm or even have any bad feelings towards you at all. A friend can be an opponent. An enemy by definition bears you I'll will and is motivated by negative emotion to cause you harm, and may not always be reasoned with or deserve discourse. An opponent and an enemy are poles apart...not even in the same ball park of adversary.

  • @65firered

    @65firered

    Жыл бұрын

    The difference between the two isn't as clear cut as it might appear, if it was that easy nations wouldn't rise and fall.

  • @BarriosGroupie
    @BarriosGroupie Жыл бұрын

    What a great interview. I find it psychologically comforting to know that knowledgeable barristers like David Renton exist. And his point at the end is spot on about Tommy Robinson shutting down the free speech of Islam4uk protestors, while claiming to be an advocate for free speech. It goes to show that we all moderate free speech as a way of moderating the flow of information to influence other people, winning their hearts and minds to serve our agenda while shutting down others speech if we find the consequences too damaging towards the reality we want to exist for ourselves.

  • @OurNewestMember

    @OurNewestMember

    6 ай бұрын

    No, I don't think "we all moderate free speech" actually

  • @hissupremecorrectfulnessre9478
    @hissupremecorrectfulnessre9478 Жыл бұрын

    Failing at enacting fascism doesn't mean you're not a fascist. All it means is that you suck at it.

  • @Llamo-
    @Llamo- Жыл бұрын

    Everytime the interviwer presses this guy on his double standards, he just reshifts the focus of the conversation. Wack. Hold him to account, man come on

  • @JCTheSniper15
    @JCTheSniper15 Жыл бұрын

    It's crazy to hear a person arguing that you shouldn't allow free speech for a nebulous group that you just kind of get to define however you want... If suppression of speech is allowed it will always be abused.

  • @illithidhunter6177
    @illithidhunter6177 Жыл бұрын

    This topic gives me such a hard time picking a side. One side is that it's true that if we want "free" speech we need to accept people with destructive worldviews. The other is that to preserve "free" speech we can't allow people to use it to remove other people's rights. For me, I can't accept that Free speech can't self-preserve. That would mean allowing speech for the removal of free speech of other people.

  • @HowardWimshurst

    @HowardWimshurst

    Жыл бұрын

    You have identified what makes this topic really tricky.

  • @timwhite5562
    @timwhite5562 Жыл бұрын

    It's funny, I watch these interviews and think of how novel it is to see them done in this manner. Then I realize "oh wait, this was pretty much textbook at one point decades ago." If you watch old news programs with people like Walter Cronkite and Edward R Murrow. I found the guest's position to track right up to around 35 minutes in where he took a turn and started to exhibit blinders as to how free speech is being assaulted and from what quarters. Around the 40:00 mark he describes the effectiveness "de-radicalizing" programs in the 1970's which sounds a whole hell of a lot like reeducation.

  • @Jacob-yb3hz
    @Jacob-yb3hz Жыл бұрын

    It's hard for me to take him serious when he quite literally says no left wing group should be de-platformed and he refuses to admit any left wing group could possibly be violent enough to deserve de-platforming. When you give him a hypothetical of a left wing group that is just as violent as fascists he basically just says they would be fascists then. His entire argument is literally special pleading, he says himself he won't apply standards to his own side, only to the side he doesn't like.

  • @PauLtus_B

    @PauLtus_B

    Жыл бұрын

    I've not listened to all of isn't the entire point specifically aimed at fascism rather than being about free speech for just broadly being right wing? "When you give him a hypothetical of a left wing group that is just as violent as fascists he basically just says they would be fascists then." ...then I suppose at that point yes. I don't see how a left wing group would end up being fascist (besides in name only perhaps), that seems a very "both-sides" mentality. It might seem somewhat paradoxical but to me it falls among the same line where to be intolerant of intolerance fits within an ideal of tolerance. As fascism would use violence against the free speech of its opposition, it's not that weird to make that claim. Suppressing the free speech of people who want go against free speech in the name of free speech, basically.

  • @NotYurAverageJoe

    @NotYurAverageJoe

    Жыл бұрын

    I think the notion of “fairness” here belies a false equivocation that fascism as an ideology is just violent authoritarian right-wingism with violent authoritarian leftism as its opposite. That’s an oversimplified misunderstanding of the specific nature of fascism. They aren’t equal and opposite. Left-wing extremist ideology, aberrations aside, does not NECESSITATE authoritarian censorship or a genocidal level of violence as its explicit end. Fascism is unique in that it does and that’s part of what defines it, so yes if a “left-wing” group delved into that they would be making the horseshoe and defying their own supposed ideals. This is why deplatforming might be a necessary political vaccine to something like fascism as otherwise it would become a cancer within the free speech paradigm that would destroy it from within, using (at times reprehensible, but relatively marginal) left-wing spooks to justify wholesale totalitarian moves as they have throughout history. Instead we should be focusing on discriminating essentially fascist ideas from social conservatism and drawing a clear line to avoid censoring with too broad a brush and triggering a retaliatory fascist surge.

  • @jayplay8869

    @jayplay8869

    Жыл бұрын

    It’s not fascist to kill fascists…

  • @Retog

    @Retog

    Жыл бұрын

    That’s because your equating the right and left with equal legitimacy. If you learn the foundational beliefs of both sides and then the effects they have had on the world, you would see this is not the case. The left is legitimate, the right is not.

  • @BiggestDataBoy

    @BiggestDataBoy

    Жыл бұрын

    @@NotYurAverageJoe since when is violence a necessary part of the definition of fascism? It’s certainly true that authoritarian political systems can almost never come to be without violence but that’s not necessary, it’s just our practical experience. With that, the relationship to socialism is rather obvious. Fascism is not, in itself, a reflection of right or left politics. It’s not on that spectrum. It’s an attribute, potentially, of any system.

  • @joellaw7950
    @joellaw7950 Жыл бұрын

    I don't get it. Renton, Kisin, and Barron have been really awful guests. They do not seem very principled or reasoned, instead talking about feelings, tactics and intuitions without being able to flesh them out at all. I listened to this hour long interview and the only thing I got out of it is that facism in the early 1900s was bad and shouldn't have been allowed to have a platform at that time. Everytime O'Conner tries to get him to say anything he takes 10 minutes to say nothing. I think you are trying to be cordial, which works great when the guests are great, such as Craig, Brierley, and Woodford, but with your more recent guests there are glaring issues in thier reasoning that they dance around the entire time. Without directly stating that these things don't make sense or that they didn't answer a question I, as a viewer, get frustrated by the experience.

  • @mrg7405

    @mrg7405

    Жыл бұрын

    Except Kisin was clear and principled

  • @leonais1

    @leonais1

    Жыл бұрын

    If Alex is exposing the problems with his guests merely by asking polite questions then he is problably doing well as an interviewer. If he does any better, nobody will want to give him interviews.

  • @joellaw7950

    @joellaw7950

    Жыл бұрын

    ​@@leonais1 I agree and think he is doing a great job interviewing, which is the problem when guests are low quality. Next time he reads a book that catches his fancy, a video essay may be a better viewer experience. An interview like this would only be a good viewer experience if the person being interviewed is famous some other way, a politician, a leader of an organization or some other such thing where showing that them having problems would be interesting in itself.

  • @joellaw7950

    @joellaw7950

    Жыл бұрын

    @@mrg7405 Probably not the right video to talk about it. Imagining I didn't include Kisin in the list my point would be conducting a great interview on a person without clear principled ideas is a poor viewer experience even if it does lay their beliefs bare.

  • @joellaw7950

    @joellaw7950

    Жыл бұрын

    @Never repeats I, at least, was talking about his talk on within reason and not his greater body of work. For instance when O'Connor confronted him with the idea that speech could be considered a form of violence just like any other physical act he floundered for a while, then repeatedly called him clever, then stated 'I think we all instinctively understand the difference'.

  • @AnttiJumppainen
    @AnttiJumppainen Жыл бұрын

    Enjoyed, many good/important points, thanks

  • @Meow_Zedong
    @Meow_Zedong Жыл бұрын

    I want to agree with David's overall conclusion, but the narrowness of his criteria for deplatforming benefits the fascists themselves. Maybe I'm misunderstanding, but he came across as dismissive of the power that large social media platforms have to funnel certain people in the direction of fascism if left unchecked. Maybe this is a bad analogy, but it's like allowing a tumor to grow in your body but not removing it until it becomes cancerous and metastisizes.

  • @misterchief242
    @misterchief242 Жыл бұрын

    Wow! I came into this thinking I would be mostly disagreeing after watching yesterdays clip…. And now I have a new name written down to keep checking on in the future. Loved this talk!

  • @mateokenyon3311
    @mateokenyon3311 Жыл бұрын

    I always laugh when someone calls the silicon valley billionaires left wing, like really? BILLIONAIRES? LEFT WING? do you understand what leftism is? can you define socialism? this isn't directed at Alex because I know he was just bringing up what others think btw.

  • @fifiadan

    @fifiadan

    Жыл бұрын

    Based. Leftism has been redefined as liberal / identity politics

  • @notloki3377

    @notloki3377

    Жыл бұрын

    they pretend to be left wing so they can steal the money from low iq trailer park socialists. it's just profitable for them.

  • @myjciskate4

    @myjciskate4

    Жыл бұрын

    For real. It's like these people don't actually read theory at all.

  • @notloki3377

    @notloki3377

    Жыл бұрын

    @@myjciskate4 no, the prefer to manipulate socialist midwits using their own ingroup language. exactly as it should be. come buy your "punch a nazi" shirts! $20! get one for a comrade! who's a good little revolutionary, you are! yes you! you're gonna save the planet! now pay off your student loans ;)

  • @65firered

    @65firered

    Жыл бұрын

    The left is not one singular ideology.

  • @stephansyme2125
    @stephansyme2125 Жыл бұрын

    Stating a fact is not hateful rhetoric.

  • @timfallon8226
    @timfallon82269 ай бұрын

    I think extreme leftists should not be allowed a platform, I'll redefine this as we go along.

  • @Anabsurdsuggestion
    @Anabsurdsuggestion Жыл бұрын

    I disagree. I don’t think fascism is qualified by physical violence. Why wait to until there is violence in the mix to label the tendency? I do not wish to wait until I am in the midst of violent suppression to label correctly the policies that brought me to that awful situation. Why fear identifying it for what it is before violence is surrounding us? By then it will be too late.

  • @Stikibits
    @Stikibits Жыл бұрын

    Any incitement of hate, discrimination or violence violates human rights, so fella needs to learn some basic shit. And he doesn't know what fascism is, either.

  • @KT-pv3kl

    @KT-pv3kl

    Жыл бұрын

    I agree with your sentiment but human rights are non existent wether you look at it from a pragmatic angle or a philosophical one.

  • @Stikibits

    @Stikibits

    Жыл бұрын

    @@KT-pv3kl Doesn't matter about your false dilemma. Human Rights exist...and they're inalienable with or without your apparent dilemma, so...

  • @abbasfadhil1715

    @abbasfadhil1715

    Жыл бұрын

    ​ @K T I don't know why we assume humans have rights to begin with; it just seems like a thing we all agree exists without justification. This is an issue I particularly have with the left and the right: they both think they have the moral high ground, thus dehumanizing the other without being truly genuine in their arguments. So what do you think? Eager to see your point of view

  • @abbasfadhil1715

    @abbasfadhil1715

    Жыл бұрын

    where did we receive these supposed rights from? It's more like a presumption .

  • @KT-pv3kl

    @KT-pv3kl

    Жыл бұрын

    ​@@abbasfadhil1715I wouldn't even say that we all agree on them. that's another lie that is propagated from the people who claim human rights exist and it's conveniently the same people who have been defining what those human rights are and how other humans have to abide by them. the original justification was that they were somehow "natural" rights which is clearly not true as nature doesn't give a crap about any rights and neither do any other animals. If you asked a north Korean , a neo nazi and a tribesman from the Namib desert wether they all agreed on human rights I'd bet money on the fact that they would in fact not agree on them as many of our western pseudo intellectuals presume.

  • @nicholascopsey4807
    @nicholascopsey4807 Жыл бұрын

    The part where Alex asks if there were some conspiracy against the right to silence their speech on social media platforms, the guest doesn't even bother to consider the hypothetical. Why is he so disingenuous about his beliefs?

  • @DeezScotts2023
    @DeezScotts2023 Жыл бұрын

    A Great Leap Forward in thinking…

  • @wilconorth
    @wilconorth Жыл бұрын

    This guys dangerous

  • @LukeMcGuireoides
    @LukeMcGuireoides Жыл бұрын

    This essentially has nothing to do with deplatforming. According to this quack barely anyone at all qualifies to be deplatformed. The Germans are in a unique position in relation to this issue. I think we should look to them for wisdom.

  • @chesterdonnelly1212

    @chesterdonnelly1212

    Жыл бұрын

    No. The Germans live with a burden of guilt. That affects them in a way that we are not affected.

  • @TheDannyc1991
    @TheDannyc1991 Жыл бұрын

    This guy seems like hes slept for the last 20 years.

  • @UNCIVILIZE
    @UNCIVILIZE Жыл бұрын

    If you're gonna draw the line of free speech just right before fascism, well then you might as well move it even further, right? That's the problem. It's a slippery slope. And that's why some principles, like free speech, need to be he'd fast.

  • @entertainingideas
    @entertainingideas Жыл бұрын

    So we can't call a fascist a fascist until it's too late?

  • @rkdeshdeepak4131

    @rkdeshdeepak4131

    Жыл бұрын

    or until it is accurate

  • @BurnigLegionsBlade

    @BurnigLegionsBlade

    Жыл бұрын

    Watch the vid

  • @DrumWild

    @DrumWild

    Жыл бұрын

    @@rkdeshdeepak4131 It has been accurate for quite some time. We shouldn't have to wait until The Night of Long Knives repeats itself. We have the power of historical reference. Any educated person can see where this is going. Those who do not learn from history are damned to repeat it. And those who do learn from history are damned to watch the world fail again and again, for they are so grossly out-numbered.

  • @rkdeshdeepak4131

    @rkdeshdeepak4131

    Жыл бұрын

    @@DrumWild there is no we here. Fascism has certain defintition, one should use the term when it fills the definition.

  • @UniDocs_Mahapushpa_Cyavana

    @UniDocs_Mahapushpa_Cyavana

    Жыл бұрын

    _I mean..._ you can call anyone a fascist if you 🫵 *want to* .

  • @Stikibits
    @Stikibits Жыл бұрын

    This is possibly the most credible person on the globe when it comes to Fascism: "How is fascism defined? Robert Paxton, a professor emeritus of social science at Columbia University in New York told Live Science that fascism is "a form of political practice distinctive to the 20th century that arouses popular enthusiasm by sophisticated propaganda techniques." According to Paxton, fascism uses such propaganda to promote: -anti-liberalism, rejecting individual rights, civil liberties, free enterprise and democracy -anti-socialism, rejecting economic principles based on socialist frameworks -exclusion of certain groups, often through violence -nationalism that seeks to expand the nation's influence and power" Source: Live Science; What is Fascism?

  • @Historia.Magistra.Vitae.

    @Historia.Magistra.Vitae.

    Жыл бұрын

    _"-anti-socia lism, rejecting economic principles based on soci alist frameworks"_ This is where Paxton has no clue what he is talking about. Fasci sm was a soc ialist ideology based on national syndi calism. They never rejected social ism, they rejected mar xism.

  • @hanansheikh5016

    @hanansheikh5016

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Historia.Magistra.Vitae. Define socialism.

  • @Historia.Magistra.Vitae.

    @Historia.Magistra.Vitae.

    Жыл бұрын

    @@hanansheikh5016 : an economic system where the collective (such as workers, guilds, the government etc.) own/control the buildings and tools that make goods and services like farms and factories. This can be achieved through decentralized and direct worker-ownership, or through centralized state-ownership/control of the means of production. or simply, the collective ownership or control of the means of production, distribution and exchange of goods.

  • @alabaster2163

    @alabaster2163

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Historia.Magistra.Vitae. in history when the people handed over all the things to those already in power... it never went well. It doesn't matter what pretty horrid label you give it... it still ends in Northe Korea or NaZi camps...

  • @TeikonGom

    @TeikonGom

    Жыл бұрын

    Becoming a social scientist dosen't requires that much intelligence or honesty it seems.

  • @wessexexplorer
    @wessexexplorer Жыл бұрын

    31:45 he is saying socialists that act violently, become far right fascists.

  • @Anon_571
    @Anon_571 Жыл бұрын

    No free speech for communists and I get to decide what is and who is a communist, how about that

  • @zalacainbilbao
    @zalacainbilbao Жыл бұрын

    'No Free Speech for Communists' would be an equally valuable book.

  • @Iandar1
    @Iandar1 Жыл бұрын

    Sounds like someone needs to know about the paradox of tolerance. And stochastic terrorism.

  • @Ryanw131
    @Ryanw131 Жыл бұрын

    Very interesting conversation, one point i feel a little off about, is the reluctance to label something as fascist unless it involves government violence and murder. We will end up looking around at bodies saying "oh this is fascism" if we aren't able to point out current fascist rhetoric as fascist. there's not much point in understanding it's history if we can't say it is so until it is far too late.

  • @jackdelaney6633
    @jackdelaney6633 Жыл бұрын

    i'm still scratching my head as to where all these fascist are? i'll go along with the premis but where are these people who should be de-platformed?

  • @didion5204
    @didion5204 Жыл бұрын

    could you address why, 26 episodes in, you have not had any women as guests?

  • @lukeh2440

    @lukeh2440

    Жыл бұрын

    Are you assuming prior guests’ gender identities?

  • @KT-pv3kl

    @KT-pv3kl

    Жыл бұрын

    clearly because he is sexist and loves to discriminate against females! on that note hwo do you know that none of his 26 guests identify as women ? did they mention their pronouns and prefferences or are you simply assuming their genders ? that's not very progressive of you if I may say so...

  • @fixpontt

    @fixpontt

    Жыл бұрын

    one needs a really specific mindset and agenda to even ask an unimportant question like this, wow just wow

  • @zvonomirzuboronovic8662

    @zvonomirzuboronovic8662

    Жыл бұрын

    This is a serious and mature podcast

  • @tidalfite2748

    @tidalfite2748

    Жыл бұрын

    Don't need to.

  • @iggysfriend4431
    @iggysfriend4431 Жыл бұрын

    This might be a controversial question, but... What about the equally far left, or other groups, they can be equally violent in their opposition. When free speech is denied to anyone, it's potentially denied to everyone. I am not talking in the "shouting fire in a theatre" free speech here. I don't know the answer to this question but it seems to be a very slippery slope. The real problem is that where the line is drawn can be a very arbitrary, and those drawing that line are like anyone susceptible to getting it wrong. It might start off with banning free speech for fascists but then there's the possibility that it's extended for an other group deemed equally bad. Then if two groups are OK then why not 3, or 4 or 44. Where does it stop? There are a number of questions that need answering. Who gets to decided? Is there a right of appeal? How does this person get the position of deciding? How do you get rid of this person when they are manifestly wrong? At the 10 minute mark David's description could apply to the far left too. The political system in Russia and China could easily be categorised in this way.

  • @johnrobertson93
    @johnrobertson93 Жыл бұрын

    Respectfully, I do not think that word (fascism) means what he thinks it means. Fascism is not defined by the willingness to engage in violence against one's political enemies even though this may occur. Fascism is a specific type of ethno-cultural nationalism which is often, but need not always be, totalitarian in its promulgation of its ideals.

  • @RoninTF2011

    @RoninTF2011

    Жыл бұрын

    have you ANY example of this that did NOT involve violence against the "outsiders" ? Any?

  • @SineN0mine3

    @SineN0mine3

    7 ай бұрын

    ​@@RoninTF2011violence occurs in a lot of scenarios that aren't fascism.

  • @RoninTF2011

    @RoninTF2011

    7 ай бұрын

    @@SineN0mine3 the point ==..................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................==> you

  • @aozf05
    @aozf05 Жыл бұрын

    Renton seems to make a lot of excuses to not label Trump a fascist but he seems to ignore the fact that the reason Trump's administration wasn't outright fascist was because he was surrounded by people who kept talking him down from doing fascist things or just not carrying out his orders. If not for all these external restraints, there would be no doubt that Trump is fascist. By all accounts, his first instinct in every situation lands firmly in that area. Luckily for all of us, the man lacks the intelligence and leadership skills to bring his wishes to fruition. He may be the de facto leader of a fascist uprising but it will take others to make it happen which leaves us with an opening to take it down before it takes over.

  • @LarkKeats
    @LarkKeats Жыл бұрын

    @1:03:39 This is the most terrifying statement this man has made yet. I'm not a Tommy Robinson fan, but the state ignoring the law in order to convict someone seems fascist.

  • @carpediem5232

    @carpediem5232

    Жыл бұрын

    He didn't say they ignored it. He said they laughed at the hypocrisy.

  • @LarkKeats

    @LarkKeats

    Жыл бұрын

    ​@@carpediem5232 Did you miss the part where he said that it influence their decision?

  • @carpediem5232

    @carpediem5232

    Жыл бұрын

    ​@@LarkKeats No and I didn't miss the "among the reasons why" either. It was not the only reason, you should be able to look up the reasons. But mainly he was arguing that it was just free speech where as others claimed it was harassment. A history of fighting against free speech would serve as one aspect "among others" why the argument made by the defence could be seen as not convincing.

  • @LarkKeats

    @LarkKeats

    Жыл бұрын

    ​@@carpediem5232 After relooking at the video. Yeah maybe you are right but it's just laughing at and then condemning a man seems really messed up. I try to hold true to my liberal ideology. I understand that judges have discretion, but blatantly ignoring a pillar of ideology is terrifying to me. We're basically saying that our ideology does not apply to you, because you failed to apply our ideology. The standard that this action sets should be terrifying because it is terrifying. Also, would it not justify the way blacks are treated in America, because they failed to buy into the ideology.

  • @carpediem5232

    @carpediem5232

    Жыл бұрын

    @JC if you want to know why the judges ruled a certain way look up the ruling. There you can find the entire thing. Don't make up a hypothetical from an offhand comment from a sit in. Especially when that comment doesn't say what you thought.

  • @roxee57
    @roxee57 Жыл бұрын

    This is the guy who spied on a fellow barristers (Allison Bailey) phone calls at work and then reported her to her bosses at Garden Court Chambers for being transphobic. All because she expressed concern people were insisting lesbians like her had to agree & accept people born male who claimed they were women and lesbian into their groups & dating pool. How do I know? Allison took GC Chambers to court and this guys behaviour was brought up in the evidence. His behaviour sounds a bit stasi like to me.

  • @oliverhug3

    @oliverhug3

    Жыл бұрын

    a society in which one isn`t allowed to define what a woman is, isn`t far away being fascist.

  • @say6hows7
    @say6hows7 Жыл бұрын

    Did this guy honestly bring up Charlottesville? He obviously didn’t actually listen to what Trump said in that situation. In any case pretty good interview.

  • @TheYogaDen
    @TheYogaDen Жыл бұрын

    Please, help me understand why this isn't true of David's position: by definition the Left cannot be violent; the very moment a left wing group becomes violent is the same moment that group becomes right wing.

  • @chesterdonnelly1212

    @chesterdonnelly1212

    Жыл бұрын

    Hmm, I think that is his belief, or close to it.

  • @exiledfrommyself
    @exiledfrommyself Жыл бұрын

    I think a better title would be "Censorship for Fascists". Free Speech deals with the government. The platforms are owned by individuals, not the government. No one has the right to use another individual's property without their permission.

  • @KT-pv3kl

    @KT-pv3kl

    Жыл бұрын

    and yet the government does exactly that on a regular basis...

  • @LukeMcGuireoides

    @LukeMcGuireoides

    Жыл бұрын

    Kudos, and Alex took a bad turn inviting this man on and basically acquiescing to his fascist enabling. This man is either a moron or a bad faith actor.

  • @Zer0Spinn

    @Zer0Spinn

    Жыл бұрын

    "Oh, so we just gotta create your means of comunication and then let them be run by someone else? Neat." *proceeds to fund Silicon Valley* That argument is as bad faith as bad faith gets.

  • @exiledfrommyself

    @exiledfrommyself

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Zer0Spinn It's about property rights. You don't have a right to someone else's property. Also, I don't use any social media outside of KZread. I think social media is a scourge on society.

  • @nurifidei4056

    @nurifidei4056

    Жыл бұрын

    the problem arises when the privately owned platforms collude with the government to censor people, like what happened in the last three years

  • @Aterdeusisunavailable
    @Aterdeusisunavailable Жыл бұрын

    So glad to see you finally have a socialist on the podcast, more of this please!

  • @MariamPassionfruit
    @MariamPassionfruit Жыл бұрын

    I think David Renton is rather narrow with his definition of fascism and what it means to be fascist, you can be ideologically minded as a fascist and be unable to kill your political enemies, even if they want to do so. I understand his point that it applies to a political figurehead who would go to that extent but some fascist simply hide their identities, simple as. Perhaps this meaning is only applicable to his no platforming argument, in which it is not a general defintion of being a fascist.

  • @Surefire99
    @Surefire995 ай бұрын

    Does the UK has RICO/Racketeering laws? So if a politician says something like "if you don't vote for me, you might have an accident", or does it only count if they come out directly with a threat?