Freedom of speech, yes. The Supreme Court has even accepted a case to decide whether that covers lies as well; stay tuned. But freedom of speech and speaking freely are quite different.
We all know how politicians and the media sift through spoken or written comments by anyone they might consider a threat – or newsworthy in any way; but we have also discovered that isn’t confined to what they actually say, but any words they say, that taken out of context might prove to be grist for the mill. In other words if I were to say I don’t like you when you say things like that, the headline might read I don’t like you, and the underlying article might never attempt to clarify it. But that’s politics – and that’s news; politics is for a fact dirty business – and always has been, but news can be pretty underhanded as well; struggle for power has always been win at all costs.
But it goes beyond that, as has been p0inted out in the context of Facebook. The case of the young cheerleader in the Midwest who was driven to suicide by character assassination and inuendo was well publicized, but not unique. Young people and those not so young have gotten in the habit of speaking their minds on line, with very little concern for how it might be interpreted. In fact it has been suggested that some recruiters routinely check out applicants on line (on Facebook) to get a more candid view of them as a person. When confronted with the results, targets have been very surprised and indignant: that information is PRIVATE. Oh, is it? Obviously it isn’t and those that key it in, or worse, illustrate it with pictures, sometimes indiscreet, have learned to their dismay that it is not. And that’s not fair! Why not? The subscriber keys it in and sends it out – on a public platform. Facebook has subsequently been forced to enhance security, but everyone knows, or should, that friends have friends and once loose, data travels FAST.
The same is true with emails; once released there are no controls – and almost no attribution. There the admonition is the opposite though, because many, particularly muliple-addresse emails, are usually written to be passed on. And we all know, or should, all kinds of lies, half truths and innuendo are quite common in mass delivery emails – deliberately. Which is one reason why I am always advising people not to take information at face value without going more deeply into it. Such emails - and much else - almost always at best only give only one side of a situation. Their potential for propaganda; whether black, white or grey; is not only well known but commercially exploited (advertising).
There is no privacy any more, and as the Facebook situation makes evident, many people seem to want it that way, in that they exploit themselves, even if not ALWAYS deliberately – but often enough. Of course then there is hacking, where preditors make it their business to access other people’s data, without permission, with malice aforethought Anywhere else that would be a crime, but on line perpetrators are difficult to catch. For that kind of an attempt for privacy we have created a massive industry that we pay for protection, and even then it doesn’t always do the trick, although it helps.
Add to that our propensity toward political correctness. There are many things that are just unacceptable to say anymore and say-ers will be quickly taken to task. Huckleberry Finn has even been removed from bookshelves as a result, but not uniquely. Political correctness is a whole other discussion, but protecting one’s self from its defenders is not, and has caused people to resort to the above title admonition, despite free speech. Speech may be free, and protected legally, but that doesn’t mean defenders of whatever they might not want to hear won’t take it and run with it.
When I began this thought process what I was after was the admonition, if you don’t want something to be known or misused – or used against you, shutcher mouth. But in the process I have been reminded once again how freedom of speech has been exploited – for and against almost everything, proving once again that rights are very fragile without responsibility.