StatsNerd wrote:
pete1061 wrote:
Thing is, A&E is not a public forum. They can censor whoever they want.
This is a situation where the rights of one party are up against the rights of another.
Does the homophobic religious zealot have the right to espouse his beliefs on any podium he chooses?
Or does a business have the right to censor anyone representing them who has beliefs that do not agree with that business?
Yes to both.
But who's rights trumps the other?
If A&E lets Christians preach their anti-gay messages,
Then they should also let neo-nazis & kkk preach about racist things,
Or let Muslims go on about how inferior the infidel is.
If A&E is allowed to censor whoever they want, well, there are many other networks to choose from.
If people don't like their censorship, they have the right to change the channel. If their censorship is unpopular enough, they lose ratings and go out of business. But if they allow certain groups to espouse hate speech, then they will alienate another group and still potentially lose business. It comes down to which alienated group effects their business more.
The government isn't allowed to censor, but businesses can censor what they want. The 1st amendment doesn't apply to private property. If people can't do what they want on their private property (so long as they don't physically harm another person), then that property isn't really private property.
Maybe that's the harsh truth abut our society, there is no such thing as private property. Do actually we live in a communist society?
This really is a tangled, sticky situation. When rights collide.
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