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where permissible free speech ends and actionable hate speech or incitement to violence begins. It is a complicated area of law and even attorneys who regularly deal with this type of public speech will tell you that "it depends on exactly what was said, when, to whom and in what context."
But, you know, we didn't used to have to depend on statutes and case law to govern what was "OK" to say out loud and what was not.
Americans used to have a sense of shame; a sense of decency; a conscience.
Can anyone imagine Dwight Eisenhower or John Kennedy insisting that up was indeed down, black absolutely was white and that apples and oranges are exactly the same fruits?
Yet, how many supposedly responsible "leaders" repeatedly assured America that the Health Insurance Reform bill created "death panels" empowered to "pull the plug on Grandma"?
How many times did we hear "government take-over of health care" and warnings about government "coming between you and your doctor'?
How many times did we cringe at yet another Republican oozing thinly-veiled racism as he or she questioned whether Barack Obama was a US citizen?
And, now, we are enduring the likes of Eric Cantor, John Boehner and (ugh!) Ann Coulter smugly insisting that they get threats, too, they just don't whine about it.
I recall a time when no public figure would have expected to continue their careers beyond the next election if they had so grievously insulted the intelligence of the electorate.
But, that was then. Today, if you don't get prosecuted for whatever poison you choose to vomit into the public discourse, you can pretty much count on any outrage having been totally forgotten by the next election---replaced by a new outrage du jour or maybe just a REALLY exciting week on "Dancing With The Stars".
It's a quaint idea, I realize, but the purifying effects of a genuine sense of conscience and decency would cure much of what ails our nation.
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