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17 - Reply to Jeremy Waldron

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 June 2012

Michael Herz
Affiliation:
Cardozo School of Law
Peter Molnar
Affiliation:
Center for Media and Communications, Central European University, Budapest
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Summary

Professor Waldron believes that I beat a “precipitate retreat” from an earlier position in an email to him commenting on an argument he made. He has called my “bluff” and resisted my “browbeating.” I did not intend the email for publication, but I cannot find any retreat there. I had said, in the “Foreword” Waldron cites, that a law criminalizing “hate” speech “spoils the democratic justification we have for insisting that everyone obey.” I said, in the email Waldron decided to quote, that such laws leave us with “something morally to regret” and with “a deficit in legitimacy.” In an earlier book Waldron cites, I said that legitimacy is a matter of degree, and that not every law that is “spoiled” by a defective democratic process justifies citizen rebellion. Claiming that an opponent has retreated is often a useful rhetorical device, but it seems unpersuasive in this case. We can hardly justify a defect in political legitimacy by arguing that it might have been worse.

Waldron appears to accept, at least in this essay, that it is indeed a defect in legitimacy to enforce legislation against those who were not permitted to speak in opposition during the political process that produced that legislation, that this does “spoil” the democratic pedigree of the legislation to some degree. If the legislation in question required everyone to carry health insurance, for example, then suppression of even “vituperative” dissent would put the legitimacy of that law “in question.” He thinks hate speech different, apparently, for two reasons. One of these – that issues of racial dignity have been settled in mature democracies – is doubtful, and Waldron offers it with what seems great hesitation. Well he might: These issues seem much less settled now – in Germany and the Netherlands, for example, as well as in Britain and the United States – than they seemed decades earlier. The other reason Waldron offers is interesting, however; it touches a very deep issue in political philosophy. What is the basis of the “equal concern and respect” that coercive government owes those who fall under its dominion?

Type
Chapter
Information
The Content and Context of Hate Speech
Rethinking Regulation and Responses
, pp. 341 - 344
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2012

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References

Dworkin, RonaldForewordExtreme Speech and DemocracyOxford University Press 2009Google Scholar
Dworkin, RonaldIs Democracy Possible Here? 97 2006
2011

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