In the United States, freedom of speech is protected by the Second Amendment. Just kidding. Itās the First Amendment. But if weāre honest, the line between speech and violence is thin in practice, if not in law.
Hereās the thing: freedom goes both ways. Thereās the freedom to speak, and the freedom from being bombarded by whatever nonsense comes tumbling out of peopleās mouths. And thatās where things get messy. The grand defence of speech, in all its uncensored glory, often ignores what weāre giving upāour freedom of peace. You know, that quiet space where we donāt have to listen to the verbal sewage spewed by the uninformed, the unhinged, or just the plain old wankers.
What about freedom of peace?
We’ve all heard the phrase: āYour freedom to swing your fist ends at my nose.ā Simple. You canāt punch someone in the face and call it freedom. But what about words? Thereās no shield for the nose of the mind. The stupid, the ignorant, the hatefulāthey get to swing their fists of idiocy without a single consequence. What about freedom of peace?
Weāve all been there. You’re minding your own business, and thenābam!āsome blowhard pipes up with their unsolicited, half-baked opinion. And guess what? They’re free to do it. But whereās the balance between their freedom to spew nonsense and your right not to have to listen? Spoiler: it doesnāt exist.
Now, this isnāt an argument for censorship. Letās not confuse it. No oneās saying we should start gagging people (tempting as it is sometimes). But the conversation around freedom of speech needs a reality check. We defend it like itās a sacred cow, and in many ways, it is. But that defence is often blind to the other side of the coin. Freedom of speech without the freedom from a constant barrage of verbal rubbish? Thatās not freedom. Itās a social endurance test.
Maybe itās time to rethink what we mean by “freedom”ānot to restrict speech, but to recognise the cost of living in a world where everyone gets to say whatever they want, whenever they want. The right to peace is real too, even if itās less glamorous than the right to shout.