The angry speech of people who’ve been falsely accused in one or another legal procedure and labeled freakish, scary, or violent is often highlighted to imply that because they use “bad words,” they must be bad people whose claims of injustice aren’t worthy of consideration.
Such people have been wrongly deprived of some or all of the following: dignity, security, children, property, home, livelihood, health. If, in complaining about that, they use the c-word or the f-word, though, it’s concluded they must have had it coming.
The identical sentiments denounced by feminist house organs like Jezebel.com and rights advocacy groups like the estimable Southern Poverty Law Center are defiantly and amusingly expressed by Australian singer-songwriter Kat McSnatch.
A U.S. citizen was recently deemed a “credible threat” to Florida state senator Lauren Book, including by the FBI, because he tweeted a hyperlink to the cartoon video above in association with the senator’s name.
For using speech and/or images a lot less provocative than those featured in these videos, citizens in the “Land of Liberty” may be investigated, prosecuted, and jailed.
Copyright © 2018 RestrainingOrderAbuse.com
*Here’s how to tell whether you’re living in a police state: Did you ask yourself, “Can she say that?”
Rivkah Hirtshberger
May 3, 2016
While I don’t use that kind of language I sure can sympathize with those that do who have been falsely accused. I won’t lower myself just because a court thinks
I deserve to be lowered by being falsely accused.
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