The Responsibility of Freedom
Culture, Speaking Freely Tagged cagle post, deb saunders, first amendment, free speech, personal responsibility March 27th, 2008If I were a huge nerd, I would begin this post with a quote from Spiderman (”with great power comes great responsibility”). But I’m not going to do that. (Whoops! I guess I already did.) Anyway, nerd or not, the sentiment is still true.
Having the freedom (or power) to make your own decisions and plan your own life is of utmost importance. But this freedom doesn’t come without responsibility—you can’t use your freedom to harm others or infringe on others’ rights, and so on. Unfortunately, however, the whole responsibility part often gets drowned out by loud cries for freedom.
This seems to be especially true in cases of free speech. Take JuicyCampus.com, for example.
Their mission is simple: “enabling online anonymous free speech on college campuses.” Their content is is simple-minded.
Don’t get me wrong; I’m all for free speech. I looove the First Amendment. But Juicy Campus’s idea of preserving this fundamental freedom includes scintillating posts like, “Where are the sluts?,” “Who is the hottest soccer player?,” and lists of the “best bars to pick up drunk chicks.”
Really? Providing a forum where college students can “anonymously” post advice on where best to find inebriated girls is protecting free speech on college campuses? I think not.
Columnist Deb Saunders calls Juicy Campus’s take on free speech “a modern view…all of the privilege and none of the responsibility.” She goes on: “…this site encourages its anonymous participants to rate their professors, sorority girls, football players and other students by name. Don’t like your grade? Your advances were rejected? Juicycampus.com is the perfect venue for payback.”
Somehow, I don’t think this was what the First Amendment was intended for. (Read Saunders’s full column on Juicy Campus here.)
Tiptoeing the line between free speech and slander might sometimes be something like navigating a minefield—and to avoid disaster, we ought to remember the responsibilities that come with our treasured freedom.
(Hat Tip: Cagle Post Cartoons & Commentary. Do you subscribe? You should! The Cagle Post organizes all of America’s top columnists and political cartoonists by topic, and you can subscribe to your favorites. You can even purchase cartoons for your own publications!)




March 27th, 2008 at 11:02 pm
K,
I’m not disagreeing with you, but you’re sounding positively un-libertarian. It’s the distinction I’ve made a thousand times if I’ve made it once, and it usually goes like this:
“That’s not liberty; that’s license.”
-MT
Michael Tams’s last blog post..What’s up with the AFB?
March 27th, 2008 at 11:10 pm
Fear not, I’m still wholly libertarian. Let me be clear: I’m not looking for some kind of government solution here. But I do think you can still be a libertarian and believe people ought to combine discretion and responsibility with their love for liberty.
I don’t think Juicy Campus’s supposed promotion of free speech is is a great representation of this important right, but I still support the right to speak freely, no matter what the topic, whether I agree with it or not.