- Reaction score
- 4,051
- Location
- Upper US
Vice President J.D. Vance was swiftly put in his place by Sen. Chris Murphy (D-CT) when he tried to claim European countries are engaged in an assault on free speech.
Vance was in which German prosecutors were asked "Is posting an insult a crime?" and "Is it a crime to repost a lie?" — and they responded "yes."
German law guarantees a right to freedom of speech but, as with many European countries, that right is not as absolute as it is in the U.S. Constitution, with exceptions criminalizing hate speech — an issue taken seriously in Germany due to the country's history with the rise of Nazi dictatorship. German police have this year on internet trolls under these laws, sparking extensive debate about where the limits should be on speech protections.
German law guarantees a right to freedom of speech but, as with many European countries, that right is not as absolute as it is in the U.S. Constitution, with exceptions criminalizing hate speech — an issue taken seriously in Germany due to the country's history with the rise of Nazi dictatorship. German police have this year on internet trolls under these laws, sparking extensive debate about where the limits should be on speech protections.
"Now do you guys," he , displaying a screenshot of a recent X post by pro-Trump tech billionaire Elon Musk. Musk, who has also criticized Germany's hate speech law himself, had written, "60 Minutes are the biggest liars in the world! They engaged in deliberate deception to interfere with the last election. They deserve a long prison sentence."
Musk is referring to an by President Donald Trump that the CBS program 60 Minutes deceptively edited their interview with former Vice President Kamala Harris in last year's election to make her look better (Trump was offered his own competing interview on the program, but declined.) Trump has threatened CBS with the loss of their broadcast license and filed a personal lawsuit against the network.
n recent weeks, Paramount, CBS' parent company, has discussed the possibility of , even though experts are adamant it has no merit, in the hope that it will prevent the Trump administration from axing their planned multibillion-dollar merger with entertainment company Skydance. However, some Paramount executives are worried such a deal would to bypass trade regulations, which could open them up to shareholder lawsuits or criminal charges.