I also wanna note:
I find it INCREDIBLY ANNOYING as a writer and a designer to have people tell me I'm "Censoring" myself. Or that I specifically -shouldn't- take any kind of cultural criticism of my work to heart and change my own work of my own volition because of the impact I want to create.
Not "Shouldn't have to" which is an ignorant statement 'cause no one "Has" to take criticism. But just outright "Shouldn't". That I should go back to previous works which I rewrote to avoid negative issues and just stick to the original, unintentionally offensive, version. Like. What the hell? No, I'm not going to do that. That sounds awful. Editing TWICE?! And to make a political statement I don't agree with? Screw that!
It has never felt like being censored or self-censorship, to me. It's felt like I've made a misstep, apologized for making a misstep, and then tried not to do it, again.
I feel like the people who are calling things like this "Censorship" are just telling on themselves and swaddling their confessions in self-righteous indignation and justification to make themselves feel better.
I loved your comment. But I want to add a little more context. The idea of self-censorship isn't just an idea- it is quite real. In First Amendment law it is referred to specifically as the "chilling effect."
It is core and foundational to the broad protections of the First Amendment. One of the most famous cases that has defined the contours of defamation law is on point - New York Times v. Sullivan, 376 U.S. 254 (1964). That's when the Court first ruled that inadvertent false statements will always happen in robust public discourse, and therefore cannot be actionable. To allow a defamation suit because of inadvertent errors would deter people from speaking freely and engaging in protected speech, and the Court overruled the lower court because of “the chilling effect of the Alabama libel laws on First Amendment freedoms in the area of race relations.”
The basic idea behind the "chilling effect" is that we don't want to have vague or broad laws that might deter people from protected or expressive conduct. Another infamous example is US v. Stevens, where the Court voided a federal law banning depictions of animal cruelty (the, um .... "crush videos" law) because it would chill protected speech regarding hunting or documentaries exposing livestock slaughter. For that matter, cockfighting was still legal in Puerto Rico at the time, yet under this law a person could make a video of that lawful activity and then be prosecuted for it.
But again, this is about state action*- we never want the government to be able to put us in the pokey or fine us or deter us from speaking.
Which gets us to the heart of the issue. As I said before, the state should never be able to sanction** speech.*** But all people adjust their messages based on all sorts of factors. For example, maybe you curse a lot normally around your friends. But when you are talking to your boss, you "self-censor" because of the "chilling effect" of not wanting your boss to think you're a degenerate moron like Snarf. In fact, the reason that speech can be so powerful is because there are those who don't self-censor, who are fine with provoking, offending, or shocking - and they then deal with the social consequences for doing so, either good or bad. I keep hammering this point home, but I just don't know why people don't get it (you seem to, great post).
Asking for people not to respond to your speech in a negative manner? That's NOT free speech. Say what you want- but people are perfectly able to react as they want to as well. That's life. If you walk into a cocktail party and start telling everyone that the Austrian Painter had "some good ideas" then you shouldn't be surprised when you aren't invited again.
*Now, I know some of you might say, "Wait. Isn't a defamation action between two private parties? The actual answer is, not always. But yes, in modern times it is almost always by one private party against another. So why is there any First Amendment protection? Because you are using state action for it (defamation is a law, enforced by a court).
**ARGHHH! Contranyms.... well, I mean the bad sanction, not the meaning of "allow."
***Never doesn't actually mean never.
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