They’re not putting forward some thoughtful but controversial theory of whatever. They’re not saying things that Deserve Respect Even If We Disagree. This isn’t that kind of communication. They’re fantasizing about enslavement and gas chambers. There’s nothing for society to gain here from an Honest and Open Exchange of Views Followed by Thoughtful Reflection.
There is, however, a lot for society to gain from the people who want subjugation and slavery and murder knowing that they will be pariahs if they let those thoughts out of their mouth. There’s a lot to gain from everyone around them seeing them greeted with revulsion and shunned.
That, too, is part of free speech. It is the •foundation• of free speech.
@inthehands IMO The US's particular culture around this goes further than the first amendment: freedom comes before other values, which is both a decisive advantage and a crucial weakness. I would argue that something like tall poppy syndrome has a socially protective aspect for example, and that is almost completely absent in the US.