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Answer Overview

Response rates from 269 4 voters.

46%
Yes
54%
No
24%
Yes
51%
No
16%
Yes, as long as it does not threaten violence
2%
No, and increase penalties for hate speech
6%
Yes, because I don’t trust the government to define the boundaries of hate speech
1%
No, freedom of speech laws should only protect you from criticizing the government

Historical Support

Trend of support over time for each answer from 269 4 voters.

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Historical Importance

Trend of how important this issue is for 269 4 voters.

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Other Popular Answers

Unique answers from 4 voters whose views went beyond the provided options.

 @9HKB6GRfrom  answered…12mos12MO

Yes, but is a very thin line. Each instance needs to be carefully looked at on a case-by-case basis and measured up against the very important right to as much latitude on free speech as possible.

 @99D45WHfrom Illinois  answered…2yrs2Y

Yes, free speech is meaningless if it doesn't apply to views I dislike.

 @8V6RSLManswered…3yrs3Y

If some are allowed to spew hate (because it is ordained in their holy books/ideologies), then all should be allowed. If some are not allowed, then all should be banned.

 @99GLS7Vanswered…2yrs2Y

No. Hate speech produces a discourse wherein violence is more likely. However, the government must define it carefully, potential through consultations with commissions of experts and citizen's assemblies.

 @8TST5DGanswered…3yrs3Y

Yes, but speech that encourages violence should be penalized. Also, the definition of hate speech should be exclude hateful speech itself and include only encouraging violence.

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