CBS ”60 minutes’ highlights the suppression of German insults, hate speech
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CBS “60 minutes” On Sunday, on Sunday, he aired a friendly interview with local German officials, as the government government triggers a breakthrough in offensive speech.
CBS’s Sharyn Alfonsi has harmonized that even while the United States allow “hatred or toxic” speech, Germany “tries to bring some politeness to the worldwide police in a way that most Americans could never imagine.”
Germany committed the attack on the homes of those she believed to make offensive statements on the network. CBS rode along with six armed officers as they searched the suspect’s house and seized his electronics.
Alfons interviewed state prosecutors, Dr. Matthäus Fink, Svetja Meinghaus and Frank-Michael Laue, who explained that such laws came as a surprise to even German citizens.
Vance jokes about Greti Thunberg as he goes to the burning of the country to the European censorship
CBS “60 minutes” rode while German police executed executing homes to break hate speech.
Fink said that a typical reaction that “people are surprised to be really illegal, to publish this kind [sic] Words … they don’t think it was illegal. And they say, “No, it’s my free speech,” and we say, “No, you have freedom of speech, but he also has his limits.”
Alfons summarized that the German law “forbids any speech that could stimulate hatred or be considered offensive” and asked prosecutors about how it works in practice.
“It is illegal to show the Nazi symbolism, the swastika, or to deny the Holocaust, that is clear,” Alfonsi said. “Is the crime offend someone in public?”
“Yes,” prosecutors agreed.
“And it’s a crime to insult them on the network?” Alfons asked.
“Yes,” Meininghaus replied.
“The punishment could be even greater if you offend someone on the internet,” Fink explained. “Because [on the] The internet, stays there. If we talk face to face, you insult me, I insult you, okay, finish. But if you are [on] Internet, if I insult you or politicians- “
“Hold on forever,” Alfonsi said, ending his sentence.
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German state prosecutors spoke with CBS “60 minutes” that even German nationals were shocked by their own hate speech laws.
The Alfons reported that the German law also “forbids the spread of malicious gossip, violent threats and false quotes.”
Meininghaus explained how much foul is the fake data.
“In the days of re -publication, it is also a crime,” the prosecutor said. “Because the reader cannot distinguish whether you just invented it or just posted it again. It’s the same for us.”
“The punishment for violating the Law on Speech of Hate may include a prison time for re -offenders,” Alfonsi said. “But in most cases, the judge charges a firm fine and sometimes keeps his devices.”
Laue laughed as he described how “shocked” people were when their phones were taken. “It’s a kind of penalty if you lose a smartphone. It’s worse than a fine you have to pay.”
“Because your whole life is usually on your phone,” Alfonsi noted.
Host CBS exploded for ‘Bonkers’ claim that Nazi Germany ‘armed’ free speech
CBS ‘Sharyn Alfonsi advertised the efforts of the German government as “trying to bring some politeness to the world internet to the police in a way that most Americans could never imagine it.” (CBS)
CBS noted that there are 16 units with teams of investigators who accompany hatred speech throughout the country. Laue, who runs a unit with a lower sac, said his office alone usually processes about 3,500 cases a year.
The segment followed only a few days after Vice President JD Vance attended a safety conference in Munich, where he criticized Germany and other European allies for adopting a “Soviet”-Sent access to censorship.
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Elsewhere on the same network, CBS hosted Margaret Brennan locked horns with state secretary Marc Rubio while defending Vance’s speech. Host “Face the Nation” claimed that Free speech was “armed” in Nazi Germany to bring a holocaust.
Rubio pushed away, “free speech was not used to carry out genocide … There were no free speech in Nazi Germany. There were none. There were no opposition in Nazi Germany. They were the only and only party that governed that country. It is not the correct reflection of history. “
Fox News’ Anders Hagstr has contributed to this report.