Should People Have the Right to Say Awful Things Without Facing Legal Consequences? [View all]
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Should People Have the Right to Say Awful Things Without Facing Legal Consequences?
Those who want to curtail freedom of speech do not log the debits and credits of censorship, nor do they care about the balance of normsthey act when they have power.
By Jay Caspian Kang
November 25, 2023
{A view of a food cart in Manhattan.}
Videos of a former State Department official verbally abusing a Manhattan street-truck vender went viral last week.Photograph from Anadolu/Getty Images
Terrible times breed terrible words, and words have consequencesespecially when what you say can be recorded and broadcast. Yet society cannot agree, perhaps more so now, on which views are acceptable and what the consequences should be for a person expressing them.
Last week, Stuart Seldowitz, a former State Department official, was arrested and charged with a hate crime after videos of him delivering a series of bigoted rants against Mohamed Hussein, a twenty-four-year-old Manhattan street-cart vender, went viral. In these, Seldowitz called Hussein a terrorist, insulted his Muslim faith, and said, with a hysterical crack in his voice, If we killed four thousand Palestinian children, you know whatit wasnt enough. Hussein, for his part, repeatedly asked Seldowitz to leave him alone.
The online case against Seldowitz is fairly open-and-shut. It is quite clear that he is a bigot and a bully. As hundreds of people on social media have pointed out, his dangerous rhetoric is far more disturbing when placed in the context of his proximity to the highest levels of the U.S. foreign-policy establishment. Seldowitz served under both Republican and Democratic Presidents and worked in the State Departments Office of Israeli and Palestinian Affairs. Bad people go viral for all sorts of reasons, but theres a special level of contempt reserved for those who seem to reveal something rotten at the core of the institutions of power.
The legal case against Seldowitz comes down to this: in New York State, a person can be charged with stalking in the fourth degree if he intentionally, and for no legitimate reason engages with someone in a manner that causes the target to have reasonable fear for his or his familys health and safety. In the videos, Seldowitz appears to make bizarre threats to sic an Egyptian intelligence agency on Husseins grandfather. The law also protects people against threats to their employment. Seldowitz told Hussein that he was going to call immigration authorities, and repeatedly asked him about his citizenship status. There is also a clause that says you cannot repeatedly initiate contact at someones place of business if that person has asked you to stop. Hussein asks Seldowitz to go away several times, yet he appears to have come back on at least three separate occasions. Harassment in the second degree is a similar charge that says you cannot engage in repeated acts to seriously annoy another person if those acts serve no legitimate purpose. Both charges are misdemeanors.
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