You're kind of forgetting an important part in that, sweetheart (that's right, I said sweetheart, you got a problem with it?
). It feels a lot like you're assuming I'm from somewhere I'm not. Specifically, the US of A.
More to the point, I'm Brazillian. Which means that our approach to freedom of speech comes from a different bent.
From 1964 until roughly 1981, we were under a military dictatorship. Freedom of press did not in fact exist back then for obvious reasons. People were jailed, beaten, tortured and shipped off to God-knows-where just for possessing a copy of Marx's books. Any book. (Most of the media groups that rose to prominence back then are STILL major newsgroups now. So you can imagine the mess.)
Now, the end of said dictatorship meant that we had free press again. Which was great.
It also meant we now had a generation of journalists to whom "freedom of speech" meant "being free from journalistic ethics". Which is not so great.
Especifically, each time someone is called upon to take responsibility for saying stupid shit or inciting hatred or whatever, they use that horrible past as a flag to defend themselves. The words "we haven't seen that much censorship since 1964" get thrown around like a mantra. Which brings me to my point: freedom must be followed by responsibility. Otherwise, you're just a dickhead. This is why the freedom of speech defense works - even freedom must have clearly defined boundaries, otherwise you get good old "survival of the fittest" style social dynamics.
As far as standing up for the people close to you... let's take a quick approach to bullying, for example. What are people teaching their kids to do when they see a bully? "Do not tolerate." "Tell your teacher." Or, implied: "gang up on the bully with your friends and be a bully yourself."
At no point do they tell, "Stand up to the bully. You'll earn a friend for it." In essence, the approach is to turn the social dynamics on the bully by reminding him or her that a bully is constantly outnumbered. Now I don't know about you, but last I checked, bullies typically rise from broken homes, overall shitty lives, or by being in fact outright taught that people need to be brought under their heel. They try to impose their identity through strength, whether social or physical. They are, in effect, a minority - and they're treated like people have always treated minorities in the past, by fucking them up.
See what I did there?
But back to the point of approaches to dealing with dickheads. Waiting for the racists and bigots to die out will never work because, unfortunately, social ostracism is not enough to keep someone out of the gene pool. Like minds often flock together, and given enough time and booze, they actually reproduce. Which means that even if they turn into a minority, they'll never actually die out. Someone is always going to look back and think "man, those days where white people were slave owners were the days", even if that's a completely appalling notion to most of us. And you can't really teach those who 'know', either. In order to kill an idea, you will basically have to kill anything and anyone that subscribes to that idea, and then kill any written experiences they left behind. Which not only goes against that precious notion of freedom of speech, it's immoral on several other levels as well, including but not limited to the hypocrisy of doing
exactly the kinds of things you're condemning them for in order to keep their hatred out.Again, I don't have an answer. I really wish I did, then I could get to spreading it and making the world a better place. Instead of, y'know, ranting the afternoon away.
It'd help if we could really get to the base of the subject. As in the real reason behind all that shit. If it were fear, it'd just be a matter of giving them something bigger that they needed to stand together against. Something that affected both sides of the equation. Like world hunger, a violent deadly virus outbreak, or invading monstrosities from Hell itself. The closest we've come to is the argument of "fear of the unknown", the notion that people fear that which they cannot understand and/or closely relate to.
I'm going to do my part. Teach my kids to hate people for being liars and assholes, which is something they'll have to give a lot more thought to than "that guy is black, get him!" (I jest, of course, but you get the idea.)
I dunno, maybe I'm just a little underwhelmed by the idea of "kill the haters by hating them". We'd have a better net gain, overall, by teaching people to help indiscriminately instead. Instead of focusing on the bully, focus on the bullied.
Thought experiment. You set up a charity for helping starving people. However, at no point do you specify who these people
are. You ensure there is no fraud and the money goes to exactly that purpose. It could be almost literally anyone. Who donates to that charity?
Another thought: you have a company that makes two kinds of products - one that is environmentally friendly and another that is not, by comparison. The profit margin is equal on both, but the manufacturing cost is not (the environmentally friendly variety is likely to be more expensive). Both are clearly stated as being eco or non-eco friendly. Who buys which?