Summary

A group displaying swastika flags on an I-75 overpass in Evendale, Ohio, was confronted by local residents, leading to tensions and a heavy police presence.

Residents pushed past police, seized a flag, and forced the demonstrators to retreat into a U-Haul truck.

Officials, including Cincinnati’s mayor and Hamilton County’s sheriff, condemned the demonstration.

The Jewish Federation and NAACP also spoke out, questioning where the demonstrators came from. The NAACP suggested the current administration’s policies may have emboldened the group.

No arrests were made.

  • @[email protected]
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    04 days ago

    Yea but not really though…

    You can say “I hate Nazis” and that’s hate speech (as stupid as that might sound), but it doesn’t mean “I want to hurt/kill Nazis”, the intention behind the message isn’t stated therefore the message is lawful.

      • @[email protected]
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        4 days ago

        We’re having a discussion about the law, not morality, I used that as an example to reverse the situation and put the counter protesters in the other position, but it’s exactly the same as those Nazis saying they hate blacks or Jews or whoever, in the US they have the right to say that, they don’t have the right to say they want to hurt them.

        • @[email protected]
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          13 days ago

          You don’t choose to be born Jewish or black, you do choose to be a Nazi, and a Nazi is someone who inflicts violence on people.

          Identifying as a Nazi is a threat of violence that is considered legally acceptable in the US because the US already partway to being a Nazi country.

          • @[email protected]
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            13 days ago

            Use whatever example you want, it’s always the same thing. It’s a discussion about laws and you keep mixing your feelings in the equation. In the eyes of the law there’s a difference between stating your hate X and stating you want to be violent towards X, one is legal, the other isn’t, no matter which group X is.

            • @[email protected]
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              13 days ago

              Yes, because the US is halfway to being a Nazi state, the law is overly permissive of Nazis.

              Just like how the US started as a white supremacist nation where the law allowed slavery.

              My feelings have nothing to do with the extent to which white supremacy and Nazism influences the US state to allow threats of violence against marginalized groups to be permissible. US law is not impartial, it is biased in favor of Nazis and white supremacists.

              • @[email protected]
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                12 days ago

                If the law is the same for everyone no matter who they say they hate then the law isn’t overly permissive to a certain group of haters.

                • @[email protected]
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                  12 days ago

                  You’re spouting the same bullshit used to justify redlining. The law is not the same for everyone. Even if letter of the law stays neutral, the way it gets enforced matters.

                  Notice how students that peacefully protest for Palestine get arrested and put in handcuffs, but literal Nazis walk free. The law is not the same for everyone.

                  • @[email protected]
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                    12 days ago

                    If you notice, the discussion has been about the law from the get go, not enforcement (although in this case this specific law was enforced properly). I was correcting someone who said that free speech doesn’t protect hate speech in the US, but it does.