If people are sufficiently stuck in their beliefs that they literally cannot stop themselves from performing violent actions then it's even more important that we are allowed to criticise them.
But like I said... there's a difference between criticism and provocation.
Do you disapprove when a forum mod bans a troll? What's the difference? It's a matter of good or bad faith. If you don't discourage bad faith behavior, then everything gets torn apart in the name of freedom. This is the anarchist saying this. Like everything else, free speech is not a pure black & white issue.
Forums are private areas of the internet. Moderators can ban people to keep the forums how they like them to be, and users will move towards a forum with an atmosphere they like. If someone is banned from a forum that doesn't mean they can't still say what they were saying - it just means they have to take it somewhere else. Arresting people for "trolling" in real life would be completely different.
But there are parallels. A troll is, by definition, someone who says things
only for the sake of being disruptive. They can and do completely tear apart communities if they are not dealt with in some way. I've seen two forums die because the owner/moderator of a forum introduces someone who is their friend outside of that forum... and the guy turns out to be a total troll. Moderator is normally a reasonable guy, but grants this one person friendship immunity. Community devolves into bickering and everyone leaves.
The same thing happens in meatspace communities, whether public or private. If you want various people with extreme differences to be able to get along with each other, then pushing the buttons inherent in those differences has to be discouraged. You can actively discourage button-pushing, or you can sit back and watch the shit hit the fan for the sake of ideological purity... the same sort of ideological purity that motivates religious radicals.
Freedom of speech exists because it is essential to the protection of other rights, and to prevent the marginalization of unpopular groups. Not because trolling is ok.
Even if it's predictable that these people will react like that, I don't think it either justifies their actions, or that appeasing them is a good idea.
Yeah, the religious radicals are absolutely not justified in their violent behavior. Nobody is saying this. Nobody. What I'm saying is that this doesn't automatically mean that the person who provoked them was justified in doing so.
I'm also not saying anything about appeasing them. Just because radical islam might be calling for the guy to be punished does not mean that is the only possible reason to punish him. There's also the fact that he's a fucking asshole for what he did, and intentionally lit the spark that turned into a big fire.
I'm not talking just things you can get arrested/fined/sued over. Punishments that fit the crime after all; being an asshole is very much a problem, but not something you can be arrested for.
I do somewhat agree with this. I don't know what sort of punishment fits this situation. The problem is that yeah... his crime is basically being an asshole... but the manner in which he chose to be an asshole is significantly problematic to say the least.
Edit: And MSH, it's perfectly understandable to dislike religious radicals. However, your attitude suggests that it's to the point that you really want a fight over it... and not a personal one. Everything you say reeks of "Let's get this party started." That's not ok. You can't drag the world into your personal convictions. Go start fistfights with radical muslims on the street if you want. Nobody's going to stop you. Advocating the escalation of an international slug-fest... not going to stand for that one.