If you plan to spend any time in Middleborough, Mass., you might want to be careful if you’re the sort who enjoys slinging four-letter words around. The town’s residents voted 183-50 Monday night to enact a fine for the public use of profanity, so police will have their ears open.
In modern American society, this is typically seen as a conflict between free speech and civility. Some people believe you should be able to say anything you want without government interference, and others believe that offensive and vulgar behavior should be prohibited. Merchants in the town say some of their customers have been uncomfortable with groups of teens hanging out downtown and swearing loudly. So which side is right?
I’m an advocate of keeping government completely out of the business of censoring speech, but I’m also someone who detests profanity. (I’m one of the few people you know who you’ll never hear it from. I didn’t grow up with it and I’ve consciously avoided using it. It’s not what I want to be.) So it sounds as though these two competing values are in conflict and there’s no logical way to resolve it.
That’s sort of true. There’s no logical way to resolve it under the current system of “public” ownership of property and the rules that come with “public” space. But what if the real issue isn’t free speech vs. civility? What if the real issue is who owns property — and who should be allowed to make the rules?

Love is best thing to happen to us
English teacher tells Wellesley grads: ‘You’re nothing special’ — not yet
Midlife becomes big crisis when our self-deception stops working
We’re all a little crazy; I worry about those who don’t know it
Left-wing distortions of church just as toxic as right-wing kinds
Wishful thinking: Why Ron Paul can’t (and won’t) be elected president
Change sometimes happens slowly, not in the grand leap that we want
Finding joy brings more happiness than the empty pursuit of pleasure
We sometimes need help to finish a long race we’ve decided to run