I’ve come to the conclusion that most people are confused about what “free speech” means. It seems as though rude people want to use it as a way to avoid the consequences of their rudeness. I think it’s time we realized what free speech really means — and I also think it’s time for more of us to stand up for public civility.
In a discussion on my Facebook page, a woman decided to act out her childhood anger with people where she grew up by calling everybody in the state “inbreds.” I told her that she was being rude and insulting to others, in addition to being inaccurate. After a few minutes of a thread involving six or eight people — all letting her know she was in the wrong — she finally played her trump card.
“What happened to free speech?” she whined.
Nothing happened to free speech, but as my friend Ike Pigott responded, “Speech is free, the consequences aren’t.”
We’ve become a rude and mean society, with many people believing that it’s acceptable to verbally trash others at will — and also believing that they’re being infringed upon if anyone calls them on the behavior. Sometimes the rudeness is political. Sometimes it’s cultural or based in some form of “tribalism.” And other times, it’s just based on saying what feels good at the moment, for various emotional reasons.

If our assumptions don’t match, we can clash with best intentions
Humans are most heroic in small moments of caring for each other
This mortal life swings between lonely misery and loving paradise
Do great dreams really come true or do they just serve to haunt us?
Today’s kids learning they should fear police, not respect them
Going through old relics tells me I’m still same person I used to be
Face the facts: U.S. Constitution is dead document with no meaning
AUDIO: Now is a time to take risk, not the time to be stopped by fear
I can live without ‘Galt’s Gulch,’ but I need my ‘Akston’s diner’