Bahar Mustafa has a right as a human to be able to communicate her thoughts and ideas. I absolutely think she is a horrible detestable person, sexist, racist, teaparty of the left, I put her in the same bubble as the westboro baptists, that is how I feel about her and I mention it only to put what I am saying into a particular context. Just like all of them, she has a right to say what she wants to say, a right to Freedom of Speech. Now the UK government has a difference of opinion with me on this subject, but just because something is a law does not make it right. I do not fear her words because I have a right to freedom of speech as well and can argue against them, I do not fear them because I think I am right and a fair discussion of her positions will show me to be right to reasonable people. I think penalizing people because of what they say, especially by law, only shows that you fear what they have to say, or you are merely vindictive. This is bull****, and I am personally not going to stand for it, though there is little I can actually do, other than start a conversation about it with people who maybe can. Any restriction of speech hurts everyone, any time you make a club to silence your enemies you make a club for your enemies to silence you. Truth can only be found by all options being available and debated and bad ideas argued against, not silenced.
I say again, this be some ****ing bull**** right here.
Freedom of speech is one thing. Incitement to criminal activities is another, and should at least be investigated, just like criminal threats.
In other words, yes, everyone's free to say whatever they wish, but with freedom comes responsibility to not say certain things. If you say certain things, people will assume you mean them.
In this case, it would fall under "Encouraging or assisting a crime" which is one of the inchoate offenses of English law. To quote from Wiki page:
"Inchoate means "just begun" or "undeveloped", and is used in English criminal law to refer to situations where, although a substantial offence has not been committed, the defendant has taken steps to commit it, or encouraged others to do so. As in all inchoate offences, the defendant "has not himself performed the actus reus but is sufficiently close to doing so, or persuading others to do so, for the law to find it appropriate to punish him."
Additionally, it can be clearly said that the tweet saying "Kill all white men" incites or encourages people to commit crimes
on a racial and gender basis. So it would also fall under "Incitement to racial hatred" and whatever legislation covers hate speech in the UK.
So in my opinion, freedom of speech is not threatened by the law enforcement taking action when a crime has been committed.
There is no way that you can possibly determine if someone is inciting violence on purpose or not. they might just say something in the moment that is utterly hateful and violent without having any thoughts at all of the consequences. in order to "help cause" any criminal act, you would have to buy material used, fund, participate in, plan, or coordinate the act. those last two I can see getting a little close to speech, but would definitely fall under the giving-orders-to-subordinates case. All of these things are crimes as far as I can tell. "inspiring" it? no
Freedom of speech also means you have a freedom to
not say stupid **** that you don't mean. You also have the freedom to implicate yourself of criminal activities, and in this case, it is indeed a crime to urge people to commit criminal activities in most jurisdictions. Whether or not you really meant it.
Obviously case-by-case judgement is necessary, but the Internet - and by extension Twitter is a mass medium, and there is absolutely no way of knowing what kind of audience received that message. Who's to say someone
didn't take it seriously? That is why the base assumption is to take things like these at a face value, and start an investigation on it. It is the same with bomb threats or school shooting threats - most of them are probably hoaxes, but you got to take them seriously because the one time you don't respond and it turns out to be legit, you're sort of screwed, right?