40%
Yes
60%
No
24%
Yes
55%
No
9%
Yes, as long as it does not threaten violence
3%
No, and increase penalties for hate speech
7%
Yes, because I don’t trust the government to define the boundaries of hate speech
2%
No, freedom of speech laws should only protect you from criticizing the government

Historical Results

See how support for each position on “Hate Speech” has changed over time for 7.5k Australia voters.

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Historical Importance

See how importance of “Hate Speech” has changed over time for 7.5k Australia voters.

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Other Popular Answers

Unique answers from Australia users whose views extended beyond the provided choices.

 @8D2H6GManswered…4yrs4Y

Freedom of speech is to be able to share your opinion without judgement. Hate speech is not an opinion, it’s hate and should not be protected.

 @8NSNY8Sanswered…4yrs4Y

 @ISIDEWITHanswered…3yrs3Y

Yes as long as it supports all sides of an argument at the moment it only supports the far left and left of politics

 @9GGG49Zanswered…9mos9MO

Yes, this doesn't count towards threats of violence. The state shouldn't define what is hate speech.

 @9F9VNPVanswered…11mos11MO

Yes, I don't trust a government to define hate speech. I believe however that a social consensus must be made on discriminatory beliefs and that societies in general should see genuinely harmful beliefs as a threat and the proponents of such speech should be held accountable for their harmful beliefs.

Latest News

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