nca14 wrote:
Maybe the word "sperg" was formed to insult Aspies? To mock them, making fun of their problems, to humilitate. It may be malicious. Someone who says "you sperg!" may have obvious want to insult an Aspie. It may appear to denote people with lower functioning forms of AS especially and maybe to mock especially them, who suffer more because of their AS. This word may be associated with hatred, contempt, humilitation, offensiveness etc. It appears to be strong, malicious insult.
Yep, it might. Others, including those even within this topic, might mean no offense when they use it in humor and jest. I wouldn't consider it offensive without other evidence suggesting that it is. That is why the "fighting words" doctrine isn't the one-size-fits-all legal remedy that certain hate-crime advocates wish it was. Today, as well as when the doctrine was articulated, people have differing opinions about whether such words in one community mean the same as they do in another community. That is why judges look seriously at an individual's intent
and the other individual's reaction to determine if certain speech should be excluded from protected speech. Between the two parties, there is almost always a disagreement of intent and reaction, so such interpretation by a prudent court to restrict what would otherwise be free speech tends to be rare; thus, protecting speech except for the most egregious use. In my opinion, that is exactly the kinds of courts we should want to have.