blackmahakala,
Thanks for your response. I am not offended in the lease, and I thank you for the coherent, logical discussion. It's amazing how many times I get into a discussion that I have people just turn into personal attacks and name calling. Thank you for not doing that.
You make a great point on censorship, and I'll consent your point. Tally-ho, good man!
I have a question for you. How do you know that the people who view these videos on YouTube do not have a genuine interest in magic? If they do not have a genuine interest in the art of magic do you think they would really invest the intellectual energy in memorising how a trick is done?
I don't know if these people have a genuine interest in magic, I'm sure some do. The problem here is this: The people who are exposing the magic on YouTube are not that great at doing the effect in the first place, and they certainly aren't that great in explaining it. So now you get someone who "kind of" knows how to do the trick, showing someone else how to do the trick, and then they post the trick performace on YouTube (not done very well and it exposes it), someone sees that and figures out how it's done, then THEY post a video exposing the effect, etc. etc. etc. Here's the rub of magic. A LOT of the sleights/effects/moves are simple to learn, difficult to master. Anybody can be shown how to do a DL. It's not that hard. But it takes PRACTICE to make it look natural. It seems that people these days don't have the patience to practice these effects until they appear natural. That's my complaint. It cheapens the art of magic. The mystery disappears.
On to your question of ethics:
Freedom of speech is the concept of the inherent human right to voice one's opinion publicly without fear of censorship or punishment.
Exposing magic isn't expressing an opinion, it's weakening a magical history, so I see no problem "censoring" that.
What these people are doing is not ILLEGAL (else it would have been stopped), so we as a magic community must do what we can to stop it, as in the end, it affects us.
And for me, I don't have a problem with freedom of speech, but if you call my wife a b***ch, I'm going to do something about it, even though you have the right to call her that.
[quote]The issue for me is one of ethics. I believe it is unethical to censor another being, even if that makes my life more difficult. I may not like what they say, but I would rather let them say it than try to stop them. [quote]
What if they personally attack you? Or drag your name through the mud? Or your family? Would you just sit back and let them do that? Or would you try to stop them?
Thank you for airing your views. I think that people need to understand personally why they are signing a petition, rather than just being "Oh, it's a magic thing, OK." Your dialogue has hopefully helped others realize their stance. I know it has mine.