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==Hate speech== {{Main|Hate speech}} After [[World War II]] and [[The Holocaust]], [[Germany]] found it necessary to criminalize [[Volksverhetzung]] ("incitement to hatred") in order to prevent a resurgence of [[fascism]]. [[Counter-terrorism]] expert {{ill|Ehud Sprinzak|he|אהוד שפרינצק}} defines [[verbal violence]] as "the use of extreme language against an individual or a group that either implies a direct threat that physical force will be used against them, or is seen as an indirect call for others to use it." Sprinzak argues that verbal violence is often a substitute for real violence, and that the verbalization of hate has the potential to incite people who are incapable of distinguishing between real and verbal violence to engage in actual violence.<ref>Sprinzak, Ehud, ''Brother against Brother: Violence and Extremism in Israeli Politics from Altalena to the Rabin Assassination'' (New York: The Free Press, 1999)</ref> People tend to judge the offensiveness of hate speech on a gradient depending on how public the speech is and what group it targets.<ref>{{cite journal |last=Cowan |first=G. |author2=Hodge, C. |title=Judgments of hate speech: the effects of target group, publicness, and behavioral responses of the target |journal=Journal of Applied Social Psychology |date=1996 |volume=26 |issue=4 |pages=355–71 |doi=10.1111/j.1559-1816.1996.tb01854.x}}</ref> Although people's opinions of hate speech are complex, they typically consider public speech targeting ethnic minorities to be the most offensive. Historian [[Daniel Goldhagen]], discussing [[Antisemitism|antisemitic]] hate groups, argues that we should view verbal violence as "an assault in its own right, having been intended to produce profound damage—emotional, psychological, and social—to the dignity and honor of the Jews. The wounds that people suffer by ... such vituperation ... can be as bad as ... [a] beating."<ref>Goldhagen, Daniel Jonah, ''Hitler's Willing Executioners: Ordinary Germans the Holocaust'' (Knopf, 1996), p. 124.</ref> In the mid-1990s, the popularity of the Internet brought new international exposure to many organizations, including groups with beliefs such as [[white supremacy]], [[neo-Nazism]], [[homophobia]], [[Holocaust denial]] and [[Islamophobia]]. Several white supremacist groups have founded websites dedicated to attacking their perceived enemies. In 1996, the [[Simon Wiesenthal Center]] of Los Angeles asked Internet access providers to adopt a code of ethics that would prevent extremists from publishing their ideas online. In 1996, the [[European Commission]] formed the Consultative Commission on Racism and [[Xenophobia]] (CRAX), a pan-European group which was tasked to "investigate and, using legal means, stamp out the current wave of racism on the Internet."<ref>Newsbytes News Network (31 January 1996)</ref>
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