She's full of shit. You can say virtually anything you want unless it's provably slanderous or an "incitement to riot".
Also, there's a difference between "slander" and "libel" Slander is spoken, libel is written. She probably has no idea what she's babbling about but has learned a few buzzwords. BTW, slander is *very* hard to prove.
vny!://www.nolo.com/legal-encyclopedia/defamation-law-made-simple-29718.html (//vny!://www.nolo.com/legal-encyclopedia/defamation-law-made-simple-29718.html)
"Defamation" is a catch-all term for any statement that hurts someone's reputation. Written defamation is called "libel," and spoken defamation is called "slander." Defamation is not a crime, but it is a "tort" (a civil wrong, rather than a criminal wrong). A person who has been defamed can sue the person who did the defaming. (For in-depth information on defamation claims, check out Nolo's Defamation, Libel & Slander (//vny!://www.nolo.com/legal-encyclopedia/defamation-slander-libel) section.)
Defamation law tries to balance competing interests: On the one hand, people should not ruin others' lives by telling lies about them; but on the other hand, people should be able to speak freely without fear of litigation over every insult, disagreement, or mistake. Political and social disagreement is important in a free society, and we obviously don't all share the same opinions or beliefs. For instance, political opponents often reach opposite conclusions from the same facts, and editorial cartoonists often exaggerate facts to make their point.
What the victim must prove to establish that defamation occurred: The law of defamation varies from state to state, but there are some generally accepted rules. If you believe you are have been "defamed," to prove it you usually have to show there's been a statement that is
all of the following:
published
false
injurious
unprivileged
She'd have to prove ALL of these things, which is very difficult to do. My advice is to ignore her.
Full article: vny!://www.nolo.com/legal-encyclopedia/defamation-law-made-simple-29718.html (//vny!://www.nolo.com/legal-encyclopedia/defamation-law-made-simple-29718.html)
Quote from: Natasha on Jun 14 14 07:18
And I'm serious about it too.
I posted something the other day and the lady is threatening to slap slander charges on me. I admit I didn't say "in my opinion" or "in my experience" so I'm curious now, can a person pretty much say what ever they want as long as one of those phrases is mentioned??
Just an FYI, I'm NOT seeking any actual legal advice, just opinions from others on the subject. Seriously, who goes on a forum like this to seek REAL legal advice lol