“WOKESCOLD”? DO WE NEED TO RESTORE THE COMMON LAW PROHIBITION AGAINST SCOLDS?
I learned a new word today “Wokescold”.
Fascinating way to frame the ancient germanic law against ‘scolds’ to apply to modern effeminate ‘scolds’ in the marxist (feminine) seditious class.
Personally I think the failure to preserve this under ‘freedom of speech’ was a mistake, and like yelling fire in a theatre, the behavior of Scolds should be illegal and punished as a means of containing the feminine seduction natural to women and an increasing minority of feminized men.
SCOLD
1. Definition
A scold (skold, skelld, scal) in Germanic law referred to a person—usually a woman—who habitually engaged in loud, quarrelsome, accusatory, or defamatory speech that disturbed the peace of the household or community.
Legally, “scolding” was classified as a form of verbal assault or public nuisance—an abuse of speech that imposed external costs on others by damaging reputation, trust, and social order.
The offense fell under the principle of “peace-breaking” (frith-breca)—a breach of the public peace or domestic order through speech, rather than through physical violence.
It was a crime of speech-as-parasitism, not of opinion, but of false, inflammatory, or reputation-harming utterance.
2. Legal Context
In early Germanic and Anglo-Saxon customary law, every free person had the right to speak, but also the duty to speak truthfully, proportionally, and reciprocally. Speech carried weight because it could trigger feud, shame, or legal retaliation.
Thus, speech was a weapon, and like any weapon, it was regulated.
Germanic law evolved under the principle:
–“No man or woman may disturb the peace of another with false, excessive, or defamatory speech.”–
Penalties for scolds varied across regions:
— Fines or wergild (payment for defamation or public disturbance).
— Public humiliation punishments, later in medieval England symbolized by the “cucking stool” or “ducking stool”—a performative means of restitution to the offended community rather than corporal punishment.
— Ban or exclusion from community proceedings for repeat offenders (loss of voice in assembly).
3. Causal and Operational Meaning
In operational terms, the law against scolds enforced the reciprocity of speech:
— You may criticize truthfully (performing your duty to the commons).
— You may not use speech to impose costs—through gossip, slander, deceit, or relentless quarrel—on others’ standing, marriage, business, or authority.
This law preserved the peace of the commons (frith) and the economy of reputation—both essential in pre-state societies that relied on honor, trust, and oral testimony for cooperation.
Without written contracts or bureaucratic enforcement, reputation was the primary currency of law and trade, and speech could destroy it instantly.
4. Civilizational Function
The “scold” prohibition is an early proto-legal articulation of reciprocal speech norms, predating modern libel, slander, and harassment laws.
It institutionalized the idea that free speech is not license, but reciprocal right—bound by truth, intent, and consequence.
In modern terms, it recognized that:
— Speech is action,
— Action carries liability, and
— Liability requires reciprocity.
5. Cultural Continuity
The prohibition persisted across:
— Scandinavian and Anglo-Saxon codes (Laws of Æthelstan, Cnut, and the Grágás).
— English Common Law (Lex Scoldae, later “Common Scold” offense, 14th–18th centuries).
— American colonial law, which inherited these statutes but gradually abandoned them with the separation of criminal and civil speech liability.
The moral and operational kernel of the law, however—that untruthful or reputation-damaging speech is a violation of reciprocity and therefore unlawful—remains embedded in defamation, fraud, and perjury statutes to this day.
Summary:
The Germanic law against scolds prohibited parasitic speech that disturbed the peace or damaged others’ reputations. It arose from the same principle as wergild: restitution for harm. Speech, like action, carried liability. The law enforced truth, proportion, and reciprocity in speech—the moral foundation of all later defamation, libel, and public nuisance laws.
Source date (UTC): 2025-10-31 18:01:48 UTC
Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1984319910429044897
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