Vague Definition Creates Unmanageable Business Liability
The hate speech definition uses subjective terms ("negative feelings," "hostility," "attitudes") and eliminates intent requirements, making it impossible for businesses to predict what commercial speech, advertising, or entertainment content will trigger liability. The provision explicitly captures factual statements and satirical content (movies, songs, parodies), meaning truthfulness provides no defense. With "other identity factor" undefined, businesses cannot identify which groups are protected, and the dignity-based standard varies by community. This creates unmanageable legal risk for media companies, advertisers, content creators, and any business engaging in public communications—forcing over-censorship and stifling commercial innovation.