Within
hours of the bloodshed in Paris, large numbers of people had gathered in major
cities across Europe in protest at what they saw as being an attack on a
fundamental European human right: freedom of expression, a pillar of democracy.
This theme was eclipsed by the theme of ‘unity’ in the course of mass marches
attended by leaders from across the continent a few days later.
I had some
difficulty in seeing what the point of the protests targeting freedom of
expression in the immediate aftermath of the killings was. Who was the intended
recipient of the message – al-Qaida in Yemen? If so, the protesters would be
well advised to save their breath to cool their broth.
There is a
legal ring to the phrase ‘freedom of expression’, especially when the word
‘right’ precedes it. The irony of the situation is that Western parliaments
have been passing laws over the past couple of decades that severely restrict
freedom of expression – so-called ‘hate speech’ laws – with hardly a murmur of
protest except from the vilified right of politics. Of course there is no such
thing as absolute freedom of expression, and never has been; incitement to
violence has long been on the no-no list. But when one sees speech or other
forms of expression (cartoons, for instance) deemed to be ‘insulting’ or
‘denigrating’ mentioned in criminal statutes, alarm bells should start to ring.
In Holland – a country where ‘insulting a group’ is a crime – Geert Wilders is
facing prosecution for ‘inciting racial hatred’ because his audience in a café
started chanting “Fewer! Fewer!” when he asked them whether they wanted more or
fewer Moroccan immigrants – an immigrant group way overrepresented in crime
figures – living in their neighbourhoods. President Chirac was hardly defending
freedom of expression when he said in the wake of the Danish cartoons saga, “Anything that can hurt the convictions of someone else, in
particular religious convictions, should be avoided.” Charlie Hebdo was as good
as banned in the UK.
What it comes down to is that one is censored, or may even be prosecuted, for
‘hate speech’ without there being any explicit or implied call to violence for
expressing an unfashionable opinion about a politically sensitive issue. Such
as immigration or multiculturalism policies, for instance.
A common
argument used by lefty ideologues against freedom of expression is that nobody
has a right to yell ‘Fire!’ in a crowded theatre, or similar. But if there is
indeed a fire starting and the caller was raising the alarm, s/he is off the
hook. Where things become tricky is if the caller sincerely believed there to be a fire starting –
in the theatre analogy, perhaps there were wisps of cold air coming from under
the stage which s/he thought to be smoke. There was a mad rush to the exits,
and some people got hurt. The guilt of the caller depends on what his/her
intentions were – the mens rea
element of most criminal prosecutions. If s/he can convince the court that the
intention was to avert harm rather than cause it, s/he will probably get off. I
would apply the same reasoning to someone accused of non-PC utterances who
sincerely believes that society is falling apart and that the butt of the words
complained of is a leading cause of that disintegration – they sincerely
believe that there is a ‘fire’ in the ‘theatre’ and are warning people about
it. But the ‘lack of intent’ defence for ‘hate speech’ crimes is at best a
shaky one.
The
tendency nowadays is to criminalise expression that may be ‘offensive’. Excuse
me, ‘offensive’
to whom? As Salman Rushdie put it, there is no right to not be offended. The
‘reasonable person’ test – i.e. speech or another form of expression that would
be deemed offensive by an ordinary ‘reasonable person’ – is not much use here.
The ‘reasonable man’ (as it used to be called) test may have made sense many
years ago in a largely monocultural society the overwhelming majority of the
citizens of which subscribed to common values and social norms, but the
‘reasonable person’ is impossible to define in a multicultural/multimorality
hotchpotch in which minorities are encouraged to maintain beliefs and practices
that set them apart from others. There is moreover a discernible element of
selective morality here – as a White heterosexual male of a socially
conservative bent, my claiming to be
offended counts for nothing (in fact it is likely to be deemed ‘offensive’ for
me to claim to be offended!).
Let’s go
back to the bare facts. What happened on 7 January is that three French
citizens of Northern African extraction gunned down ten staff members of a
periodical that had satirised the Prophet Mohammed and two police officers, one
of whom was calmly murdered in cold blood when he was already lying wounded in
the street. Two of them, brothers, were known to be in cahoots with militant
Islamists – one had clandestinely travelled to Yemen to link up with al-Qaida
there – and had received military training in terrorist camps. One had already
been in trouble with the law in 2008 for recruiting young men to fight with
terrorist militias. The two were on US and UK ‘no fly’ lists. The day after the attack, the youngest member
of the trio – an 18-year-old – turned himself in. The two brothers later died
in a shoot-out with police. In the meantime, a French citizen of sub-Saharan
African origin who had pledged allegiance to ISIS, and his girlfriend (a French
citizen again of Northern African descent), created diversions first by
murdering a young policewoman and then by taking hostages in a supermarket,
four of whom they killed, before the man was shot dead by police. The
girlfriend scarpered and has not been located.
I’m really
not sure where ‘freedom of expression’ fits into all this, except that the
assailants obviously didn’t believe in it. So why the knee-jerk response of displays
of undying loyalty to the principle of freedom of expression? I have no doubt
this was a genuine sentiment on the part of many protesters, but I am highly
sceptical when I hear moralistic prattle about freedom of expression from
people who support clamping down on that ostensibly sacrosanct freedom through
laws to quell open discussion and debate about ideologically charged social issues
and detect a red herring here. A couple of days later, Hollande sneaked the
word ‘pluralism’ into his proselytising about the “values of the Republic”. By
the time of the mass rallies that followed, freedom of expression had taken a
back seat.
As far as I
am concerned, the Charlie Hebdo massacre had little to do with freedom of
expression and a lot to do with the downsides of immigration and
multiculturalism policies that the self-styled cultural and political elite
have foisted upon us. It is those issues that I want to see on the public
agenda – without the spectre of sanction arising from those
anti-freedom-of-expression laws that the ruling elite have imposed hovering
over the discussion. The babble about ‘freedom of expression’ – anathema to the
PC-clique as that is – is a smokescreen. Be not fooled.
7 comments:
I think the shootings were the result of immigration and multiculti.
Yes, the freedom of speech carry on really fails to fly when a few facts are considered. In the state organised march, one large political party was conspicuously banned, that being the National Front which received 25% of the vote in the European elections; they were also uniquely qualified to attend as they have been one of the leading voices in warning about the dangers of multiculturalism and unrestricted immigration. Also worth noting, the freedom loving folks at Charlie Hebdo has previously campaigned to have the National Front banned.
The shootings were the result of human hatred and extremism.
Christians and their beliefs seen to be fair game for all, but leftists and atheists persist in tiptoeing around Islam and insisting that everyone else do so, too.
This probably has to do with the fact that offended Christians who closely follow their religion don’t violently act out, whereas offended Muslims who closely follow their religion, do.
A few years ago, a New York art gallery exhibited a glass crucifix filled with the artist’s urine entitled “Piss Christ.”
The gallery owner defended this exhibit as “freedom of expression,” saying that those who didn’t like it could exercise their own freedom of expression by protesting against it.
Outraged Christians did just that. They wrote letters to newspapers, called talkback radio, placarded outside the gallery for a few days, then went home.
We can only speculate as to how long his freedom of expression would have lasted had the exhibit been an excrement-filled glass crescent labelled “Shit Muhammad.”
I think we all know the answer to that one.
Both his and the artist’s freedom of expression would have been abruptly (and permanently) terminated by followers of the Religion of Perpetual Offense.
The Koran and Hadiths (narrative accounts of the life and doings of Muhammad) are replete with accounts of Muhammad calling upon his followers to assassinate his critics, for which they found huge favour in his eyes.
We can hardly be surprised that right-believing Muslims today continue to act in this manner.
....do you remember 10 July 1985 just before midnight..? two explosions ripped through the hull of the Greenpeace flagship..the sinking of the "Rainbow Warrior" at Marsden Wharf Auckland was the result, with the killing of a Portuguese crewman. This Act of Terrorism in New Zealand's territory by the french secret service agents (DGSE),should never be forgotton!! Also remember that the UK and the US failed to condemn this Act of Terrorism....Trust no one in this World..
To CPR 747 re the terrorism act of blowing up the Rainbow Warrior.
It will never be forgotten, especially by the NZ Media who make a meal of it annually. Great copy and relatively cheap as well.
Still what can you expect from this referral act of terrorism by the French despite it now being 2015. Not another 1815 Waterloo?
It is appropriate in this respect to refer back to an excuse attributed by the Earl of Kildare to King Henry VII when he burnt Cashel. His excuse was that he thought the Archbishop was inside!
One might think the French would have learnt from history, and done the job properly by waiting until ALL the Greens were aboard!.
Brian
All religions have had their time at killing in the name of whatever religion it was. To my knowledge all bar one have realised that it aint right to kill people because they are not the same as you or don't share the same beliefs. If you look at all the wars currently waging around the world, you will find that involve muslims & their belief that as non believers we are nothing & so killing us is of no importance. Well as far as I am concerned we are of importance & the only way to stop muslims killing us in the name of Ala is to deport anyone suspected of any links to the terrorist organisations along with refusing entry back into NZ anyone that has had contact with any of these organisations. Anyone that bleats about it should be sent packing as well. If the whole world did it then eventually they will end up back in their sand pit where they belong
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