Charlie Hebdo in the Dock
Despite its stand against the terrorist's veto, France treats offensive words and images as crimes.
On Sunday, as more than a million people marched through the streets of Paris in support of the right to draw cartoons without being murdered, the French Ministry of Culture and Communication declared that "artistic freedom and freedom of expression stand firm and unflinching at the heart of our common European values." It added that "France and her allies in the EU safeguard these values and promote them in the world."
In the wake of last week's massacre at the satirical weekly Charlie Hebdo, perpetrated by men who saw death as a fitting punishment for the crime of insulting Islam, these were stirring words. If only they were true. Sadly, France and other European countries continue to legitimize the grievances underlying the barbaric attack on Charlie Hebdo by endorsing the illiberal idea that people have a right not to be offended.
It is true that France does not prescribe the death penalty for publishing cartoons that offend Muslims. But under French law, insulting people based on their religion is a crime punishable by a fine of €22,500 and six months in jail.
In addition to religion, that law covers insults based on race, ethnicity, national origin, sex, sexual orientation, or disability. Defamation (as opposed to mere insult) based on any of those factors is punishable by up to a year in prison, and so is incitement to discrimination, hatred, or violence.
In 2006 the Paris Grand Mosque and the Union of French Islamic Organizations used the ban on religious insults to sue Charlie Hebdo and its editor at the time, Philippe Val, over its publication of three cartoons depicting the prophet Muhammad, including two that had appeared in the Danish newspaper Jyllands-Posten the previous year. Although Charlie Hebdo won the case and Val escaped prison, the potential for such inquiries inevitably has a chilling effect on freedom of expression.
Since the mid-1980s, French courts have rejected religious-insult complaints against books (including Salman Rushdie's novel The Satanic Verses), movies (including The Last Temptation of Christ), movie posters (including one for The People vs. Larry Flynt), and written and oral commentary (including novelist Michel Houellebecq's 2001 description of Islam as "the stupidest religion"). They have been more receptive to complaints about a billboard lampooning The Last Supper, a newspaper essay on the purported connection between Catholic doctrine and the Holocaust, and remarks by the actress Brigitte Bardot and the comedian Dieudonné M'bala M'bala, whose show was recently banned as anti-Semitic.
The point is not that the government has done a bad job of distinguishing between legitimate art or commentary and gratuitous offensiveness. In a free society, that is simply not the government's job. When courts are asked to draw this line, artists and commentators must try to anticipate whether their work will pass muster, which promotes self-censorship.
Worse, this system teaches people that the use of force is an appropriate response to words and images that offend—a principle that is poisonous to free speech and conducive to violence. Since the French government has announced that offending the wrong people by saying the wrong thing in the wrong context can be treated as a crime, it would not be surprising if some people, convinced that their rights had been violated and that they could not count on the courts to vindicate them, resorted to self-help.
Other countries that criminalize "hate speech," including Germany, the Netherlands, the U.K., Sweden, and Canada, are likewise sending a dangerous message that offending people with words or images is akin to assaulting them with fists or knives. Instead of facilitating censorship by the sensitive, a government truly committed to open debate and freedom of speech would make it clear, in no uncertain terms, that offending Muslims (or any other religious group) is not a crime.
Sacrilege may upset people, but it does not violate their rights. By abandoning that distinction, avowed defenders of Enlightenment values capitulate to the forces of darkness.
© Copyright 2015 by Creators Syndicate Inc.
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Although Charlie Hebdo won the case and Val escaped prison, the potential for such inquiries inevitably has a chilling effect on freedom of expression.
Sounds like the cartoonists should have been protected from any attacks, sitting safely behind French prison bars.
Fisty, have you ever been in a... in a French prison?
Bad crepes and cheap wine - oh the horror!
As horrific as American prisons are, for a developed country in Europe, France's prisons are closer to what you would find in Bangkok or Kampala, Uganda.
Having read Papillon I should have guessed that.
IT'S A COOKBOOK!
Or the Count of Monte Cristo.
Any member of the grilled cheese family is the same as the horrors of a Siberian gulag.
Blech!
Cheese and bread. Two great tastes that taste great together.
Fat, starch, and salt.
Frank Abagnale's description of a French prison:
http://frankwabagnale.tumblr.c.....-four-cell
I don't surrender to French authorities; they surrender to me.
ever seen a grown man naked?
No, and don't call him Shirley.
In America, we could offer them haven at Rikers Island. That there is a right not to be offended is precisely the implicit rationale behind New York's criminalization of inappropriately deadpan email mockery, the pretext given being that the use of another's "name" to engage in a parody that "crosses the line" is a form of "deceit" or "impersonation." This has taken place without any comment from the First Amendment community, something that reveals a good deal about current attitudes towards these matters in the United States. See the documentation of America's leading criminal satire case at:
http://raphaelgolbtrial.wordpress.com/
um impersonation ought to be a crime in order to protect free speech. Impersonating someone inherently damages their ability to speak freely. Mind you I'm not talking about Jon Stewart putting on his best Dub-yah voice and saying "Nucular". But rather cases where PII is used to give the impression that the speaker is genuinely the person they are attempting to impersonate.
Essentially the only person that has a right to speak on your behalf is you.
We did it
No, you didn't
"We're still relevent, dammit, look at us!" - shorter terrorist.
Hrmmm... would a shorter terrorist deliver a bomb in a minivan?
We are all diminished by that joke
But only by a little.
You guys - please quit playing small ball
He would never be successful... Because he would use a short fuse
Yeah, but he only gets 36 virgins.
Brava!
there are a lot of soccer moms in France
this system teaches people that the use of force is an appropriate response to words and images that offend
Every civilized person knows the proper response is "I know you are, but what am I?" or "Says *you*!".
Yo' momma!
You and what army!
OH! THAT army....well, OK then...
That, Sirrah, be *dissin'*!
Je Suis Rubber
HA! Brilliant.
under French law, insulting people based on their religion is a crime punishable by a fine of ?22,500 and six months in jail.
Serves them right for hurting someones feelz.
Hmm. Serious question: What if one were to say "That hijab you're wearing is ugly"?
French cops would beat you with a croissant, then carry you to jail in a Peugeot. (The second part is cruel and unusual punishment in of itself.)
beat you with a croissant
Croissant de guerre?
This is what happens when you weaponize victimhood. The SJWs and the anti-bullying crowd are doing that here. Remember that one cousin or sibling you had who would get mad because you wouldn't give him your toy so he'd smack himself, start crying, and then tell his mom that you hit him? Same thing.
that would have been my younger brother
"SJWs". Right.
Look, I know they shut down 8chan for hosting kiddie porn, but you don't have to come here.
You mean like the anti-blasphemy laws, government handouts, and religious mandates we used to have all throughout Christendom for centuries? Churches have been much better at playing victims and being the beneficiaries of government largesse than SJW.
Christian Right: Where did you SJW's learn such behavior?
SJW: " We learned it by watching YOU!"
Tu quoque woo
Since I am neither a SJW nor a Christian, it's not a "tu quoque". I'm just reminding people that things are even worse when Christian churches occupy the roles that SJWs occupy today.
"Churches have been much better at playing victims and being the beneficiaries of government largesse than SJW."
Incorrect. SJWs occupy most university positions and a majority of government positions. The best "benefit" that churches get is the government steals less from them than other organizations.
That's true in the US, it's not true elsewhere.
In Germany, for example, churches and their lackeys do occupy university positions and government positions. Pope Benedict XVI used to be both a German civil servant and a German university professor, and he received German government benefits that would put even a California civil servant to shame.
That sort of massive corruption should be kept off US shores: it destroys both civil society and religion.
In a free society, [distinguishing between legitimate art or commentary and gratuitous offensiveness] is simply not the government's job. When courts are asked to draw this line, artists and commentators must try to anticipate whether their work will pass muster
"Courts", as opposed to "the government"?
Never mind -- "legitimate" art or commentary.
""Courts", as opposed to "the government"?"
Ummmm... perhaps you don't read so good. That the courts are a part of the government is EXACTLY the point. Asking courts, i.e., the government, to distinguish between "legitimate art or commentary and gratuitous offensiveness" is a BAD thing.
Yeah, this so much. "We defend free speech! Unless you deny the Holocaust, in which case we'll jail you!"
NOT that I don't believe the Holocaust happened, or think people who don't are OK....but....they shouldn't be jailed for it.
Fuck humanity.
I blame Bush.
Hmm. Serious question: What if one were to say "I deny that all of World War II happened"?
That is a good question.
Or "I state that all of what is conventionally referred to as "the past" is just an illusion"?
"Then tomorrow you won't mind that I've stolen all your stuff, since it was just an illusion."
"Yep. Just don't jail me."
Descartes and his Meditations must be banned, as we are all just playthings in the hand of an evil demon.
You would be put in an insane asylum, because fuck you, that's the reason.
"I deny that this asylum exists!"
BWAHAHAHAAA!!
You're sentincing him to Florida?
Probably. But would you also be fined ?22,500?
People in Hawaii would go, "Then what sunk this battleship?"
Seriously, though, I'm not familiar with any of the Holocaust denial stuff, but I'd guess the "reasonable" folks say something along the lines that the camps were really just prison camps that happened to have some Jewish people in them and that everything else was propaganda. That's easy enough to say because you still address much of the physical evidence. If you claimed WWII never happened then you'd have to explain how various wreckage wound up where it did, where all the film footage came from, etc.. It might be easier to say something like Poland provoked Germany and then the Allies attacked, driving Germany to invade France as a defensive measure, and so on.
Hey, that's good. If someone disagrees, you say, history is written by the victors. The conventional narrative was part of your indoctrination. That's why you don't know the truth.
history is written by the victors.
Ah, but that conventional narrative was part of your indoctrination.
Anyone else find it odd that they named a battleship for a landlocked state?
"I deny that Arizona is landlocked!"
Find its coast then.
Don't you oppress him. It's his right to deny whatever he wants.
Or to be called Loretta and want to have babies, for that matter.
And a whole class of subs? We do have Lake Erie and the Ohio River though,
I've got three words for you: Global Warming Conspiracy!
I believe the proper response is "Stop being such an idiot."
How is that a "serious question"?
Look, i dont get why everyone is blaming the 2 muslims who were just out enforcing Shaira law.
i mean
the law is the law
its not like they wrote the law
at least those brave police, err i mean terrorists, nope still not right, Muslim fundamentalists got home safe.
Activists.
I think French people are fucking idiots.
There isn't a law in France to prevent French men and women from having sex with whomever they please, regardless of their partner's intellect.
Well... not yet.
I hope it's still OK to insult the French for their nationality. After all, it's not mean if it's justified.
What was left out as a "hate speech" crime was "contesting the existence of crimes against humanity." In other words, if you deny the holocaust you can be punished. It's interesting that country which had one of the largest group of people since WWII to protest what happened and support free speech has some of the strictest anti speech laws.
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"By abandoning that distinction, avowed defenders of Enlightenment values capitulate to the forces of darkness."
Pffft, that just sounds like a right winger saying "I want to abuse free speech"
"Sticks and stones might break my bones "... but broadcasting dishonorable words makes these same sticks and stones break bones and cause death.
Free-speech will only stay free if the speech is not illegal. Hate speech is already illegal and has always been against natural law.
The "Charlie Hebdo" massacre was a crash course for the whole Earth on the facts of life and should have explained these facts are constant and human laws can't protect speech that violates the laws of nature and NEVER COULD.
My inalienable right to speech trumps your non-existent right to not be offended.
Don't like it? Too fucking bad, Turbo. Get rump-ruffled all you like, not-a my problem.
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Charlie Hebdo is the criminal face of Magazine