
- There is a tendency, to
censor certain viewpoints because they might "offend" others. The
problem is, it is not the inoffensive things that need protecting; it is
only the offensive things that do.... Freedom of speech exists
precisely to protect the minority from the tyranny of the majority.
- "[T]he freedom of Speech may be taken away, and, dumb and silent
we may be led, like sheep, to the Slaughter." — US President George
Washington, 1783.
- How come it is all right to publish the original source,
prescribing murder, but that it is "hate speech" to point out that
quote?
- "Sometimes, when one points out these rules, people will respond:
'Well, the Bible says such-and-such.' The point is not that these
things are written in Islamic scripture, but that people still live by them." — Bruce Bawer, February 8, 2018.
- Restrictions against "hate speech" often do not really ban hate
speech; instead they may actually be protecting certain forms of hate
speech against legitimate inquiry.
In November 2019, Germans celebrated the collapse of the Berlin Wall
and the reunification of Germany 30 years earlier. That same month,
Chancellor Angela Merkel, in a speech to the German federal parliament (Bundestag), advocated more restrictions on free speech for all Germans. She warned that free speech has limits:
"Those limits begin where hatred is spread. They begin
where the dignity of other people is violated. This house will and must
oppose extreme speech. Otherwise, our society will no longer be the free
society that it was."
Merkel received great applause.
Critics, however, would claim that curtailing freedom in order to
protect freedom sounds a bit Orwellian. One of the first acts of any
tyrant or repressive regime is usually to abolish freedom of speech.
Merkel should know this: she lived under a repressive regime -- in the
communist dictatorship of East Germany, where she studied at Karl Marx
University.
The First Amendment to the United States Constitution protects
freedom of speech, specifically speech critical of the government, and
prohibits the state from limiting free speech. The First Amendment was
placed first in the Bill of Rights because the American Founding Fathers
realized that freedom of speech is fundamental to a free society. US
President George Washington said:
"For if Men are to be precluded from offering their
Sentiments on a matter, which may involve the most serious and alarming
consequences... reason is of no use to us; the freedom of Speech may be
taken away, and, dumb and silent we may be led, like sheep, to the
Slaughter."
Without freedom of speech, you cannot truly be free. Freedom of
speech exists precisely to protect the minority from the tyranny of the
majority.
What exactly is "hate speech," and who gets to define it? Those who
love justice usually also hate injustice. But what is justice? Social
justice? Economic justice? Ecological justice? Religious fundamentalist
justice? Climate justice?
Hate may be a negative emotion, but you cannot ban emotions. Envy and
jealousy are also widely considered negative feelings. Yet we do not
ban them. Envy of people who are wealthier than you is arguably a
component of Socialist and Marxist political parties everywhere.
The concept of a "hate crime" is also flawed. If you rob, assault or
murder people, that is equally injurious regardless of the motivation of
the assailant or of who the victim is. We should not have different
penalties depending upon whether the victim is a gay black man, a
straight white man, a Muslim woman or a Christian nun, or we will end up
with a kind of a legal caste system.
Although the legal system should not be based on feelings or
emotions, we see an increasing tendency toward this subjectivity. There
is a tendency to censor certain viewpoints because they might "offend"
others. The problem is, it is not the inoffensive things that need
protecting; it is only the offensive things that do. When, in the US,
the National Socialist Party of America wanted to march though Skokie,
Illinois, home to many Holocaust survivors, the Supreme Court decided that the Nazis' right of free speech overrode suppressing the marchers. According to the Bill of Rights Institute:
"In these cases, National Socialist Party of America v. Village of Skokie (1977), and Brandenburg v. Ohio
(1968), the Supreme Court held that the First Amendment protects
individuals' rights to express their views, even if those views are
considered extremely offensive by most people...
"American writer Noam Chomsky said 'If we don't believe in freedom of
expression for people we despise, we don't believe in it at all.'
Individuals who express unpopular opinions are protected by the First
Amendment. The First Amendment prevents majorities from silencing views
with which they do not agree—even views that the majority of people find
offensive to their very core. "
Possibly many things people say will be considered offensive to
somebody, somewhere. In 1600, Giordano Bruno was burned alive at the
stake as a heretic for saying
that the universe has no center, and stars are suns, surrounded by
planets and moons. The findings of Charles Darwin were challenged by the
"Scopes Monkey Trial"
in 1925, when a high-school teacher in Tennessee, John T. Scopes, was
charged with violating state law by teaching the theory of human
evolution.
Just a few years ago, it was uncontroversial to state that there are
only two biological sexes. After all, this is a fact that would seem
pretty straightforward. Yet recently, even this simple statement has
become explosive. When the tennis champion Martina Navratilova questioned the fairness of having transgender men compete in sports again women, but was eventually driven to "apologize."
In the UK, a physician, David Mackereth,
recently lost his government job as a medical assessor after more than
three decades for refusing to renounce his view that gender is
determined at birth.
People who claim to combat "hate" often seem to be quite full of hate
themselves. Some Americans claim that US President Donald J. Trump is a
racist,
yet themselves express open hatred toward Trump, and those who vote for
him. They do not object to hating. They just seem to believe that their
hate is the only legitimate one.
In 2013,
the American scholar Robert Spencer was banned by British authorities
from entering the UK. Spencer the author of many books about Islam and
runs the website Jihad Watch.
The Koran sura 9:5 has verse stating:
"When the sacred months are over slay the idolaters
wherever you find them. Arrest them, besiege them, and lie in ambush
everywhere for them. If they repent and take to prayer and render the
alms levy, allow them to go their way. God is forgiving and merciful."
The exact translation of this verse can be debated, but the Arabic verb qatala
generally means to kill, slay or murder somebody. How come it is all
right to publish the original source, prescribing murder, but that it is
"hate speech" to point out that quote?
Robert Spencer and others have observed, for instance, that verse 9:5 and other intolerant verses in the Koran have been quoted repeatedly by militant Muslims to justify jihad attacks and violence (for instance here, here and here). Although other religious books also contain violence, as the scholar Bruce Bawer points out:
"Sometimes, when one points out these rules, people will
respond: 'Well, the Bible says such-and-such.' The point is not that
these things are written in Islamic scripture, but that people still live by them."
Muslims in Britain and other Western nations are free to spread
teachings that are hateful towards non-Muslims. Yet because non-Muslims
such as Robert Spencer pointed out that some teachings are hateful and
have inspired actual atrocities, UK authorities banned Spencer for
spreading "hate."
One sees, then, that restrictions against "hate speech" often do not
really ban hate speech; instead they may actually be protecting certain
forms of hate speech against legitimate inquiry.
Laws against "hate speech" and "racism" always lead to political
censorship, because the definition of what constitutes "hate" is always
influenced by politics and ideology. Laws against hate speech or racism
should therefore be removed. No person has the right "not to be
offended." Freedom of speech means saying and hearing things with which
you may disagree. What remains important is to be able to say and hear
them.
Fjordman, a Norwegian historian, is an expert on Europe, Islam and multiculturalism.
Source
Why Laws Against Hate Speech Are Dangerous
Reviewed by
PostDiscus
on
January 21, 2020
Rating:
5