June 13, 2008
YOU'D HAVE A TOUGH TIME CONVINCING US MR. STEYN MINDS ANY OF THE REACTIONS...:
Unlike Others, U.S. Defends Freedom to Offend in Speech (ADAM LIPTAK, 6/12/08, NY Times)
A couple of years ago, a Canadian magazine published an article arguing that the rise of Islam threatened Western values. The article’s tone was mocking and biting, but it said nothing that conservative magazines and blogs in the United States do not say every day without fear of legal reprisal.Things are different here. The magazine is on trial. [...]
The Maclean’s article, “The Future Belongs to Islam,” was an excerpt from a book by Mark Steyn called “America Alone” (Regnery, 2006). The title was fitting: The United States, in its treatment of hate speech, as in so many other areas of the law, takes a distinctive legal path.
“In much of the developed world, one uses racial epithets at one’s legal peril, one displays Nazi regalia and the other trappings of ethnic hatred at significant legal risk, and one urges discrimination against religious minorities under threat of fine or imprisonment,” Frederick Schauer, a professor at the John F. Kennedy School of Government at Harvard, wrote in a recent essay called “The Exceptional First Amendment.”
“But in the United States,” Professor Schauer continued, “all such speech remains constitutionally protected.”
Canada, England, France, Germany, the Netherlands, South Africa, Australia and India all have laws or have signed international conventions banning hate speech. Israel and France forbid the sale of Nazi items like swastikas and flags. It is a crime to deny the Holocaust in Canada, Germany and France.
Earlier this month, the actress Brigitte Bardot, an animal rights activist, was fined $23,000 in France for provoking racial hatred by criticizing a Muslim ceremony involving the slaughter of sheep.
By contrast, American courts would not stop a planned march by the American Nazi Party in Skokie, Ill., in 1977, though a march would have been deeply distressing to the many Holocaust survivors there.
Six years later, a state court judge in New York dismissed a libel case brought by several Puerto Rican groups against a business executive who had called food stamps “basically a Puerto Rican program.” The First Amendment, Justice Eve M. Preminger wrote, does not allow even false statements about racial or ethnic groups to be suppressed or punished just because they may increase “the general level of prejudice.”
Some prominent legal scholars say the United States should reconsider its position on hate speech.
...but certainly the best yet is a column suggesting we should become more like the multiculti Europe that his book charts the demise of.
Just paving the way for the NYT to soon press for the banning of conservative opinions on talk radio and the internet, regardless of the election results. Especially if The Light Worker (I prefer to break it up into two words, myself) loses, in which case they'll say that it was all due to racism and his opponents must be silenced.
Posted by: b at June 13, 2008 1:16 PMSome prominent legal scholars say the United States should reconsider its position on hate speech.
Hey, "legal scholars," how about you carefully review some relevant primary source material before opening your gobs and making yourselves a collective effing punchline.
Posted by: Matt Murphy at June 13, 2008 10:24 PMI'm not sure which is more laughable: the NYT's credulous acceptance of the suppression of their peers in Canada, or their smug, tacit assumption that they'd be on the non-censored side should the trend continue.
Posted by: ArtD0dger at June 14, 2008 4:46 PMI'm not sure which is more laughable: the NYT's credulous acceptance of the suppression of their peers in Canada, or their smug, tacit assumption that they'd be on the non-censored side should the trend continue.
Posted by: ArtD0dger at June 14, 2008 4:48 PMTo facilitate discussions in the comments, we require a name be submitted with your comments.

