http://www.chroniclesmagazine.org/2010/10/15/an-ambiguous-victory-for-wilders/

An Ambiguous Victory for Wilders
by Srdja Trifkovic
October 15, 2010

The news that Dutch prosecutors have changed their mind about prosecuting Geert 
Wilders for the Orwellian crime of “discriminating against Muslims” and 
“inciting hatred” is prima facie a victory for free speech and all that. In 
fact 
it is not nearly as good as it may seem.

The establishment is scared of continuing to hound the leader of the 
third-largest political party in the land. The fact that their legal minions 
are 
forced to eat humble pie is gratifying, but the trouble is that they are 
dropping this particular case while keeping all the pernicious laws used 
against 
him. They have come up with the ridiculous argument that the politician’s 
comments about banning the Kuran can be discriminatory, but because Wilders 
wants to pursue a ban “on democratic lines,” there is no incitement to 
discrimination “as laid down in law.” As for his comparison of the Kuran with 
Mein Kampf, the prosecutors now say that the metaphor was “crude, but that did 
not make it punishable.” While some of his comments could incite hatred against 
Muslims if taken out of context, they concluded, on the whole Wilders seems to 
be opposed to the growing influence of Islam and not hostile to Muslims as such.

A clear victory would have been for the Dutch state to declare that it was 
mistaken in pursuing a case of any kind against Wilders; but that would have 
meant the end of the Dutch state as we have known it for the past forty years.

In the event the oppressive laws are there to stay. Ordinary Dutch citizens, 
less visible than Wilders, can be maliciously prosecuted – and convicted – for 
saying the same things he has said, but with far less fuss. In the same manner 
some well known East European dissidents were relatively protected from the 
Comrades’ fury in the 1970s, but arbitrary and oppressive laws were then 
applied 
with an even greater ferocity against the anonymous multitudes.

For as long as Holland’s and other European countries’ ridiculous “hate” laws 
remain on the statute books, the threat of prosecution hangs above everyone’s 
head – and no conviction is required to make people think twice about 
expressing 
themselves frankly and meaningfully about “prophet” Muhammad’s ideology of war 
and hatred.

I suspect that Wilders himself would have preferred a highly publicized trial 
and conviction, followed by an appeal that would test the constitutionality of 
the laws used against him. That is the kind of battle that requires courage, 
money, and media attention. He is the ideal man to give it one more try.




_______________________________________________
News mailing list
News@antic.org
http://lists.antic.org/mailman/listinfo/news

Reply via email to