"Either we must clamp down on critics of Islam, mandating a uniform code of 
political correctness, or else we must let the critics say what they wish, 
regardless of the consequences"

 
http://www.weeklystandard.com/Content/Public/Articles/000/000/014/687vefpl.asp
 
 Speaking of Islam 
Liberty and grievance in Canada. 
by Lee Harris 
02/11/2008, Volume 013, Issue 21 





The English-speaking peoples are justifiably proud of their tradition of free 
speech. When Thomas Macaulay reviewed the achievements of the Glorious 
Revolution of 1688, he observed that the victorious English Whigs had shown how 
"the authority of law and the security of property" could be reconciled with "a 
liberty of discussion and of individual action never before known."

Since Macaulay's day, many of the other nations of the world have also figured 
out how to reconcile liberty of discussion with the general welfare, until a 
point has been reached where we in the West have completely forgotten what a 
remarkable achievement our ancestors bequeathed to us. Even a devout Whig like 
Macaulay, writing midway between us and the Glorious Revolution, recalled a 
time when unrestricted liberty of discussion could not be made compatible with 
domestic tranquility. Today, on the other hand, most of us have lost any 
awareness of the painful fact that, under certain conditions, a society might 
be forced to make a tragic choice between two incompatible goods, namely, free 
speech and the public welfare. Yet the events of the last several years should 
have awakened us from our dogmatic slumber, for when it comes to speaking of 
Islam, there is troubling evidence that our cherished liberty of discussion may 
not be compatible with security of life and limb, not to mention the security 
of property.

It is only by keeping these sobering facts in mind that we can hope to put into 
perspective the strange drama unfolding in Canada--a drama that contains 
elements that might have been borrowed from the theater of the absurd, making 
it uncertain whether we are dealing with a surreal farce or an all too real 
tragedy.

On January 11, 2008, in a small drab government office in Alberta, a hearing 
was held to investigate a complaint brought against Ezra Levant, a Canadian 
publisher, author, and libertarian activist. The case, in truth, had its 
origins two years earlier in Denmark, where the daily news-paper 
Jyllands-Posten commissioned and published a set of cartoons lampooning the 
prophet known to Muslims as Muhammad. As most of us remember, after a delay of 
several months, and with an assist from a road-show to the Middle East 
organized by unhappy Danish imams, the so-called Danish cartoons set off havoc 
in various corners of the Muslim world, leaving a death toll of around 100 
people, many of whom were shot by police in their attempt to quell the riots. 
In the aftermath, Prime Minister Anders Fogh Rasmussen stated that the cartoon 
controversy was the worst international crisis for his country since World War 
II, when Denmark was invaded by the Nazis.

Ezra Levant had nothing to do with the original cartoon debacle. His magazine, 
the now defunct Western Standard, decided to reprint the cartoons in order to 
let its readers see and judge the drawings for themselves. When the cartoons 
appeared on February 14, 2006, there were no riots, deaths, or international 
crises. But, not long afterwards, Levant found himself in hot water. Syed 
Soharwardy, representing the self-proclaimed Islamic Supreme Council of Canada, 
filed a complaint with the Calgary police, alleging that Levant was inciting 
hatred against him--a crime in Canada. These criminal charges, according to the 
Calgary police, are still under investigation. In addition, Soharwardy lodged a 
complaint with the Alberta Human Rights and Citizen Commission.

In a related case, four Muslim law students affiliated with the Canadian 
Islamic Congress have filed complaints against author Mark Steyn for publishing 
an excerpt from his bestselling book, America Alone, in the Canadian newsweekly 
Maclean's. These complaints, filed in December 2007, will be heard by the 
British Columbian Human Rights Tribunal and by the Canadian Human Rights 
Commission.

There has been remarkably little interest shown in these cases by the American 
media, usually so alert to perceived violations of the right to free speech, 
and it is perhaps too easy to speculate why the editorial boards of our leading 
newspapers and magazines have not gotten up in arms over these attacks on their 
Canadian colleagues. Could it be that they are not as keen on defending our 
right to speak ill of Islam as they are to defend our right to speak ill of 
virtually everything else? On the other hand, the Canadian cases have caught 
the attention of the blogosphere, especially but not exclusively among those to 
the right of center. After Levant made the videotape of his appearance before 
the Alberta Human Rights Commission available on YouTube, it was inundated with 
viewers, most of them enthusiastically sympathetic with his defiant response to 
the order to appear before the commission. There is also a Free Mark Steyn! 
website dedicated to information about his pending case and to defending other 
"Canadians from the thought police and 'human rights' commissars."

So what are we really dealing with here? A grave threat to the Anglo-Saxon 
tradition of free speech, as some seem to think, or a cautionary tale of 
bureaucratic folly in a nanny state running amok?

Before the commencement of his hearing, Levant read a statement in which he 
refused to recognize that the commission had the authority to summon him before 
it to answer questions relating to Soharwardy's complaint. Levant vehemently 
asserts that he, like everyone else, has the unconditional right to engage in 
speech that is offensive and unreasonable. The defiant and pugnacious attitude 
that Levant took has been widely echoed by his supporters, and there has been a 
uniform tendency to lump the various Canadian tribunals and commissions 
together under the heading of kangaroo courts, intent on violating what Levant, 
in his opening remarks, called his "inalienable" right to freedom of 
expression, further sanctioned, in his words, by "the 800-year tradition" of 
English common law on the subject. 

Macaulay would have been quite surprised to learn that from the 12th century 
onward there were no restrictions on speech under English common law. As a 
Whig, Macaulay might have reminded Levant that it took the Whig revolution to 
secure anything like the kind of liberty of discussion that we take for 
granted. During the reign of James I, Macaulay might have noted, there was a 
heated controversy over the degree to which members of the House of Commons 
could freely speak their minds during a session of Parliament, and even those 
members of the House who pushed to protect their own right of free speech 
recognized that there were obvious limits beyond which it would be improper to 
go. No member of the House of Commons could urge the overthrow of the monarchy, 
for instance, or make speeches that endangered the general welfare.

In 17th-century England, no one doubted that it was often in the public 
interest to curb men's tongues. During the reign of Charles I, for example, the 
archbishop of Canterbury William Laud decided to hand down a ruling that 
forbade ministers to discuss the sublime mysteries associated with Calvin's 
doctrine of predestination. They could not preach it, nor could they preach 
against it. They could not mention it at all. This was clearly an infringement 
on the right of free speech, but for Laud it was an infringement that was amply 
justified in the interests of domestic tranquility and social harmony. For 
Laud, what was at stake was not so much the promotion of his own theological 
opinions as the suppression of the furor theologicus that had caused so much 
devastation in England and throughout Europe in the aftermath of the 
Reformation. What Laud wanted to achieve was not the victory of his own narrow 
theological opinions, but the eradication of all theological divisiveness, 
along with the rancor and the violence that came with it. His goal was to bring 
about uniformity of religious opinion and practice by weaning the English 
population away from violent disputations over inherently unsolvable mysteries.

If Macaulay represented the Whig approach to liberty of discussion, Laud could 
be said to represent the Tory approach. For Macaulay, free speech was the 
foundation of mankind's "intellectual improvement," so that any state that 
interfered with the free expression of ideas had impeded the growth of 
knowledge and the ethical uplift of the race. In addition, for the Whig, free 
speech was the ultimate bulwark against governmental or ecclesiastical 
despotism. For the Tory, on the other hand, the state not only had a legitimate 
right to interfere with free speech under certain conditions, it had a duty to 
interfere. If liberty of discussion threatened to incite men to violence, or 
caused them to take the law in their own hands, then the state, representing 
the general welfare and not merely its own selfish interests, had to curb this 
so-called liberty. Liberty yes, license, no. When preaching sermons about 
predestination becomes tantamount to shouting "Fire!" in a crowded theater, 
then such sermons must cease.

It is easy, looking back, to take a smug attitude toward the men of those 
times, and to preen ourselves on how much farther we have advanced in the 
recognition of the importance of basic human rights than our ancestors. But 
what we forget is that we are the heirs of a profound cultural transformation 
that made free speech less dangerous to the social order than it was in 
previous centuries. We were all brought up in a world in which it was safe to 
speak our minds--safe both for us, and for the other members of our community. 
There was a tacit compact by which we all agreed to play by the same set of 
rules. I could say pretty much whatever I wanted to say, provided I allowed you 
the same liberty. Furthermore, I agreed that I would not become too upset if 
you offended me, provided you agreed that you would not become too upset if I 
offended you. Of course, most of us would watch what we said, in the interest 
of not causing others too much offense, but we would not fly off the handle if 
now and then someone went too far over the line. We might grumble and complain; 
we might even decide not to speak with the person who offended us, but we would 
not stab the offender to death, or behead him, or riot in the streets in 
protest against him, or burn down buildings to indicate to the world the fury 
of our resentment.

Levant, and other defenders of the classical Whig position, do not seem to 
realize that this tacit social compact is presently breaking down in the very 
nations that prided themselves the most on having achieved it. Today, because 
of Islam, the furor theologicus that we in the West thought we had put behind 
us is reemerging and can flare up in any part of the world. A cartoon or a film 
documentary that Muslims find offensive can set off a chain of reactions that 
lead to riots, bloodshed, the murder of innocents, and international crises. To 
continue to maintain, in the light of these troubling facts, that the state has 
no business watching what its citizens say is to indulge in a wistful 
anachronism. Even the most dedicated libertarian must surely realize that at 
some point the other members of his society may not be willing to pay the 
social costs of his freedom of expression. One may of course wish for a society 
to stand firmly behind those who have the courage to speak their minds; but it 
is simply naive to expect the general population to support them beyond a 
certain point. The question is, How close are we to that point?

Let us consider several well-known examples.

First, let us go back to the publication of the original cartoons in the Danish 
magazine. It is highly likely that the Danish government would never have heard 
about these cartoons if they had lampooned Zoroaster, the Buddha, Moses, or 
Jesus of Nazareth. Caricatures of these revered figures might have offended 
certain readers, causing them to write angry letters to the editor, or even to 
cancel their subscriptions; but nothing would have happened to make the Danish 
government weigh in the balance the individual right of free expression versus 
the general welfare of their nation. On the other hand, if the fallout of the 
Danish cartoons was indeed the worst thing to happen to Denmark since the Nazi 
invasion, then what patriotic Dane could be happy to see his country embroiled 
in an international uproar because of an editorial decision at a newspaper?

Second, consider the well-known case of Dutch film-maker Theo van Gogh. His 
protest film about the oppression of women in Islam outraged Muslim sensibility 
in Holland and led a lone fanatic to stab van Gogh to death in the streets of 
Amsterdam. The Dutch, who had achieved their celebrated tolerance after 
enduring the worst form of the furor theologicus, were stunned by this 
violation of the tacit compact by which they had managed to balance the desire 
for freedom of expression with the desire for social harmony. The effect of van 
Gogh's murder was chilling, since it revealed the breakdown of a fragile civil 
ecology that permitted the strong-minded and stubborn Dutch to live at peace 
with one another despite their differences. 

The consequences of this breakdown were also evident in the Dutch treatment of 
the brave Somali-born woman who had conceived and scripted the offensive film. 
Van Gogh's murderer had pinned a death threat against Ayaan Hirsi Ali to his 
victim's chest, declaring to the world that she was a target of possible 
attack. For obvious reasons, the neighbors who lived in Hirsi Ali's apartment 
building were disturbed to think that they were living next to someone who 
might become the object of a terrorist attack, possibly in the form of a 
bombing. By speaking out courageously against radical Islam, Hirsi Ali not only 
put herself at risk, but, as her neighbors saw it, she had also (quite 
inadvertently) put them at risk. But why should her neighbors be forced to live 
under the same death threats that Hirsi Ali had received? They had said nothing 
controversial themselves, and deeply resented the idea that they might be 
called upon to pay the price for a courage that they had never dreamed of 
displaying. 

Those of us who have the luxury of living risk-free can easily ridicule the 
paranoia of Hirsi Ali's Dutch neighbors. But their feelings were no doubt akin 
to those of a group of hostages held by masked men with guns, who suddenly 
discover that they have a hero in their midst, intent on speaking his mind to 
the gunmen who are holding them. The other hostages might momentarily admire 
the hero, but they will probably also wish that he keep his heroism to himself, 
since by speaking his mind he is exposing his fellow hostages to the danger of 
getting shot.

In the case of Hirsi Ali, her neighbors were satisfied when she moved out of 
the apartment block, and the Dutch government was eventually satisfied when 
Hirsi Ali moved out of their country. But suppose she had not moved. Then what? 
Might not the day have arrived when her neighbors asked the government to 
protect them by gagging her? If the person who is exercising his freedom of 
speech is endangering the lives of other people in his society, how long will 
it be before an appeal is made to quiet him by whatever means are available? 
Indeed, how long can such a state of affairs go on before it has an 
intimidating effect even on those who are by no means lacking in the courage to 
risk their own necks? 

For example, when Pope Benedict XVI gave his Regensburg Address in 2006, there 
was also a Muslim backlash, less lethal than that of the Danish cartoons, but 
still more than enough to create serious ethical reservations in the mind of 
anyone of stature who undertakes to make a public criticism of Islam. If 
certain words can literally kill, then morally responsible men and women will 
naturally be hesitant to say them aloud, leading to a self-censorship that can 
make timorous those who are not -otherwise short on courage. 

In the bloody aftermath of the Regensburg Address, many journalists in the West 
assailed the pope for "causing" the mayhem and held him personally responsible 
for the death of a Catholic nun murdered in Somalia by Muslim fanatics. This 
attack on the pope was certainly unjustified, and yet, if we are completely 
honest with ourselves, we must recognize that there is a hard unpleasant kernel 
of truth in it. If criticism of Islam sets off riots and leads to the death of 
innocent people, then those who are prepared to make these criticisms must also 
be prepared to face the moral hazard they are running by doing so. 

Fortunately, in the case of the Western Standard, there were no riots or 
deaths. It is true that Levant appears to have offended at least one Muslim, 
namely, the man who has filed the complaints against him. But Soharwardy did 
not stab Levant to death, or blow him up--and, to quote Gilbert and Sullivan, 
this is "greatly to his credit." Soharwardy may not be an Englishman, like the 
able seaman of the Pinafore, but at least he is behaving like one, vigorously 
availing himself of the law and its loopholes in order to get his way, and 
thereby avoiding the violence that so often accompanies expression of Muslim 
anger in other parts of the world. Canadian law has made the mere expression of 
hatred a crime, unlike American law, which must consider whether hateful speech 
is likely to lead to the actual physical harm of the person who is its object; 
and who can really fault Soharwardy for thus taking advantage of opportunities 
placed in his way? Levant may well object to Canadian law on this matter, and 
he may even be right to argue that the Alberta Human Rights Commission has 
exceeded its mandate by taking his case under consideration. But that is not 
Soharwardy's fault. 

Levant appears to recognize the inherent absurdity of the situation when he 
compares his "interrogation" to a story by Franz Kafka. And if you watch the 
video on YouTube, you can see what he means. While Levant defiantly defends his 
ancient and inalienable rights, as if he were pleading before the Star Chamber, 
a lone bureaucratic inquisitor, Shirlene McGovern, sits across the table from 
him. Drab as the room itself, she is silent under Levant's ferociously 
indignant tongue-lashing. Every now and then McGovern squirms uncomfortably, 
raising her eyebrows at some of Levant's more extravagant claims, no doubt 
wishing that she could get her government paycheck without this kind of ordeal. 
Obviously, she is someone who, as the phrase goes, is just trying to do her 
job, and has no desire to abridge anyone's freedom of speech. Indeed, when 
Levant finishes castigating the commission that she represents, McGovern 
responds by saying, as any good Canadian might, "You're entitled to your 
opinion, that's for sure." And she obviously meant it.

McGovern has been condemned as the mindless functionary of the nanny state at 
its worst. But before we jump on this inviting bandwagon, let us at least try 
to give Nanny her due. If speaking of Islam runs genuine risks of inciting 
violence, we cannot just pretend that it isn't so. We can be indignant about 
this and declaim loudly against it--but what good does such an approach really 
do? If criticizing Islam promotes bloodshed, then criticizing even more hardly 
seems like an attractive solution. On the other hand, let us look at the 
possible upside to the nanny approach.

Let offended Muslims file complaints to their heart's content. Make outraged 
imams fill out tedious forms. Require self-appointed mullahs, representing 
imaginary counsels and committees, to provide documentation of their 
grievances. Encourage them to vent through the intrinsically stifling 
bureaucratic channels provided by panels like the Alberta Human Rights 
Commission. Show them, nanny-like, that you care about their injured feelings. 
Patiently and silently listen to their indignant complaints, and let them, 
ideally, get it all out of their systems. Humoring, let us remember, is not 
appeasement, but often a clever way to coax troublesome children of all ages 
into behaving like civilized human beings. Every good nanny knows as much. So 
perhaps there is something that the rest of the world can learn from the 
Canadian nanny's book of tricks. If it is a book of tricks. .  .  .

For here's the rub. If the Canadian government were using its "kangaroo courts" 
as a deliberate ploy to siphon off Muslim rage or to guide it into proper 
bureaucratic (and happily nonviolent) channels, then we could perhaps admire it 
for its prudence and cunning. But suppose these commissions and tribunals are 
not a cunning charade, designed to hoodwink ill-tempered Muslims into becoming 
good litigious Anglo-Saxons? What if the Canadian government actually thought 
that it could help matters by cracking down on writers like Ezra Levant and 
Mark Steyn, by fining them or by throwing them into prison, silencing those who 
have the courage to speak of Islam, while encouraging Muslim immigrants to feel 
that they can manipulate weak-kneed governments into stifling any criticism of 
their religion and culture? Obviously this naive approach would backfire 
disastrously, and would end by endangering the very domestic tranquility that 
it was trying to preserve.

Of one thing we can have no doubt: Short of a firing squad, there is nothing 
that the Canadian government can do that will have any effect on what Ezra 
Levant or Mark Steyn will say and write in the future. You couldn't have picked 
worse people to try to cow. But unfortunately, it is the nature of the nanny 
state to bring up citizens who have been trained not to rock the boat. Under a 
nanny regime, the good citizen is one who is reluctant to speak his mind merely 
out of fear of what other people might think. For people already this cowed, 
even the threat of a minor bureaucratic hassle would be a powerful argument for 
keeping one's mouth shut, and for standing by while our hard-won liberty of 
discussion is steadily eroded. Canada still has uncowable men like Levant and 
Steyn; but where will such men come from a generation hence?

Even worse, the threat of ongoing legal action, carried out in a number of 
different Canadian provinces, might be more than enough to keep less well-known 
writers and smaller news outlets from exposing themselves to the risk of legal 
costs that a magazine like Maclean's can afford to take. When faced with the 
threat of an endless hassle, draining away limited personal resources, many 
writers will simply take the safer course of not saying anything offensive 
about Islam. But since it is difficult to say in advance what will be offensive 
to men like Soharwardy, the safest course will be to say nothing at all. In 
short, gagging Canadians may not take a generation. It may work in a matter of 
a few months.

And is it just Canada that we are talking about? After all, if enough Muslims 
continue to react with violence to criticism of their religion and culture, all 
the other nations of the West will eventually be forced to make a tragic choice 
between two of our highest values. Either we must clamp down on critics of 
Islam, mandating a uniform code of political correctness, or else we must let 
the critics say what they wish, regardless of the consequences, and in full 
knowledge that these consequences may include the death of innocents. This is 
not a choice that the West has had to face since the end of our own furor 
theologicus several centuries ago, but, like it or not, it is the choice that 
we are facing again today. 

Lee Harris is the author, most recently, of The Suicide of Reason: Radical 
Islam's Threat to the West.



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