National Review Online
 
 
 
October 18, 2010 4:00  A.M.What the Wilders Trial  Means 





 
 
The trial  of Dutch politician Geert Wilders has been altogether an 
extraordinary event. He  is accused of saying rude and even hateful things 
about 
Islam, the prophet  Mohammed, and the Koran — and people are not supposed to 
talk like that, in  public at least. The case against him appears to be 
coming undone: Prosecutors  have requested that the charges be dropped, but the 
final decision remains in  the hands of the court. 
A great deal turns on the outcome of this case, for the Netherlands, for  
Europe, and — not least — for the Muslim world. 
Free speech is indispensable in a free society, and many a great man has  
fought for that principle, some of them going to prison for it. It is a  
longstanding if hard-won principle in the West that Wilders has a fundamental  
right to make whatever comment he likes about Islam, its prophet, or its 
scriptures, and  so do all of us. To the extent that Dutch law contradicts that 
principle, it  contradicts what is best in Europe’s heritage.  
Furthermore, Wilders is an elected parliamentarian, leader of the  
third-largest party in his country. Public figures not only have a right to  
speak 
out, but a duty. 
Wilders compares Islam to Nazism, a provocative stance, to be sure. But how 
 should such provocative criticism be received? With open debate, or with 
the  criminalization of opinion? It is extremely pertinent in the Wilders 
case to ask  whether his trial means that Europe’s commitment to freedom is 
already dead. 
Along with free speech, many a great man has also fought for the principle 
of  the separation of powers, whereby issues are decided in the legislature, 
and  courts are there only to ensure the proper application of the law. In 
the case of Wilders,  the judiciary has flirted with imposing political 
decisions that are quite  outside its powers. This is the road to 
antidemocratic 
show trials arranged to  gag or eliminate anyone whom authority condemns as 
an enemy of the people. 
The Wilders trial has also to be seen in the international context. The 
Organization of  the Islamic Conference (OIC) purports to represent, and speak 
for, all Muslim  countries. This body is now campaigning in various forums, 
including the United  Nations, to criminalize all criticism of Islam. Any 
such privileging of Islam  would block all possibility of reform and condemn 
Muslims to perpetual  intellectual stagnation. Freedom of expression for 
Wilders also means freedom of  expression for Muslims. 
It is retrograde and shameful that a Dutch court should now be aligned with 
 the OIC in the business of making criticism of Islam punishable by law. 
And  highly dangerous,  too.   


-- 
Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
<[email protected]>
Google Group: http://groups.google.com/group/RadicalCentrism
Radical Centrism website and blog: http://RadicalCentrism.org

Reply via email to