latimes.com
Op-Ed
Free speech under fire
Western nations appear to have fallen out of love with free speech and are  
criminalizing more and more kinds of speech through the passage of laws 
banning  hate speech, blasphemy and discriminatory language.
By Jonathan Turley 
March 9, 2012
 
The recent exchange between an atheist and a judge in a small courtroom in  
rural Pennsylvania could have come out of a Dickens novel. Magisterial 
District  Judge Mark Martin was hearing a case in which an irate Muslim stood 
accused of  attacking an atheist, Ernest Perce, because he was wearing a 
"Zombie Mohammed"  costume on Halloween. Although the judge had "no doubt that 
the incident  occurred," he dismissed the charge of criminal harassment 
against the Muslim and  proceeded to browbeat Perce. Martin explained that such 
a 
costume would have led  to Perce's execution in many countries under sharia, 
or Islamic law,  and added that Perce's conduct fell "way outside your 
bounds of 1st Amendment  rights." 
The case has caused a national outcry, with many claiming that Martin was  
applying sharia law over the Constitution — a baseless and unfair  claim. 
But while the ruling certainly doesn't suggest that an American caliphate  has 
gained a foothold in American courts, it was nevertheless part of a  
disturbing trend. The conflict in Cumberland County between free speech and  
religious rights is being played out in courts around the world, and free 
speech  
is losing. 
Perce was marching in a parade with a fellow atheist dressed as a "Zombie  
Pope" when he encountered Talaag Elbayomy, who was outraged by the insult to 
the  prophet. The confrontation was captured on Perce's cellphone. 
Nevertheless,  Martin dismissed the charge against Elbayomy. Then he turned to 
Perce, accusing  him of acting like a "doofus." Martin said: "It's unfortunate 
that some people  use the 1st Amendment to deliberately provoke others. I 
don't think that's what  our forefathers intended." 
For many, the case confirmed long-standing fears that sharia law is  coming 
to this country. The alarmists note that in January, a federal court  
struck down an Oklahoma law that would have barred citing sharia law in  state 
courts. But there is no threat of that, and certainly not in Oklahoma,  which 
has fewer than 6,000 Muslims in the entire state. Rather, the campaign  
against sharia law has distracted the public from the very real threat  to free 
speech growing throughout the West. 
To put it simply, Western nations appear to have fallen out of love with 
free  speech and are criminalizing more and more kinds of speech through the 
passage  of laws banning hate speech, blasphemy and discriminatory language. 
Ironically,  these laws are defended as fighting for tolerance and 
pluralism. 
After the lethal riots over Dutch cartoons in 2005 satirizing Muhammad,  
various Western countries have joined Middle Eastern countries in charging  
people with insulting religion. And prosecutions are now moving beyond  
anti-religious speech to anti-homosexual or even anti-historical statements. In 
 
Canada last year, comedian Guy Earle was found to have violated the human 
rights  of a lesbian couple by making insulting comments at a nightclub. In 
Britain,  Dale Mcalpine was charged in 2010 with causing "harassment, alarm or 
distress"  after a gay community police officer overheard him stating that 
he viewed  homosexuality as a sin. The charges were later dropped. 
Western countries are on a slippery slope where more and more speech is 
cited  by citizens as insulting and thus criminal. Last year, on the Isle of 
Wight,  musician Simon Ledger was arrested on suspicion of racially aggravated 
 harassment after a passing person of Chinese descent was offended by 
Ledger's  singing "Kung Fu Fighting." Although the charges were eventually 
dropped, the  arrest sends a chilling message that such songs are voiced at 
one's 
own  risk. 
Some historical debates have now become hate speech. After World War II,  
Germany criminalized not just Nazi symbols but questioning the Holocaust.  
Although many have objected that the laws only force such ignorance and  
intolerance underground, the police have continued the quixotic fight to 
prevent  
barred utterances, such as the arrest in 2010 of a man in Hamburg caught 
using a  Hitler speech as a ring tone. 
In January, the French parliament passed a law making it a crime to 
question  the Armenian genocide. The law was struck down by the Constitutional 
Council,  but supporters have vowed to introduce a new law to punish deniers. 
When accused  of pandering to Armenian voters, the bill's author responded, 
"That's  democracy." 
Perhaps, but it is not liberty. Most democratic constitutions strive not to 
 allow the majority to simply dictate conditions and speech for everyone — 
the  very definition of what the framers of the U.S. Constitution called 
tyranny of  the majority. It was this tendency that led John Adams to warn: 
"Democracy …  soon wastes, exhausts and murders itself. There was never a 
democracy yet that  did not commit suicide.'' 
Legislators in the United States have shown the same taste for speech  
prosecutions. In June, Tennessee legislators passed a law making it a crime to  
"transmit or display an image" online that is likely to "frighten, 
intimidate or  cause emotional distress" to someone who sees it. The law leaves 
free 
speech  dependent not only on the changing attitudes of what constitutes a 
disturbing  image but whether others believe it was sent for a "legitimate 
purpose." This  applies even to postings on Facebook or social media. 
Judge Martin's comments are disturbing because they reflect the same 
emerging  view of the purpose and, more important, the perils of free speech. 
Martin told  Perce that "our forefathers" did not intend the 1st Amendment "to 
piss off other  people and cultures." Putting aside the fact that you could 
throw a stick on any  colonial corner and hit three people "pissed off" at 
Thomas Paine or John Adams,  the 1st Amendment was designed to protect 
unpopular speech. We do not need a 1st  Amendment to protect popular speech. 
The exchange between the judge and the atheist in Mechanicsburg captures 
the  struggle that has existed between free speech and religion for ages. What 
is  different is that it is now a struggle being waged on different terms. 
Where  governments once punished to achieve obedience, they now punish to 
achieve  tolerance. As free speech recedes in the West, it is not sharia but  
silence that is following in its wake. 
Jonathan Turley is a professor of public interest law at George  Washington 
University.

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