Arrest of Koran-Burning Pastor Terry Jones Brings Freedom of Speech Into
Focus

Posted By Walter Hudson On April 26, 2011 

 

The freedom of speech is perhaps the most popular among those cited in the
Bill of Rights. The ability to express yourself without fear of fine or
incarceration is essential to the maintenance of a free society.
<http://www.jihadwatch.org/> Jihad Watch director Robert Spencer, a prolific
author on the topic of Islam, has an important article
<http://www.humanevents.com/article.php?id=43147>  at Human Events
suggesting that free speech may be endangered.

On Good Friday in Dearborn, Mich., the notorious Koran-burning pastor Terry
Jones was jailed and fined for the crime of refusing to pay a so-called
"peace bond" to cover the costs of extra police protection for Jones'
planned demonstration outside the Islamic Center of America in Dearborn.
Judge Mark Somers also ordered Jones to stay away from the massive Dearborn
mosque for three years.

Spencer points out that Jones was not the threat to public order that
Dearborn authorities treated him as. Rather, the threat to public order was
the prospect of violent reaction from Muslims.

. if Jones and his fellow protesters were not being violent themselves,
wouldn't the responsibility for any disturbance be upon those who decided to
react to whatever Jones was doing by causing the disturbance?(.)

. To restrict Jones' right to protest in front of a mosque is to send the
signal that violent intimidation works, and that those who killed people in
Afghanistan because of Jones' Koran-burning have achieved their ultimate
goal: to make Islam immune from criticism because every potential critic
will be afraid to speak out.

Spencer is right. Jones is not responsible for the reactions of others. It
is the violence, and not the speech, which ought to be subject to police
action. Instead, the Detroit Free Press reports that authorities have those
priorities reversed
<http://www.freep.com/article/20110426/NEWS05/104260398/Pastor-Terry-Jones-a
ppeal-ruling-Dearborn> .

Dearborn officials and Wayne County prosecutors have said that if Jones
protested at the mosque, it might lead to possible violence because of
Jones' past actions.

Kowtowing to Islam in this manner is unacceptable, and Spencer rightly
condemns it. However, it is equally important that we not shoot ourselves in
the foot by elevating freedom of speech above countervailing rights
<http://www.discoverthenetworks.org/Articles/Free%20Speech.htm> . Either
imbalance is equally threatening to liberty.

For example, consider the deplorable Westboro Baptists
<http://www.discoverthenetworks.org/individualProfile.asp?indid=2129> ,
notorious for their vile protests at military funerals. Families should be
able to bury their loved ones in peace, and not be subject to protest while
conducting their solemn business. So noted Supreme Court Justice Samuel
Alito, the lone dissenter in a recent decision which favored the Westboro
Baptists
<http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2011/03/02/westboro-baptist-church-w_n_830209
.html>  over the mourning survivors of fallen soldiers.

Our profound national commitment to free and open debate is not a license
for the vicious verbal assault that occurred in this case.

Unless they own the venue, no one has any business at a funeral to which
they were not invited. The same principle applies to an increasingly popular
tactic among labor unions, protesting outside the homes of people they don
<http://www.newsrealblog.com/2010/05/21/terrorizing-young-children-seiu-thug
-tactics/> 't like. Your neighbor's right to speak does not trump your right
to live in peace, free of their blathering idiocy. You do not deprive
another of their freedom by ejecting them from your venue, be it your home,
your business
<http://www.newsrealblog.com/2011/03/20/video-seiu-union-thugs-invade-a-penn
sylvania-bank/> , or - through the proper enforcement of ordinance and
statute - any public area where their activity inhibits lawful business
<http://www.newsrealblog.com/2011/02/23/a-progressive-tea-party-no-the-comin
g-insurrection-is-here/> .

Time, place, and manner restrictions are crafted upon the precarious
junction between freedom of speech and freedom of association. This is the
principle which informs noise ordinances and statues regarding disturbance
of the peace. Enforcement of community standards is entirely consistent
with, and indeed demanded by, genuine libertarianism. The freedom of speech
is not a license to coerce association by shouting people down
<http://www.discoverthenetworks.org/moonbatcentral/2005/04/understanding-fre
edom-of-speech.html>  out of turn.

On this point, the Michigan authorities might have made a legitimate case.
While Jones is entitled to criticize Islam, he is not entitled to do so in
whatever time, place, and manner he pleases. Property rights and association
rights are as legitimate as speech rights.

Instead, Dearborn officials and Wayne County prosecutors clearly singled out
the content of Jones' speech.  This is evident, as Spencer points out, in
their requirement for a "peace bond," subjectively imposed in response to
what Jones planned to say and who he planned to say it about. Proper time,
place, and manner restrictions are blind to such considerations.

It's important to get this argument right. It is wrong to hold Jones
responsible for the actions of others. However, it's an overreach to say
he's entitled to protest wherever, whenever, and however he wants. In light
of the Left's increasing willingness to impose upon others
<http://www.newsrealblog.com/2011/01/05/marxist-frances-fox-piven-calls-for-
a-violent-uprising-against-the-american-system/>  under the guise of "free
speech," it's a point worth clarifying.

  _____  

Article printed from NewsReal Blog: http://www.newsrealblog.com

URL to article:
http://www.newsrealblog.com/2011/04/26/arrest-of-koran-burning-pastor-terry-
jones-brings-freedom-of-speech-into-focus/

 



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