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The Future Is In Our Past

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  • The Future Is In Our Past

    THE FUTURE IS IN OUR PAST
    Audrey Manning

    Beacon, Canada
    Oct 2 2007

    Battle for free speech

    The Israeli Ambassador to the United Nations called the Iranian
    president a bigot and a murderer, and the invitation to Columbia
    University shameful and scandalous. One wonders how an Iraqi
    ambassador would be regarded if he were to make similar statements
    about a president.

    Canada is waging a war in Afghanistan to bring liberty to the Afghan
    people yet, when Liberal Jim Combden apparently referred to Danny
    Williams as the Fuehrer, the weight of his words threatened to derail
    the Liberal election campaign. It didn't take long for the Jewish
    community, the Premier and others to shame Jim Combden.

    If free speech is free speech, one cannot pick and chose what can
    be said under its banner? Yet, for more than 60 years. No one has
    dared question the Holocaust. There is no free speech surrounding
    the Holocaust. Holocaust denial is punishable by jail terms across
    the European Union. In 2006, David Irving, the controversial British
    historian, was sentenced to three years in prison in Austria for
    denying existence of the holocaust.

    Every time anyone calls into question the creation of the State of
    Israel, or wishes to honour people, other than Jews, who lost their
    lives during Hitler's rampage across Europe, the axe falls. We have
    been convinced that Hitler's genocide tops the list of atrocities
    committed by humans against humans. This seems to have been done in
    order to make impossible any discussion about the State of Israel.

    It has been generally accepted that the Holocaust, 1938-1945, resulted
    in the deaths of 6,000,000 Jews. Yet, there were 5,000,000 souls of
    other ethnic origins, killed by der Fuehrer, that lie forgotten on
    the scrap heap of history. Thousands killed in Russia and Western
    Europe by German soldiers, lie beside them.

    Why is the Holocaust not equated with all the other massacres that
    occurred during the 20th century - the Armenian genocide 1915-1918: 1,
    500,000 deaths; Ukraine famine 1932-1933: 7, 000,000; Nanking massacre
    1937-1938: 300,000; Rwanda genocide 1994: 800,000; Bosnia genocide:
    2,000,000 (united human rights) and others? Why are there no special
    sensibilities toward the corresponding states? Pres. Ahmadinejad is
    a shrewd politician, and knew that he could attract attention only
    by quoting the one sensitive case.

    No one is allowed to bring attention to the misery of the people of
    Palestine who were displaced when the State of Israel was created.

    One can almost be certain that had Pres. Ahmadinejad or Mr. Combden
    used another example for their criticisms, their statements would
    have gone unnoticed.

    What's wrong with inviting Pres. Ahmadinejad to Columbia University?

    Universities are supposed to be the bastions of free inquiry. Don't
    we want all sides of a story, even the side that we don't wish to
    hear? Or, are we content with being told what to believe and accept
    it as truth?

    Had Jim Combden likened Premier Williams to another of the world's
    dictators, would anyone have been outraged? If Mr. Combden had cited
    Kim Jong-Il, who would have cared? As it was, everyone rushed to the
    defense of the Holocaust.

    Many people, too, are rushing to support Jim Combden, saying that
    they don't believe he meant to insult. According to a CBC online
    article, Mr. Combden says it was just a joke. Whatever his intention,
    Mr. Combden was making a political statement. Political statements
    are expected during election campaigns.

    Danny Williams, according to the CBC, said that Mr.Combden's remarks
    were [obviously] condoned at the highest levels of the Liberal party.

    He also said that he had expected the Liberals to get personal. Was
    the premier making a political statement?

    Perhaps the Premier's remarks could be examined for what they might
    contain of a personal nature. If Mr. Williams thinks Jim Combden's
    remarks were condoned at the highest levels of the Liberal party,
    who condoned them - the leader, the campaign manager, the president?

    If free speech means free speech, should people be able to say
    anything they wish about the nature of politics and the political
    leaders? Otherwise, who decides what is acceptable? In a free society,
    politicians have always been fair game for satire and parody.

    Rightly or wrongly, Premier Williams is widely regarded as the
    hard-nosed Donald Trump of Newfoundland and Labrador. The perception
    is that the premier brooks no nonsense from his cabinet ministers,
    or the critical public. Rightly or wrongly, some people are afraid
    of being sued, if they speak their minds. The Premier's campaign ads
    have the Premier trying to dispel that conception.

    Remarks about the Holocaust aren't funny, but neither is stifling
    free speech.

    "If liberty means anything at all, it means the right to tell people
    what they do not want to hear."

    George Orwell

    http://www.ganderbeacon.ca/index.cfm?iid=2 798&sid=24735
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