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  • "In the name of equality and fraternity, liberty has been curtailed

    Overlawyered
    Jan 10 2015

    "In the name of equality and fraternity, liberty has been curtailed in France."

    by Walter Olson on January 10, 2015


    Jonathan Turley in the Washington Post explores at more length a point
    I made briefly in my TIME opinion piece: to honor the slain
    cartoonists of Charlie-Hebdo, we should be lifting legal constraints
    on what their successors tomorrow can draw and write and say, rather
    than, as France and other countries have been doing in recent years,
    bringing it under tighter legal constraint in the name of equality and
    the prevention of offense:

    Indeed, if the French want to memorialize those killed at Charlie
    Hebdo, they could start by rescinding their laws criminalizing speech
    that insults, defames or incites hatred, discrimination or violence on
    the basis of religion, race, ethnicity, nationality, disability, sex
    or sexual orientation. These laws have been used to harass the
    satirical newspaper and threaten its staff for years.

    The numerous court actions brought against Charlie Hebdo by religious
    groups (as of 2011, organizations connected with the Catholic church
    had taken the magazine to court 13 times, Muslim groups once) are only
    the beginning:

    [Other] cases have been wide-ranging and bizarre. In 2008, for
    example, Brigitte Bardot was convicted for writing a letter to
    then-Interior Minister Nicolas Sarkozy about how she thought Muslims
    and homosexuals were ruining France. In 2011, fashion designer John
    Galliano was found guilty of making anti-Semitic comments against at
    least three people in a Paris cafe. In 2012, the government
    criminalized denial of the Armenian genocide (a law later overturned
    by the courts, but Holocaust denial remains a crime). ...Last year,
    Interior Minister Manuel Valls moved to ban performances by comedian
    Dieudonné M'Bala M'Bala, declaring that he was "no longer a comedian"
    but was rather an "anti-Semite and racist." It is easy to silence
    speakers who spew hate or obnoxious words, but censorship rarely ends
    with those on the margins of our society....

    Recently, speech regulation in France has expanded into non-hate
    speech, with courts routinely intervening in matters of opinion. For
    example, last year, a French court fined blogger Caroline Doudet and
    ordered her to change a headline to reduce its prominence on Google --
    for her negative review of a restaurant.

    Related: Jacob Gershman, WSJ Law Blog, on efforts to repeal Canada's
    not-entirely-in-disuse blasphemy law; earlier here and here. And from
    Ireland, an urgent reason to repeal its own law of this sort: Muslim
    leader vows to "take legal advice if Irish publications ...republish or
    tweet cartoons." [Irish Times, Irish Examiner, Independent]

    P.S. Graham Smith on Twitter: "What if every State represented in
    Paris today promised to repeal one law that restricts free speech?"

    http://overlawyered.com/2015/01/name-equality-fraternity-liberty-curtailed-france/

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