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Civility vs. free speech: A democratic quandary

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  • Civility vs. free speech: A democratic quandary

    The International Herald Tribune
    May 5, 2006 Friday

    Civility vs. free speech: A democratic quandary;
    Europa

    by Richard Bernstein

    Some years ago there were a number of unsuccessful efforts at
    American universities to enact hate-speech codes that would have
    punished students and faculty for expressing opinions or hurling
    epithets that would have insulted others because of their race, sex,
    sexual orientation or handicap.

    Most of these efforts failed, in part because they presented too
    sharp a contradiction with the right of free speech. And indeed,
    despite the United States' sad history of slavery and racism, the
    American value of free speech, even deeply offensive free speech, has
    generally taken priority over the value of protecting the feelings of
    minorities.

    There have been a few reminders lately that this is not the case in
    Europe, with its even sadder history of genocide I say sadder
    because, however bad American racism has been, it never involved a
    systematic effort actually to wipe out a people. David Irving, the
    renegade British historian, has actually been sentenced to a term in
    prison in Austria for the crime of Holocaust denial.

    There is no doubt that Irving denied the Holocaust for years.
    Moreover, the law is the law and to fail to enforce it on the
    possible grounds that, however objectionable Irving's views may have
    been, it seems excessive to toss somebody in prison for them would
    sap the law in general of its dignity.

    But there have been other signs recently in some European countries
    that the effort to protect people from insult has taken priority over
    the value of free expression of uncivil views, and these instances
    make one wonder whether Europe has made the right choice.

    There is, for example, the case in Poland of Kaziemira Szczuka, a
    well-known television personality, who, a few weeks ago, mimicked the
    high-pitched voice of a severely disabled 18-year-old who frequently
    reads prayers on a far-right Roman Catholic radio station, Radio
    Maryja. The station that aired Szczuka's little satire was fined the
    equivalent of ¤125,000, or $157,000, by Poland's National
    Broadcasting Council, which found the satire an unacceptable insult
    to a disabled person and to religious belief, even though Szczuka
    said she didn't know the young prayer reader was disabled.

    One could certainly argue that civil behavior does not allow ridicule
    of anybody's religious belief viz: that small Danish newspaper and
    its satirical cartoons on the Prophet Muhammad. But mockery, even if
    it is in bad taste, cannot be made a criminal offense in a democratic
    society.

    This is especially true if the mockery is of Radio Maryja, which is
    estimated to have four million to six million listeners a day and
    does not hesitate to take part in Poland's political battle,
    entreating its listeners to vote for President Lech Kaczynski's Law
    and Justice party and against Donald Tusk's Civic Platform in
    elections last autumn.

    The radio's emphasis on piety, exemplified in the broadcast prayers
    of the young handicapped woman, provide a kind of support for its
    political urgings.

    There are other problems with the Szczuka case. A few weeks after her
    television station was punished because of her remarks, the Polish
    authorities conspicuously did not punish Radio Maryja itself after
    one of its regular guests made some remarks that Poland's
    professional journalists' association and many others found to be
    blatantly anti-Semitic. This unevenness of enforcement suggests that
    hate-speech codes can be politically interpreted and politically
    enforced.

    Several European countries, committed to a sort of absolute civility,
    enforce laws against hate speech almost routinely. In March, the
    German government banned a group of Turkish nationalists who wanted
    to march in support of their tasteless and erroneous idea that the
    genocidal massacres of Armenians in Turkey during World War I never
    took place.

    And there is an ongoing trial in Mannheim of Ernst Zundel, an
    Internet purveyor of primitive anti-Semitism and of the notion that
    the Holocaust is a Jewish myth created to exact tribute from a
    gullibly guilty world. Zundel, who committed his acts of Holocaust
    denial while living in Canada and the United States, is a challenge
    to free-speech absolutists. Look up ''Zundelsite'' on the Internet
    and you will see what I mean.

    You will also find on the Web that Zundel is viewed as a sort of cult
    hero by an undeterminable number of people who have come to support
    his 25-year career of Holocaust denial and who see him, now that he
    is on trial for his views, as a martyr to a suppressed truth.

    The trial itself has been a circus, well described in the German
    press. At one point, Zundel's lawyer was barred from the court after
    making what the journalistic observers saw as neo-Nazi speeches, even
    finishing up one peroration with the phrase, ''Heil Hitler!'' She
    played successfully to a courtroom audience made up of 80 to 100
    Zundel supporters who have raised their arms in what appeared to be
    the Nazi salute.

    The trial itself, in other words, has at least to some extent become
    a platform for the propagation of the very ideas whose expression
    brought about the trial in the first place. Equally perverse, in
    prosecuting Zundel, the state has helped to create a thrilling sense
    of illicit community and radical solidarity among those interested in
    rebellion against the established moral order.

    In Germany, of course, it is not difficult to understand the yearning
    to enforce the rules of civility. The victims of the Holocaust are
    certainly morally entitled to protection from the vicious calumnies
    of people like Zundel.

    The question is: Should they also be legally entitled to that
    protection? Perhaps, sadly and although this flies in the face of a
    near European consensus they shouldn't be.

    During the uproar over the Prophet Muhammad cartoons, Muslims
    attacked the Holocaust denial laws in several European countries as
    rank hypocrisy because those same countries permitted insults to
    Muslims, and, as the American legal scholar Ronald Dworkin observed
    recently in The New York Review of Books, they had a point. But,
    Dworkin continued, the response should not be to broaden the coverage
    of the laws against insult to religion but to strike them down.

    Free speech, he argues, is an indispensable requirement of a
    democratic society, not something that can be bargained away to
    mollify this or that offended group.

    And so, as an American in Europe and a Jew mightily offended by
    Holocaust denial, I nonetheless come down on the side of free speech
    rather than on the prohibition of offensive speech. One of the
    cultural differences between America and Europe in this regard is
    that in America this issue is debated. In Europe it is not.

    --Boundary_(ID_WaltCu64u4F1SZUgkZmOtg)--
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