Thursday, March 03, 2011

The Enablers of An Islamic Ascendancy in the West

As regular readers know, in January the Danish journalist and historian Lars Hedegaard was acquitted of “hate speech” in a Copenhagen courtroom. For those who are unfamiliar with the case, you can probably guess which great religion of peace Mr. Hedegaard was accused of insulting.

The Legal Project Blog recently interviewed Lars Hedegaard about his case and the suppression of free speech in Europe. Some excerpts are below:

Eternal Vigilance in the Defense of Free Speech: An Interview with Lars Hedegaard

Lars HedegaardIn January Lars Hedegaard, president and founder of the Danish and International Free Press Societies, was acquitted of charges brought under Article 266(b) of the Danish penal code, a “hate speech” provision. Just this past December, Danish MP, Jesper Langballe, rather than endure a circus of a trial “confessed,” pleading guilty to violating Article 266(b) for remarks he made in support of Hedegaard.

In the days leading up to his prosecution, the Legal Project had an opportunity to catch up with Mr. Hedegaard. The conversation covered a wide array of topics from free speech in Denmark, to “no-go” zones, to the use of words like “Islamophobia,” to what we must do to protect free speech. Highlights are presented below.

Denmark at the epicenter of the clash between Islamism and the West

From the never-ending Mohammed cartoon controversy to the recent trials of Langballe and Hedegaard, Denmark is one country that has been at that center of the clash between Islamism and the West with Danes at the vanguard in the defense of free speech. At least in part, according to Hedegaard, that has to do with “…a certain predilection among the Danes to defend freedom and not to kiss up to or trust authorities.” A more worrisome reason, however, is that Denmark is vulnerable in ways the Danes had not imagined. Hedegaard explains:

“I am often asked that question. Why is it taking place in Denmark? Our protection of free speech is very weak in the country as we can see now. The protection that we enjoy in our constitution is extremely weak. It only says that you don’t have to ask the permission of the authorities before you go out and print or say anything. However, you can be prosecuted afterward for what you say. That is becoming increasingly clear now. I think we all thought that there was something akin to a First Amendment protection but that now turns out not to be the case.” He went on to say, “I think it has come as a shock to Danes that we really do not in fact have free speech. There is no prior restraint, but then they’ll get you afterwards.”

Hedegaard raised concerns about an additional threat to free speech in Denmark and other states in the European Union: the adoption of the so-called “framework” decision on “racism and xenophobia” in November 2008 that went into effect this past year. The decision requires member-states to adopt criminal “hate speech” laws including genocide denial and “trivialization” provisions. The intellectual cancer of “hate speech” laws is spreading.

The over-breadth of Article 266(b) and its uneven application

A striking commonality of “hate speech” laws in Europe is their sweeping language. The relatively benign remarks of a typical American politician or pundit on the nightly news might violate the letter of these laws. This idea was the premise of a recent Legal Project blog, “I Confess, Too.” I asked Mr. Hedegaard why, given the broad language of Article 266(b), we had not seen more prosecutions in Denmark and whether or not the law was being selectively applied. “Yes, it is selective, but we are going to see many more of them,” he said. He went on to discuss recent events in the news suggesting that there may be new cases in the near future. “It is an orchestrated onslaught against free speech, and I think that the police and public prosecutor know very well what is expected of them. So we’re going to see an avalanche, an army of such cases. Of course, they hope that I will be convicted on the 24th of January, which will pave the way — because I am a high profile public figure. If they can get me, they’ll say well we can then go for the little folks,” Hedegaard added. His acquittal has thus turned the tides for now. However, Article 266(b) is not being evenly applied across viewpoints. “We have a situation where the law does not apply to all. There is no equality before the law. It is being selectively used to get at people you don’t like,” he said.

[…]

While Danes fight to protect freedom, so-called “no go zones” have emerged

Though the outlook for Denmark may appear grim, Hedegaard and others like him keep up a determined fight to preserve Western ideals and liberties. Even so, in some areas of Europe, so-called “no-go zones,” the battle (but hopefully not the war) has been lost. Mr. Hedegaard explains:

“Some areas have been lost. We have enclaves in the country where Sharia law now reigns supreme as we do in every other country in Europe. The police will not go into Birmingham [U.K.] any longer unless in extremis. You have about 700 localities in France where you have ‘no-go zones.’ Police will not go in. The writ of French law does not reign in these areas, and you see the same all over Europe. People are trying to sort of look away and brush it off as exaggerations and the ragings of ‘idiots’ such as me. But, however you deal with it, it is a reality that will pave its way through every country in Europe. And of course, in the U.S., in the long run, you have your own ghettos now.” (Read Islamist Watch’s article on what may be the early stirrings of such a region in Philadelphia.)

Moderate Islam and Moderate Muslims

In the fight to defend the West from Islamists and Islamism, there are some, including Middle East Forum Director, Daniel Pipes, who reject an essentialist view of Islam and suggest that the religion can change into a moderate formulation of Islam that is compatible with Western values. I asked Mr. Hedegaard to share his thoughts on the concept of a moderate Islam, on moderate Muslims, and the potential for reform in Islam. He remarked:

“I am well aware of Daniel Pipes’ position on moderate Islam as the solution to radical Islam, and I am all for that. I am just waiting to see it happen. They have had 1400 years to develop a moderate Islam, and it hasn’t taken over anywhere in the world as far as I am concerned. We know very little about the moderation of the average Muslim mostly because we don’t know what they think. Very few moderate Muslims ever speak up in the open debate. I think that many — perhaps even the majority of Muslims — would very much like to live in a peaceful way amongst the rest of us and would like to enjoy the freedoms and protections that our laws give them. However, they are the first victims of the men of violence who rule in Islam and have been ruling for 1400 years now.”

[…]

How to preserve our values against the threat of Islamism

In light of the threat posed by Islamists and Islamism not only to fundamental rights like freedom of expression but also to our Western civilization, Mr. Hedegaard and I discussed how to preserve our freedom: “The first step is to understand what Islam is, and people do not realize what we are up against. They do not realize what a pernicious ideology we are facing, even an ideology that does not really demand any sort of formal leadership,” he said. He went on to add that unlike totalitarian ideologies like Communism and Nazism that were largely defeated when the states advocating those ideologies fell, Islam, without a formal head, is different. “As long as people think they will go to hell unless they live up to the requirements of Islam, it will exist. That is a much more difficult struggle than any struggle against other totalitarian ideologies,” he said. Further, while Mr. Hedegaard and the International Free Press Society advocate the adoption of formal protections for free speech at the international level, ultimately, the responsibility for preserving our liberty rests with each of us. Hedegaard explains:

“We need an international ‘First Amendment’ protection. But laws are only as efficacious as the people who uphold them. So, it demands eternal vigilance on the part of citizens — the common man and woman. Otherwise, formal protection does not amount to beans. So faced with Islam, such as it is, we have really no option but eternal vigilance. This is a struggle that will take centuries. Islam can wait. It can lie low for centuries, and we cannot afford to do the same thing.”

A qualified win for freedom of speech

Ultimately, when Mr. Hedegaard had his day in court he was victorious. He was acquitted because the court found that his remarks, while supposedly offensive, were not intended for public dissemination. (Please click here for a translation of 266(b) to parse the language for yourself.) In a statement following his acquittal, Hedegaard remarked that his “detractors — the foes of free speech and the enablers of an Islamic ascendancy in the West” would assert that he was acquitted on a “technicality.” However, the author of this piece, a supporter, advocate of free speech, and no such enabler, would have to agree with them on that narrow point.

[…]

Read the rest at the Legal Project Blog.

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

No persuasion is ever accomplished by over-statement and absurd exaggeration:
"The police will not go into Birmingham [U.K.] any longer unless in extremis."

That statement is, frankly, ridiculous. He seems to think Birmingham is an inner-city district. Its a city half the size of London. The police presence there is the same as any other British city. That statement only inclines me...a sympathiser with his cause...to nonetheless wonder if Hedegard has a few screws loose. So how useful is it to attend to someone who makes such pronouncements? Very useful...to those who want to portray resistance to Islam as the province of fools and nut-jobs.

Hesperado said...

I have another statement of Hedegaard's to add to thunderpuss's, which gives me pause:

I think that many — perhaps even the majority of Muslims — would very much like to live in a peaceful way amongst the rest of us and would like to enjoy the freedoms and protections that our laws give them. However, they are the first victims of the men of violence who rule in Islam and have been ruling for 1400 years now.

If we're going to bandy about broad sweeping brushstrokes about 500 million or more Muslims farflung over the globe, we should err on the cautiously -- i.e., judiciously and prudently -- pessimistic. To do otherwise, as Hedegaard does, is to dutifully help carry and place the sandbags of PC MC that have been, and continue to be, undermining our self-defense in the face of the metastasizing danger of Muslims.

babs said...

Hesperado - 500 million? It is more like 1.5 Billion!

On another note, we are currently paddling in the wrong direction with the corrupt UN trying to pass world wide blasphemy laws directly aimed at supressing speech about Islam.

One might also consider that Mr. Hedegaard does not wish to find himself in the dock again and so tempers his speech quite a bit. Although, his comment about Birmingham I cannot speak to.