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Return to the Dark Ages
Censorship is on the rise.
by Jared
Taylor (extract)
Americans
think of Europeans as essentially like themselves. They believe
European societies are like their own-rooted in the rule of law,
freedom of religion, democratic government, market competition, and
an unfettered press. In recent years, however, Europeans have given
up an essential liberty: freedom of speech. It is true that in the
United States prevailing orthodoxies on some questions are
ruthlessly enforced but it is still legal to say just about
anything. Not so in much of Europe. In the last decade or so
countries we think of as fellow democracies-France, Germany,
Switzerland and others-have passed laws that limit free speech for
the same crude ideological reasons that drove the brief,
unsuccessful vogue of campus speech codes in the United States.
Today in Europe there are laws as bad as anything George Orwell
could have imagined. In some countries courts have ruled that the
facts are irrelevant, and that certain things must not be said
whether they are true or false. In others, a defendant in court who
tries to explain or defend a forbidden view will be charged on the
spot with a fresh offense. Even his lawyer can be fined or go to
jail for trying to mount a defense. In one case a judge ordered that
a bookseller's entire stock-innocent as well as offending titles-be
burned!
Just as Eastern Europe is emerging from it, Western Europe has
entered the thought-crime era, in a return to the mentality that
launched the Inquisition and the wars of religion. It is a tyranny
of the left practiced by the very people who profess shock at the
tactics of Joseph McCarthy, an exercise of raw power in the service
of pure ideology. The desire not merely to debate one's opponents
but to disgrace them, muzzle them, fine them, jail them is utterly
contrary to the spirit of civilized discourse. It is profoundly
disturbing to find this ugly sentiment codified into law in some of
the countries we think of as pillars of Western Civilization. At the
same time, these laws cannot help but draw attention to the very
ideas they forbid. Truth does not generally require the help of
censors.
There is one subjects about which Europeans can no longer speak
freely. The issue of “Race”. "Anti-racism" laws
generally take the form of forbidding the expression of opinions
that might stir up "hatred" against any racial or ethnic
group. In some countries, it is now risky to say that genetic
differences explain why blacks have, on average, lower IQs than
whites or to say that non-white immigration should be prevented so
as to preserve a white majority in Europe.
French celebrity-turned-thought
criminal is Brigitte Bardot, the former actress. In retirement she
has become an ardent animal-rights activist and has often denounced
the ritual slaughter of sheep by French Muslims during the festival
that marks the end of the Ramadan fast. She has also spoken in more
general terms, lamenting that "my country, France, my
homeland, my land is again invaded by an overpopulation of
foreigners, especially Muslims." she is impenitent and
has been fined at least three times-in 1997, 1998 and 2000-under the
1972 anti-racism law. A judge concluded that Miss Bardot was guilty
of inciting "discrimination, hatred or racial violence,"
and that her condemnation of Muslim practices went beyond any
possible concern for animal rights.
Nick Griffin, now head of the
British National Party, received a suspended sentence after in 1998.
He edited a magazine, which discussed and opposed non-white
immigration to Britain. In his case as well, there seems to have
been no clear line between acceptable and unacceptable opinions; his
magazine apparently created an overall atmosphere that was
"likely" to incite hatred.
Some British anti-racism measures approach outright insanity. a
recently-passed law forbidding "racially threatening or abusive
words" was recently invoked against a Cambridge man who got
into a whispered argument in a library. A woman overheard Robert
Birchall tell Kenyan-born Mugai Mbaya to "go back to your own
country," and reported him to police. Mr. Birchall was fined
100 pounds. In the city of Glouc-ester police officers are reported
to have been sent to eat in ethnic restaurants and listen in on the
conversations of other patrons so they can charge them with crimes
if they say rude things about other races.
What These Laws Mean
The full-blown, unabashed
censorship laws in Europe and Canada are a giant step backwards in
the history of Western Civilization. It was perhaps one of the most
significant conceptual breakthroughs in human thought to recognize
that the social cost of suppressing "error" is far greater
than the damage unchecked "error" can do when men are free
to refute it. It is cause for great sadness that our European
brethren have stepped back into the mentality of the witch hunt,
forcing their citizens into exile and making them prisoners of
conscience.
Indeed, it is in the defense of prisoners of conscience that Amnesty
International (AI) made a name for itself, and cases like those
described here would appear to be tailor-made for them. According to
their own publications, prisoners of conscience are "people who
are imprisoned, detained or otherwise physically restricted anywhere
because of their beliefs, colour, sex, ethnic origin, language or
religion, provided they have not used or advocated violence."
Every person mentioned in this article and thousands more have been
charged with crimes because of the non-violent expression of
beliefs. AI goes on to say that "all people have the right to
express their convictions and the obligation to extend that freedom
to others" and that "Amnesty International seeks the
immediate and unconditional release of all prisoners of
conscience."
It is probably true that some of the people charged under incitement
laws really do want to stir up hatred-something that however
reprehensible is legal in the United States and should be legal
everywhere-but there is no evidence whatever that this is the motive
of people. It is the people who oppose their work who appear to be
driven by hatred.
It would be more plausible to say that anyone who harps on slavery,
Jim Crow, and segregation is inciting hatred against whites, or that
anyone who describes the way Indians mutilated the bodies of
Custer's men at Little Big Horn is stirring up hatred against
Indians. If you scoff at the miracles in the Bible are you inciting
hatred against Christians? If not, why not? After all, neither the
truth of the statements nor the intent of the speaker matters. Laws
of this kind cry out for abuse and invidious application.
Obviously of concern is the possibility that any description of race
or sex differences could be considered incitement to hatred. What if
the French and the Germans decide discussions of race and IQ are
hate-mongering?
Laws about inciting hatred are really very simple: If you hurt the
feelings of certain people you can be charged with a crime. So far,
the people about whose feelings one must be most careful are Muslim
/ Black. Pressure from Muslim / Black organizations has turned what
may have been intended as universal prohibitions into prohibition of
opinions that upset Muslim / Black
Laws of the French, German, and Austrian type that specifically
prohibit Holocaust denial likewise reflect the pressure of Jewish
organizations. There is only one historical event in all of human
history-an event of particular interest to Jews-about which the law
forbids dissent. Legally requiring acceptance of a historical event
is an absurdity on its face, but why just this one? In January 2000,
the French National Assembly voted officially to recognize the
Turkish "genocide" of Armenians during the First World
War. There are many people who strongly dispute the number and
circumstances of these deaths; Turkey angrily withdrew its
ambassador after the vote. No doubt there will be vigorous
"genocide denial," "whitewashing of crimes against
humanity," and "insulting the memory of the dead."
Why will this not be a crime in France? One can only conclude that
it is because Armenians have less influence than Jews.
But the real shame is how few people, either in Europe or the United
States, are willing to oppose this clampdown on freedom. The left
loves to quote lines attributed to Martin Niemoller (1892-1984), the
German Lutheran minister interned by the Nazis:
"First they came for the Communists, and I didn't speak up,
because I wasn't a Communist. Then they came for the Jews, and I
didn't speak up, because I wasn't a Jew. Then they came for the
Catholics, and I didn't speak up, because I was a Protestant. Then
they came for me, and by that time there was no one left to speak up
for me."
The message, of course, is that we must be vigilant against wrongs
done even to people with whom we may disagree, because if we do not
resist evil we may some day be its victims. European censorship laws
are precisely the kind of creeping evil Niemoller warned against,
but the left ignores them because it has no principles and the right
ignores them because it has no spine. Censorship is therefore on the
march in Europe and licking at our own borders. We have entered a
new Dark Age.
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