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The Answer to The Problems of Free Speech is Always More Free Speech
Despite These Riots, I Stand By What I Wrote
Last week, I wrote an article defending free speech for everyone - and in response there have been riots, death threats, and the arrest of an editor who published the article.
Here's how it happened. My column reported on a startling development at the United Nations. The UN Special Rapporteur on Human Rights has always had the job of investigating governments who forcibly take the fundamental human right to free speech from their citizens with violence. But in the past year, a coalition of religious fundamentalist states has successfully fought to change her job description. Now, she has to report on "abuses of free expression" including "defamation of religions and prophets." Instead of defending free speech, she must now oppose it.
I argued this was a symbol of how religious fundamentalists - of all stripes - have been progressively stripping away the right to freely discuss their faiths. They claim religious ideas are unique and cannot be discussed freely; instead, they must be "respected" - by which they mean unchallenged. So now, whenever anyone on the UN Human Rights Council tries to discuss the stoning of "adulterous" women, the hanging of gay people, or the marrying off of ten year old girls to grandfathers, they are silenced by the chair on the grounds these are "religious" issues, and it is "offensive" to talk about them.
This trend is not confined to the UN. It has spread deep into democratic countries. Whenever I have reported on immoral acts by religious fanatics - Catholic, Jewish, Hindu or Muslim - I am accused of "prejudice", and I am not alone. But my only "prejudice" is in favour of individuals being able to choose to live their lives, their way, without intimidation. That means choosing religion, or rejecting it, as they wish, after hearing an honest, open argument.
A religious idea is just an idea somebody had a long time ago, and claimed to have received from God. It does not have a different status to other ideas; it is not surrounded by an electric fence none of us can pass.
That's why I wrote: "All people deserve respect, but not all ideas do. I don't respect the idea that a man was born of a virgin, walked on water and rose from the dead. I don't respect the idea that we should follow a "Prophet" who at the age of 53 had sex with a nine-year old girl, and ordered the murder of whole villages of Jews because they wouldn't follow him. I don't respect the idea that the West Bank was handed to Jews by God and the Palestinians should be bombed or bullied into surrendering it. I don't respect the idea that we may have lived before as goats, and could live again as woodlice. When you demand "respect", you are demanding we lie to you. I have too much real respect for you as a human being to engage in that charade."
An Indian newspaper called The Statesman - one of the oldest and most venerable dailies in the country - thought this accorded with the rich Indian tradition of secularism, and reprinted the article. That night, four thousand Islamic fundamentalists began to riot outside their offices, calling for me, the editor, and the publisher to be arrested - or worse. They brought Central Calcutta to a standstill. A typical supporter of the riots, Abdus Subhan, said he was "prepared to lay down his life, if necessary, to protect the honour of the Prophet" and I should be sent "to hell if he chooses not to respect any religion or religious symbol? He has no liberty to vilify or blaspheme any religion or its icons on grounds of freedom of speech."
Then, two days ago, the editor and publisher were indeed arrested. They have been charged - in the world's largest democracy, with a constitution supposedly guaranteeing a right to free speech - with "deliberately acting with malicious intent to outrage religious feelings". I am told I too will be arrested if I go to Calcutta.
What should an honest defender of free speech say in this position? Every word I wrote was true. I believe the right to openly discuss religion, and follow the facts wherever they lead us, is one of the most precious on earth - especially in a democracy of a billion people riven with streaks of fanaticism from a minority of Muslims, Hindus and Sikhs. So I cannot and will not apologize.
I did not write a sectarian attack on any particular religion of the kind that could lead to a rerun of India's hellish anti-Muslim or anti-Sikh pogroms, but rather a principled critique of all religions who try to forcibly silence their critics. The right to free speech I am defending protects Muslims as much as everyone else. I passionately support their right to say anything they want - as long as I too have the right to respond.
It's worth going through the arguments put forward by the rioting fundamentalists, because they will keep recurring in the twenty-first century as secularism is assaulted again and again. They said I had upset "the harmony" of India, and it could only be restored by my arrest. But this is a lop-sided vision of "harmony". It would mean that religious fundamentalists are free to say whatever they want - and the rest of us have to shut up and agree.
The protestors said I deliberately set out to "offend" them, and I am supposed to say that, no, no offence was intended. But the honest truth is more complicated. Offending fundamentalists isn't my goal - but if it is an inevitable side-effect of defending human rights, so be it. If fanatics who believe Muslim women should be imprisoned in their homes and gay people should be killed are insulted by my arguments, I don't resile from it. Nothing worth saying is inoffensive to everyone.
You do not have a right to be ring-fenced from offence. Every day, I am offended - not least by ancient religious texts filled with hate-speech. But I am glad, because I know that the price of taking offence is that I can give it too, if that is where the facts lead me. But again, the protestors propose a lop-sided world. They do not propose to stop voicing their own heinously offensive views about women's rights or homosexuality, but we have to shut up and take it - or we are the ones being "insulting".
It's also worth going through the arguments of the Western defenders of these protestors, because they too aren't going away. Already I have had e-mails and bloggers saying I was "asking for it" by writing a "needlessly provocative" article. When there is a disagreement and one side uses violence, it is a reassuring rhetorical stance to claim both sides are in the wrong, and you take a happy position somewhere in the middle. But is this true? I wrote an article defending human rights, and stating simple facts. Fanatics want to arrest or kill me for it. Is there equivalence here?
The argument that I was "asking for it" seems a little like saying a woman wearing a short skirt is "asking" to be raped. Or, as Salman Rushdie wrote when he received far, far worse threats simply for writing a novel (and a masterpiece at that): "When Osip Mandelstam wrote his poem against Stalin, did he ‘know what he was doing' and so deserve his death? When the students filled Tiananmen Square to ask for freedom, were they not also, and knowingly, asking for the murderous repression that resulted? When Terry Waite was taken hostage, hadn't he been ‘asking for it'?" When fanatics threaten violence against people who simply use words, you should not blame the victim.
These events are also a reminder of why it is so important to try to let the oxygen of rationality into religious debates - and introduce doubt. Voltaire - one of the great anti-clericalists - said: "Those who can make you believe absurdities can make you commit atrocities." If you can be made to believe the absurd notion that an invisible deity dictated The Eternal Unchanging Truth to a specific person at a specific time in history and anyone who questions this is Evil, then you can easily be made to demand the death of journalists and free women and homosexuals who question that Truth. But if they have a moment of doubt - if there is a single nagging question at the back of their minds - then they are more likely to hesitate. That's why these ideas must be challenged at their core, using words and reason.
But the fundamentalists are determined not to allow those rational ideas to be heard - because at some level they know they will persuade for many people, especially children and teenagers in the slow process of being indoctrinated.
If, after all the discussion and all the facts about how contradictory and periodically vile their ‘holy' texts are, religious people still choose fanatical faith, I passionately defend their right to articulate it. Free speech is for the stupid and the wicked and the wrong - whether it is fanatics or the racist Geert Wilders - just as much as for the rational and the right. All I say is that they do not have the right to force it on other people or silence the other side. In this respect, Wilders resembles the Islamists he professes to despise: he wants to ban the Koran. Fine. Let him make his argument. He discredits himself by speaking such ugly nonsense.
The solution to the problems of free speech - that sometimes people will say terrible things - is always and irreducibly more free speech. If you don't like what a person says, argue back. Make a better case. Persuade people. The best way to discredit a bad argument is to let people hear it. I recently interviewed the pseudo-historian David Irving, and simply quoting his crazy arguments did far more harm to him than any Austrian jail sentence for Holocaust Denial.
Please do not imagine that if you defend these rioters, you are defending ordinary Muslims. If we allow fanatics to silence all questioning voices, the primary victims today will be Muslim women, Muslim gay people, and the many good and honourable Muslim men who support them. Imagine what Britain would look like now if everybody who offered dissenting thoughts about Christianity in the seventeenth century and since was intimidated into silence by the mobs and tyrants who wanted to preserve the most literalist and fanatical readings of the Bible. Imagine how women and gay people would live.
You can see this if you compare my experience to that of journalists living under religious-Islamist regimes. Because generations of British people sought to create a secular space, when I went to the police, they offered total protection. When they go to the police, they are handed over to the fanatics - or charged for their "crimes." They are people like Sayed Pervez Kambaksh, the young Afghan journalism student who was sentenced to death for downloading a report on women's rights. They are people like the staff of Zanan, one of Iran's leading reform-minded women's magazines, who have been told they will be jailed if they carry on publishing. They are people like the 27-year old Muslim blogger Abdel Rahman who has been seized, jailed and tortured in Egypt for arguing for a reformed Islam that does not enforce shariah law.
It would be a betrayal of them - and the tens of thousands of journalists like them - to apologize for what I wrote. Yes, if we speak out now, there will be turbulence and threats, and some people may get hurt. But if we fall silent - if we leave the basic human values of free speech, feminism and gay rights undefended in the face of violent religious mobs - then many, many more people will be hurt in the long term. Today, we have to use our right to criticise religion - or lose it.
And finally, If you are appalled by the erosion of secularism across the world and want to do something about it, there are a number of organizations you can join, volunteer for or donate to.
Some good places to start are the National Secular Society, the Richard Dawkins Foundation for Science and Reason, or - if you want the money to go specifically to work in India - the International Humanist and Ethical Union. (Mark your donation as for their India branch.)
Even donating a few hours or a few pounds can really make a difference to defending people subject to religious oppression - by providing them with legal help, education materials, and lobbying for changes in the law.
An essential source of news for secularists is the terrific website Butterflies and Wheels.
- Posted in


30 Comments so far
Show AllA very nice article and timely as some here wish to stifle free speech.
"The solution to the problems of free speech - that sometimes people will say terrible things - is always and irreducibly more free speech. If you don't like what a person says, argue back. Make a better case. Persuade people. The best way to discredit a bad argument is to let people hear it. I recently interviewed the pseudo-historian David Irving, and simply quoting his crazy arguments did far more harm to him than any Austrian jail sentence for Holocaust Denial"
This is simply the truth. And something we should remember and venerate. Free speech doesn't include shouting "fire", but pretty much everything else.
At least, the UK hasn't had the restrictions known as "Free Speech Zones".
Hopely, with the end of Bush's reign of misrule, it's now in the ash heap of history-as it should be. In school, way back in the 1950s & 60s, the entire USA was a free speech zone.
"At least, the UK hasn't had the restrictions known as "Free Speech Zones"."
The Serious Organised Crime and Police Act 2005 states anyone wanting to demonstrate in a 1km zone around Parliament Square must have permission from the police when the demonstration starts.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/london/4983780.stm
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk_politics/4527274.stm
Looks like a 'no free speech zone' to me
Excellent article.
it might help the cause of free speech if the us/uk weren't allies and supporters of many of the most oppressive regimes. these tensions like in india don't just occur in a political vacuum. parties like the hindu-chauvinist bjp have done lots of things to stir up tensions b/n religious communities in india.
and how's that 'free speech' thing working out in the u.s.? it's a different scenario in britain, but political discourse in the u.s. is so proscribed it's ridiculous. if a politician said, e.g., christianity is for suckers or israel's invasion of gaza was criminal, adios to that politician.
Jim Shea
This is a terrific article by Mr. Hari. He is to be congratulated. I never have understood why one can attack almost any idea or philosophy EXCEPT those of religion. In fact, they are usually the most ridiculous ideas of all.
That's why they are off limits. If you were married to such obsurd philosophical ideas you would want them to go unchallenged also, otherwise you might have to think about them.
nothing so raises tyrannical ire
my right to shout theatre at a crowded fire
That was great!
You should have credited Abbie Hoffman.
Ah-Ha!
Try placing a darwin-fish in your work cubicle. Watch what happens. I have been told that we "check our constitutional rights at the door" and even many of my liberal-thinking friends agree based on supreme court rulings. Of course, that forum has never been wrong before...
The darwin-fish will bring the censorers out of the wood-work, and many of them will have religious symbols posted in their cubes. Go ahead, try to make the argument that they should have to take theirs down too. Go ahead, see what that does to your career.
Not at my job, we're all progressives/liberals here :-)
Are not the rules at the work place the perogative of the employer aside from government mandates?
Hmmm, so they could make me put a cross in my cube? Can they violate my civil rights? Apparently they can. At least some of them. I have no right to free speech while I am there. What about protection from harrassment? Sexual harrassment? They can't descriminate. What do we give up in order to be employed?
I'm sure that we must be reasonable. But only on my side of the religion spectrum it seems. On the other side no such reasonableness is necessary apparently.
"Hmmm, so they could make me put a cross in my cube?"
Of course not, but they do have everry right to tell you not to bring religious symbols to work.
You have every right to free speech as long as it doesn't offen someone else or transgress the bounds of decency. All within reason of course.
"What about protection from harrassment? Sexual harrassment?"
Of course sexual harrassment, but the other....who defines what it is? If I ask you to work overtime and you refuse then I refuse your request to work overtime next time its available and give it to the person that did it last time....is that harrassment? That actually happened.
"What do we give up in order to be employed?"
Absolutely nothing in our country. You are free to come and go, choose any job you please in any industry you please or start your own business if you so choose.
“The solution to the problems of free speech - that sometimes people will say terrible things - is always and irreducibly more free speech. If you don't like what a person says, argue back. Make a better case. ...”
Or you could choose to change the channel. If someone's idiotic notions of a sky-daddy ruling the world offend, don't give them power! I often wonder how much further we might have progressed if the Roman Empire had chosen to ignore the early christians instead of oppressing them and trying to suppress their faith. How much less murder, mayhem and general misery could have been avoided by allowing a few kooks to believe that a guy survived his own death?
"I often wonder how much further we might have progressed if the Roman Empire had chosen to ignore the early christians instead of oppressing them and trying to suppress their faith."
Interesting thought.
I do think "kook" is a bit harsh for us poor old Christians though. (lol)
It was only after Constantine hijacked a pacifist creed that it became murderous.
Sioux Rose
The importance of this article seems lost on some of my fellow posters. This is not a situation which can be improved by the glib, "change the channel," as the issue here is the resurgence of belief systems on the part of several major religions that have as their goal a complete suppression of human liberties. I guess to some
it may sound like no big deal since "it's only" gays and women, but we're talking about criticism of beliefs that take hold of governments that then demand a virtual quarantine on discussion while erasing civil liberties for entire societies.
In many ways the major patriarchal religions and their authoritarian rules (and creeds) are anathema to the very PREMISE of a democratic society. Either people have basic freedoms, or religion acts as intermediary and recalls all those; and then hubristically declares that NO explanation is required, that it is extending by Divine right, "the deity's" rules. As I've often related, this "deity" is a Mars clone, intent upon creating war, frequently devoid of love, and suspiciously misogynistic. And all those bad boy big bang weapons, each a phallic simulation. Yeah, I have a problem with patriarchal religions telling citizens what to do, and what to think, and how to behave. And EVERYONE HERE should too.
There are 50 million or so that believe America is supposed to be, is Divinely decreed to be, a Christian theocracy. And what people have historically proven capable of doing when they think (as Bob Dylan put it) "God is on their side," is unspeakable and anything BUT Godly. That is for those of us who see the great Creator spirit as a being of Light, Love and inspiring those qualities in its offspring, as opposed to destroying it all while clammoring it's being done for God.
The ignorance displayed here is just breathtaking, even in the so called progressive and humanist circles.
First, just because someone has a right to say something doesn't make it valid. So to pick the claims that "I don't respect the idea that we should follow a "Prophet" who at the age of 53 had sex with a nine-year old girl, and ordered the murder of whole villages of Jews because they wouldn't follow him." Both of these claims are prima facie false. Dont' take my words for it, read it in one of the very progressive scholars on religion, Karen Armstrong. The nine year old girl in question was only wedded to the prophet, but didn't have any sexual relations until after she reached puberty. As for killing jews just because they failed to follow him is also false on it's face. Jews continued to live in Madina at the time of the prophet's death, long after the aforementioned incidents which had nothing to do with their refusal to 'follow him' and had everything to do with trying to destroy his community, repeatedly (and neither were whole villages destroyed, just the men of the tribes who took part in the fighting, and even then those men were given a final chance to repent).
With that out of the way, a question; why do we have laws against defamation? And why would anyone be so offended if the above said claims were true? Obviously people are offended at what they percieve to be defemation against a holy figure. Not something they think is true.
I am not, and would never condone silencing of critics to anything, especially religion since religion demands so much it much be held to an equal scrutiny. But there is a difference between criticism, defemation, and outright bigotry. Yes people should have a right to free speech, even the contemptable holocaust deniers such as Irving, but we also know their place in a civilized society, to be held beneath contempt. Free to say whatever, but also much despised. But not so when it comes to Islam and Muslims. There is an open season on their nations, their resources, their lives, their identitiy and even what they cherish the most and hold to be most sacred.
There are many different dimensions to this whole discussion which get completely ignored due to our own ideological blinders, which I'd be happy to discuss if anyone is so interested.
"But not so when it comes to Islam and Muslims. There is an open season on their nations, their resources, their lives, their identitiy and even what they cherish the most and hold to be most sacred."
I've heard this one before, and I believe you are implying that Islam should be given kid gloves in debate, even in non-muslim majority societies like India and Europe, out of some misplaced sympathy. I must respectfully disagree. Religion is not an ethnicity or a race. Its a belief system. That certain nationalities face stressing periods does not make their incidental religion itself sacred.
The vast majority of the world's Muslims will never meet a non-Muslim in all of their lives.
You ignored the thrust of the article.
It is ridiculous that people resort to violence over words!
First of all anyone who disagrees with her opinions, and that is all they are, is entitled to voice their counter opinion but they are not permitted to ask for their head on a plate. It is in a word UNCIVILIZED.
I am not making a blanket label for all Arabs but i am calling those people, and this includes plenty of Christians and Hindus as well, uncivilized for they still resort to violence during an intellectual debate.
if speech is free how come bush & bliar are getting paid for theirs?
Well Bush is a member of the most exclusive private club in the world and all members get paid handsomely to talk about absolutely nothing. While you may not agree with anything Blair says he is still in fact a very eloquent speaker.
Killing religion won't save the world. Killing capitalism and the military/industrial complex will. Those are the things that create religious extremism.
I may not want to live in a theocracy, but a technocracy devoid of spirituality scares me just as much.
Religions that favor a world-conquering agenda are fundamentally different in outlook from those that don't.
Great article. Disturbing trend. There seems to be little room for debate in all forums of society today, from politics to religion. My way or the highway as it were. Religion seems to breed an ignorance caused by a narrow view of the world that doesn't accept criticism and is one of the evils of the world:
http://theendisalwaysnear.blogspot.com/2009/02/see-no-evil.html
It is our duty to stand up to those who would take away our right to say what we want.
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Israel isn't in the West Bank in response to a biblical injunction. Israel is in the West Bank in response to a protracted war.