Archive for the ‘free speech’ Category

Netherlands confronts cartoon threat

Thursday, July 24th, 2008

Reporting on the arrest of the cartoonist Gregorius Nekschot in the Netherlands, the Wall Street Journal reveals that the Dutch Government certainly has its priorities right in the fight for free speech and liberty against obscurantism and religiously-inspired totalitarianism. Officials from the intelligence service, the interior ministry, the prosecutor’s office and other high-powered state bodies, under the leadership of a senior counter-terrorism officer, to create the top-secret …

Interdepartmental Working Group on Cartoons.

The title hardly sounds ominous, but the existence of this body is deeply troubling to anyone concerned about free speech (not to mention the priorities of government). The group is intended to alert Dutch officials to any cartoon-related dangers the Netherlands may face (unfunny Garfield strips? No, I don’t think that’s what they mean) and has no censorship role, we are assured. But then, no imposition of censorship is needed when an entire culture is bending over backwards to censor itself.

More at Greenspiece and Gates of Vienna.

greycat.org

The Oxford Union freak show, continued

Tuesday, November 27th, 2007

The Oxford Union’s folly continues to bring out the best in everyone, with the unholy Griffin/Irving double-act delayed by protests and a sit-in. The juvenile antics of the Union itself have been paralleled by the immature posturing of the protestors outside, whose definition of free speech means shutting up anyone you don’t agree with. Thus:

Martin Mcluskey, from the Oxford University Students’ Union, said: ‘What we are doing here tonight at the Oxford Union is putting them on a platform that will give them legitimacy and credibility. It is as if we are saying that we agree with what they are saying and that we think it is valid.’

News for you, Martin: freedom of speech means listening to people you don’t necessarily agree with and ideas you don’t necessarily think are valid. And anyone who believes an appearance at the Oxford Union carries an implication of ‘legitimacy and credibility’ is seriously out of touch with reality (even for Oxford).

greycat.org

The Oxford Union freak show

Monday, November 26th, 2007

When I was a student at the University of Oxford in the 1990s I did not join the Oxford Union Society. It seemed to me self-important, self-indulgent, smug, juvenile, stupid, and irrelevant. How right I was. Just after I left Oxford the Union got itself into a mess over an invitation to National Front and later British National Party leader and would-be British führer John Tyndall; ‘free speech’ was the justification. The Tyndall debate was only cancelled after a series of nazi nail-bombings in London in 1999, killing three people and injuring over 100, reminded everyone just how far the extreme right’s commitment to free speech actually extends.

Well, they are doing it again: two prize peddlers of lies and hate, pseudo-historian David Irving and pseudo-politician Nick Griffin, have been invited by the Union to take part in a debate about - guess what - free speech. Both these individuals have a right to state their views (within the law) and the Union has the right to invite whoever it wishes to take part in its activities, but let’s not pretend the invitation has anything to do with great issues of free speech. It’s just another example of Oxford Union immaturity, equivalent to a toddler throwing his breakfast on the floor out of fear of being ignored. The Oxford Union should be ignored. It is a pointless, self-indulgent attention-seeking freak show.

Sadly, it isn’t ignored, however; here I am writing a blog post about it, for instance. Lots of people are fooled by the presence of the name ‘Oxford’ into thinking that it must be something important, like the boat race or that fancy marmalade that isn’t made there any more. People who should know better think it’s in some way an official part of Oxford University (example here). Others have some vague idea that there must be something fine, admirable and even inherently democratic about the place. Alas, no: healthier and better-informed debate, with a much wider and nicer range of people taking part in it, can be found any night of the week in my local pub.

There’s little chance that the Oxford Union will stop playing its silly games, but I live in hope that the world will at least stop paying any attention to them.

greycat.org