Return
of the Censors
by
Patrick
J. Buchanan
by
Patrick J. Buchanan
DIGG THIS
Freedom
of the press is on trial in Canada.
The trial
is before a court with the Orwellian title of the British Columbia
Human Rights Tribunal. The accused are Maclean's magazine and author
Mark Steyn. The crime: In mocking and biting tones, they wrote that
Islam threatens Western values.
Had Steyn
written that, given the Crusades, colonial atrocities in Africa
and the slave trade, Christianity had been on balance a curse, he
would not be in the dock. In the United States, these charges would
have been tossed out by any federal judge, who would have admonished
the plaintiffs that, here in America, we have a First Amendment.
The United
States, however, is an isolated exception, as Western nations seek
to impose wider restrictions on what has come to be called "hate
speech."
Questioning
the Holocaust is a crime in Canada and Europe, as British historian
David Irving discovered when he was sentenced to prison in Austria.
To say the Armenian massacres of 19151924 were an attempt
at genocide is a crime in Turkey.
In France,
animal rights champion Brigitte Bardot has been fined $23,000 for
provoking discrimination and racial hatred by denouncing Muslims
who slaughtered a sheep in a religious ceremony. Bardot had been
punished five previous times for her statements.
Censorship
is making a comeback. Outside the United States, it is considered
an acceptable price to pay for the new diversity Western Man seems
now to value more than the old liberty.
In 1990,
writes Adam Liptak of the New York Times, Chief Justice of
the Canadian Supreme Court Brian Dickson wrote, in upholding the
conviction of one James Keegstra for anti-Semitic slurs:
"(T)he
international commitment to eradicate hate propaganda and, most
importantly, the special role given equality and multiculturalism
in the Canadian Constitution necessitate a departure from the view
... that the suppression of hate propaganda is incompatible with
the guarantee of free expression."
There you
have it. Canada's commitment to multiculturalism and the equality
of all religions, races and cultures requires the silencing of those
who do not believe all races, creeds and cultures are equal.
The dogmas
of the Diverse Society dictate that the cherished rights of the
Free Society be sacrificed on the altar of social tranquility.
What has
caused this reversal of the advance of freedom?
Western
Man has come to believe there are more important values than freedom,
if men use their freedom in ways our new Lords Temporal find unacceptable.
Nor is
this anything new. Censorship has always had powerful patrons and
not always benighted backers.
In the
Middle Ages, pious men sought to silence heretics because they believed
the Faith led to Paradise, while its loss led to Hell for all eternity.
The Christian censorship we mock today was born of men's deepest
convictions about the most important thing in life: salvation.
Devout
Muslims believe heretics and apostates should be put to death. Islam
is the most important thing in their lives, and its truths are valued
more than any freedom to mock them.
And, indeed,
most men accept some form of censorship.
Most of
us believe that published or spoken lies that ruin good names should
be punished by libel and slander laws. Most of us believe there
are military secrets that must be protected. Not a few Americans
believe that the moral codes imposed on Hollywood by the Legion
of Decency helped protect society from the toxic pollution that
poisons our children. Most of us support FCC sanctions against filthy
language or racist slurs on the airwaves.
Nor is
government censorship unknown to America.
President
John Adams signed the Sedition Acts, which called for the incarceration
of journalists who wrote insultingly of him. Abraham Lincoln suppressed
newspapers that denounced his war. Woodrow Wilson imprisoned the
Socialist Eugene Debs for denouncing his war.
A new censorship
is now arising. We read of speech codes on campuses, sensitivity
training for freshman, and tribunals before which students are made
to grovel and recant for joking references that offended some minority
or other.
"The best
test of truth," said Justice Holmes, "is the power of thought to
get itself accepted in the marketplace."
Nonsense.
Editor Elijah Lovejoy was lynched in Alton, Ill., in 1837 for advocating
abolition – against the view of the marketplace. Truth is truth,
whether the majority agrees or not.
Yet, one's
money ought to be on the new censors, for men who believe deeply
in something, even when wrong, usually triumph over men who believe
in nothing.
Today,
the true believers in Islam and the true believers in diversity
über alles are making common cause against those who believe
in freedom of speech and the press. As the former have the convictions
and increasingly the power, they may prevail, and not only in Canada
and Europe.
A new orthodoxy
is arising. Freedom's finest hour may be behind us.
June
18, 2008
Patrick
J. Buchanan [send
him mail] is co-founder and editor of The
American Conservative. He is also the author of seven books,
including Where
the Right Went Wrong, and A
Republic Not An Empire. His latest book is Churchill,
Hitler, and the Unnecessary War.
Copyright
© 2008 Creators Syndicate
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J. Buchanan Archives
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