Otro articulo de Daniel Pipes (FoxNews.com) donde de una manera dura y directa nos ofrece otra visión del tema sobre el que tanto hemos leído en los últimos días.. y que me ha hecho pensar.
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To stop Islamist violence over perceived insults to Muhammad, I argued in a FoxNews.com
article on Friday, editors and producers daily should display cartoons
of Muhammad "until the Islamists get used to the fact that we turn
sacred cows into hamburger."
This appeal prompted a solemn reply from Sheila Musaji
of The American Muslim website, who deemed it "irresponsible and beyond
the pale." Why so? Because, as she puts it, "The solution to escalating
violence and hate speech is not more hate speech."
Islamists
want to remove a marble frieze in the U.S. Supreme Court building that
dates from the 1930s and depicts Muhammad as a lawgiver.
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That sounds sensible enough. But does mocking Muhammad,
burning a Koran, or calling Islam a cult constitute hate speech? And
what about the respectful representations of Muhammad in the buildings of the U.S. Supreme Court or the New York State Supreme Court? Even they caused upset and rioting.
Hate speech, legal authorities agree, involves words directed against a category of persons. Here's a typical definition, from USLegal.com:
"incitement to hatred primarily against a group of persons defined in
terms of race, ethnicity, national origin, gender, religion, sexual
orientation, and the like."
Attacking the sanctities of a religion, I submit, is quite unlike
targeting the faithful of that religion. The former is protected speech,
part of the give and take of the market place of ideas, not all of
which are pretty. Freedom of speech means the freedom to insult and be
obnoxious. So long as it does not include incitement or information that
urges criminal action, nastiness is an essential part of our heritage.
On a personal note, I have had to learn to live with torrents of
vulgar venom, in speech and in pictures alike, from those who disagree
with me; you don't hear me whining about it. More broadly, Catholics,
Jews, Mormons, and other faith communities in the West have learned
since the Enlightenment to endure vicious lacerations on their symbols
and doctrines.
If proof be needed, recall Monty Python's Life of Brian, Terrence McNally's Corpus Christi, Andres Serrano's Piss Christi, and Chris Ofili's The Holy Virgin Mary. Or the avalanche of antisemitic cartoons spewing from Muslims.
For an over-the-top recent example, The Onion humor website published a cartoon under the heading, "No One Murdered Because of This Image."
It shows Moses, Jesus, Ganesha, and Buddha in the clouds, engaged in
what the caption delicately understates as "a lascivious sex act of
considerable depravity." As the Onion mock-reportingly but
accurately goes on, "Though some members of the Jewish, Christian,
Hindu, and Buddhist faiths were reportedly offended by the image,
sources confirmed that upon seeing it, they simply shook their heads,
rolled their eyes, and continued on with their day."
I asked for the cartoons to be published again and again to establish
that Islamists must not chip away at the freedom to mock and insult by
hiding behind bogus claims of incitement. Name an instance, Ms Musaji,
when biting remarks about Muhammad, the Koran, or Islam have led to
riots and murders by non-Muslims against Muslims?
I cannot think of a single one.
When attacks on Muslims take place, they occur in response to
terrorism by Muslims; that's no excuse, to be sure, but it does indicate
that violence against Muslims has no connection with lampooning
Muhammad or desecrating Korans. Muslims need to grow thick skins like
everyone else; this is one of the by-products of globalization. The
insulation of old is gone for good.
To make matters worse, Islamists tell us Be Careful with Muhammad! and threaten those with the temerity to discuss, draw, or even pretend to draw the prophet of Islam, even as they freely disparage and insult other religions. I can cite many examples
of actors, satirists, artists, cartoonists, writers, editors,
publishers, ombudsmen, and others openly admitting their intimidation
about discussing Islamic topics, a problem even Ms Musaji herself has acknowledged.
To cool the temperature, Muslims can take two steps: end terrorism
and stop the rioting over cartoons and novels. That will cause the
antagonism toward Islam built up over the past decade to subside. At
that point, I will happily retract my appeal to editors and producers to
flaunt offensive cartoons of Muhammad.
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