An Orgy of Democratic
Hypocrisy
“Free Speech” in the Aftermath of the
Attack on Charlie Hebdo
By David North
January 11, 2015 "ICH"
- "WSWS"
- The attack on the editorial offices of
Charlie Hebdo has shocked the
public, which is horrified by the violent
deaths of 12 people in the center of Paris.
The video images, viewed by millions, of the
gunmen firing their weapons and killing an
already-wounded policeman have imparted to
Wednesday’s events an extraordinary
actuality.
In the immediate aftermath
of the shootings, the state and media are
seeking to exploit the fear and the
confusion of the public. Once again, the
political bankruptcy and essentially
reactionary character of terrorism is
exposed. It serves the interests of the
state, which utilizes the opportunity
provided by the terrorists to whip up
support for authoritarianism and militarism.
In 2003, when the Bush administration
invaded Iraq, French popular opposition was
so overwhelming that the government led by
President Jacques Chirac was compelled to
oppose the war, even in the face of massive
political pressure from the United States.
Now, 12 years later, as President François
Hollande is striving to transform France
into the United States’ principal ally in
the “war on terror,” the attack in Paris
plays into his hands.
In these efforts Hollande
can rely on the media, which in such
circumstances directs all its energies
toward the emotional manipulation and
political disorientation of the public. The
capitalist media, skillfully combining the
suppression of information with half-truths
and outright lies, devises a narrative that
is calculated to appeal not only to the
basest instincts of the broad public, but
also to its democratic and idealistic
sentiments.
Throughout Europe and the
United States, the claim is being made that
the attack on the magazine Charlie Hebdo
was an assault on the freedom of the press
and the unalienable right of journalists in
a democratic society to express themselves
without loss of freedom or fear for their
lives. The killing of the Charlie Hebdo
cartoonists and editors is being proclaimed
an assault on the principles of free speech
that are, supposedly, held so dear in Europe
and the United States. The attack on
Charlie Hebdo is, thus, presented as
another outrage by Muslims who cannot
tolerate Western “freedoms.” From this the
conclusion must be drawn that the “war on
terror”—i.e., the imperialist onslaught on
the Middle East, Central Asia and North and
Central Africa—is an unavoidable necessity.
In the midst of this orgy
of democratic hypocrisy, no reference is
made to the fact that the American military,
in the course of its wars in the Middle
East, is responsible for the deaths of at
least 15 journalists. In the on-going
narrative of “Freedom of Speech Under
Attack,” there is no place for any mention
of the 2003 air-to-surface missile attack on
the offices of Al Jazeera in Baghdad that
left three journalists dead and four
wounded.
Nor is anything being
written or said about the July 2007 murder
of two Reuters journalists working in
Baghdad, staff photographer Namir
Noor-Eldeen and driver Saeed Chmagh. Both
men were deliberately targeted by US Apache
gunships while on assignment in East
Baghdad.
The American and
international public was first able to view
a video of the cold-blooded murder of the
two journalists as well as a group of
Iraqis—taken from one of the gunships—as the
result of WikiLeaks’ release of classified
material that it had obtained from an
American soldier, Corporal Bradley Chelsea
Manning.
And how has the United
States and Europe acted to protect WikiLeaks’
exercise of free speech? Julian Assange, the
founder and publisher of WikiLeaks, has been
subjected to relentless persecution. Leading
political and media figures in the United
States and Canada have denounced him as a
“terrorist” and demanded his arrest, with
some even calling publicly for his murder.
Assange is being pursued on fraudulent
“rape” allegations concocted by American and
Swedish intelligence services. He has been
compelled to seek sanctuary in the
Ecuadorian Embassy in London, which is under
constant guard by British police who will
seize Assange if he steps out of the
embassy. As for Chelsea Manning, she is
presently in prison, serving out a 35-year
sentence for treason.
That is how the great
capitalist “democracies” of North America
and Europe have demonstrated their
commitment to free speech and the safety of
journalists!
The dishonest and
hypocritical narrative spun out by the state
and the media requires that Charlie
Hebdo and its murdered cartoonists and
journalists be upheld as martyrs to free
speech and representatives of a revered
democratic tradition of hard-hitting
iconoclastic journalism.
In a column published
Wednesday in the Financial Times,
the liberal historian Simon Schama places
Charlie Hebdo in a glorious
tradition of journalistic irreverence that
“is the lifeblood of freedom.” He recalls
the great European satirists between the
sixteenth and nineteenth centuries who
subjected the great and powerful to their
withering scorn. Among their illustrious
targets, Schama reminds us, were the brutal
Duke of Alba, who in the 1500s drowned the
Dutch struggle for freedom in blood; the
French “Sun King,” Louis XIV; the British
Prime Minister William Pitt; and the Prince
of Wales. “Satire,” writes Schama, “became
the oxygen of politics, ventilating healthy
howls of derision in coffee houses and
taverns where caricatures circulated every
day and every week.”
Schama places Charlie
Hebdo in a tradition to which it does
not belong. All the great satirists to whom
Schama refers were representatives of a
democratic Enlightenment who directed their
scorn against the powerful and corrupt
defenders of aristocratic privilege. In its
relentlessly degrading portrayals of
Muslims, Charlie Hebdo has mocked
the poor and the powerless.
To speak bluntly and
honestly about the sordid, cynical and
degraded character of Charlie Hebdo
is not to condone the killing of its
personnel. But when the slogan “I am
Charlie” is adopted and heavily promoted by
the media as the slogan of protest
demonstrations, those who have not been
overwhelmed by state and media propaganda
are obligated to reply: “We oppose the
violent assault on the magazine, but we are
not—and have nothing in common
with—‘Charlie.’”
Marxists are no strangers
to the struggle to overcome the influence of
religion among the masses. But they conduct
this struggle with the understanding that
religious faith is sustained by conditions
of adversity and desperate hardship.
Religion is not to be mocked, but understood
and criticized as Karl Marx understood and
criticized it:
“Religious
distress is … the expression of
real distress and also the protest
against real distress. Religion is the sigh
of the oppressed creature, the heart of a
heartless world, just as it is the spirit of
spiritless conditions. It is the opium
of the people.
“To abolish religion as
the illusory happiness of the
people is to demand their real
happiness. The demand to give up illusions
about the existing affairs is the demand
to give up a state of affairs that needs
illusions. The criticism of religion is
therefore in embryo the criticism of the
vale of tears, the halo of which is
religion.” [Contribution to Critique of
Hegel’s Philosophy of Law, in Marx
and Engels Collected Works, Volume 3
(New York, 1975), pp. 175-76]
One has only to read these
words to see the intellectual and moral
chasm that separates Marxism from the
unhealthy milieu of the ex-left political
cynicism that has found expression in
Charlie Hebdo. There has been nothing
enlightening, let alone edifying, in their
puerile and often obscene denigration of the
Muslim religion and its traditions.
The cynically provocative
anti-Muslim caricatures that have appeared
on so many covers of Charlie Hebdo
have pandered to and facilitated the growth
of right-wing chauvinist movements in
France. It is absurd to claim, by way of
defense of Charlie Hebdo, that its
cartoons are all “in good fun” and have no
political consequences. Aside from the fact
that the French government is desperate to
rally support for its growing military
agenda in Africa and the Middle East, France
is a country where the influence of the
neo-fascist National Front is growing
rapidly. In this political context,
Charlie Hebdo has facilitated the
growth of a form of politicized anti-Muslim
sentiment that bears a disturbing
resemblance to the politicized anti-Semitism
that emerged as a mass movement in France in
the 1890s.
In its use of crude and
vulgar caricatures that purvey a sinister
and stereotyped image of Muslims,
Charlie Hebdo recalls the cheap racist
publications that played a significant role
in fostering the anti-Semitic agitation that
swept France during the famous Dreyfus
Affair, which erupted in 1894 after a Jewish
officer was accused and falsely convicted of
espionage on behalf of Germany. In whipping
up popular hatred of Jews, La Libre
Parole [“Free Speech”], published by
the infamous Edoard Adolfe Drumont, made
highly effective use of cartoons that
employed the familiar anti-Semitic devices.
The caricatures served to inflame public
opinion, inciting mobs against Dreyfus and
his defenders, such as Emile Zola, the great
novelist and author of J’Accuse.
The World Socialist
Web Site, on the basis of long-standing
political principles, opposes and
unequivocally condemns the terrorist assault
on Charlie Hebdo. But we refuse to
join in the portrayal of Charlie Hebdo
as a martyr to the cause of democracy and
free speech, and we warn our readers to be
wary of the reactionary agenda that
motivates this hypocritical and dishonest
campaign.