France Arrests a
Comedian For His Facebook Comments,
Showing the Sham of the West’s “Free
Speech” Celebration
By Glenn Greenwald
January 14, 2015 "ICH"
- "The
Intercept"
- Forty-eight hours after hosting a
massive march under the banner of free
expression, France
opened a criminal investigation of a
controversial French comedian for a
Facebook post he wrote about the Charlie
Hebdo attack, and then this morning,
arrested him for that post on
charges of “defending terrorism.” The
comedian, Dieudonné (above), previously
sought elective office in France on what
he called an “anti-Zionist” platform,
has had his show banned by numerous
government officials in cities
throughout France, and has been
criminally prosecuted several times
before for expressing ideas banned
in that country.
The apparently criminal
viewpoint he posted on Facebook
declared: “Tonight, as far as I’m
concerned, I feel like Charlie Coulibaly.”
Investigators concluded that this was
intended to mock the “Je Suis Charlie”
slogan and express support for the
perpetrator of the Paris supermarket
killings (whose last name was “Coulibaly”).
Expressing that opinion is evidently a
crime in the Republic of Liberté, which
prides itself on a line of 20th Century
intellectuals – from Sartre and Genet to
Foucault and Derrida – whose hallmark
was leaving no orthodoxy or convention
unmolested, no matter how sacred.
Since that glorious
“free speech” march, France has
reportedly opened 54 criminal cases
for “condoning terrorism.” AP
reported this morning that “France
ordered prosecutors around the country
to crack down on hate speech,
anti-Semitism and glorifying terrorism.”
As pernicious as this
arrest and related “crackdown” on some
speech obviously is, it provides a
critical value: namely, it underscores
the utter scam that was
this week’s celebration of free speech
in the west. The day before the Charlie
Hebdo attack, I coincidentally
documented the multiple cases in the
west – including in the U.S. – where
Muslims have been prosecuted and even
imprisoned for their political speech.
Vanishingly few of this week’s bold free
expression mavens have ever uttered a
peep of protest about any of those cases
– either before the Charlie Hebdo attack
or since. That’s because “free speech,”
in the hands of many westerners,
actually means: it is
vital that the ideas I like be
protected, and the right to offend
groups I dislike be cherished; anything
else is fair game.
It is certainly true
that many of Dieudonné’s views and
statements
are noxious, although he and his
supporters insist that they are “satire”
and all in good humor. In that regard,
the controversy they provoke is similar
to the now-much-beloved Charlie Hebdo
cartoons (one French leftist
insists the cartoonists were mocking
rather than adopting racism and bigotry,
but Olivier Cyran, a former writer at
the magazine who resigned in 2001,
wrote a
powerful 2013 letter with ample
documentation condemning Charlie Hebdo
for descending in the post-9/11 era into
full-scale, obsessive anti-Muslim
bigotry).
Despite
the obvious threat to free speech posed
by this arrest, it is inconceivable that
any mainstream western media figures
would start tweeting “#JeSuisDieudonné”
or would upload photographs of
themselves performing his
ugly Nazi-evoking arm gesture in
“solidarity” with his free speech
rights. That’s true even if he were
murdered for his ideas rather than
“merely” arrested and prosecuted for
them. That’s because last week’s
celebration of the Hebdo
cartoonists (well beyond mourning their
horrifically unjust murders) was at
least as much about approval for their
anti-Muslim messages as it was about the
free speech rights that were invoked in
their support - at least as
much.
The vast bulk of the
stirring “free speech” tributes over the
last week have been little more than an
attempt to protect and venerate speech
that degrades disfavored groups while
rendering off-limits speech that does
the same to favored groups, all
deceitfully masquerading as lofty
principles of liberty. In response to my
article containing anti-Jewish
cartoons on Monday - which I posted to
demonstrate the utter selectivity and
inauthenticity of this newfound
adoration of offensive speech - I was
subjected to
endless
contortions justifying why
anti-Muslim speech is perfectly great
and noble while anti-Jewish speech is
hideously offensive and evil (the most
frequently invoked distinction –
“Jews are a race/ethnicity while Muslims
aren’t” – would come as a huge surprise
to the world’s Asian, black, Latino and
white Jews, as well as to those who
identify as “Muslim” as part of
their cultural identity even though they
don’t pray five times a day). As always:
it’s free speech if it involves
ideas I like or attacks groups I
dislike, but it’s something different
when I’m the one who is offended.
Think about the
“defending terrorism” criminal offense
for which Dieudonné has been arrested.
Should it really be a criminal
offense – causing someone to be
arrested, prosecuted and imprisoned – to
say something along these lines: western
countries like France have been bringing
violence for so long to Muslims in their
countries that I now believe it’s
justifiable to bring violence to France
as a means of making them stop? If
you want “terrorism defenses” like that
to be criminally prosecuted (as opposed
to societally shunned), how about those
who justify, cheer for and glorify the
invasion and destruction of Iraq, with
its
“Shock and Awe” slogan signifying an
intent to terrorize the civilian
population into submission and its
monstrous tactics in Fallujah? Or
how about the
psychotic calls from a Fox News
host, when discussing Muslims radicals,
to “kill them ALL.” Why is one view
permissible and the other criminally
barred – other than because the force of
law is being used to control political
discourse and one form of terrorism
(violence in the Muslim world) is done
by, rather than to, the west?
For those interested,
my comprehensive argument against all
“hate speech” laws and other attempts to
exploit the law to police political
discourse is
here. That essay, notably, was
written to denounce a proposal by
a French minister, Najat
Vallaud-Belkacem, to force Twitter to
work with the French government to
delete tweets which officials like this
minister (and future unknown ministers)
deem “hateful.” France is about as
legitimate a symbol of free expression
as Charlie Hebdo, which
fired one of its writers in 2009 for
a single supposedly anti-Semitic
sentence in the midst of publishing an
orgy of anti-Muslim (not just
anti-Islam) content. The celebration of
France – and the gaggle of tyrannical
leaders who joined it – had little to do
with free speech and much to do with
suppressing ideas they dislike while
venerating ideas they prefer.
Perhaps the most
intellectually corrupted figure in this
regard is, unsurprisingly, France’s most
celebrated (and easily the world’s most
overrated) public intellectual, the
philosopher Bernard-Henri Lévy. He
demands criminal suppression of anything
smacking of anti-Jewish views (he
called for Dieudonné’s shows to be
banned (“I don’t understand why anyone
even sees the need for debate”) and
supported the 2009 firing of the Charlie
Hebdo writer for a speech offense
against Jews), while shamelessly parading
around all last week as the
Churchillian champion of free expression
when it comes to anti-Muslim cartoons.
But that, inevitably,
is precisely the goal, and the effect,
of laws that criminalize certain ideas
and those who support such laws: to
codify a system where the views they
like are sanctified and the groups to
which they belong protected. The views
and groups they most dislike – and only
them – are fair game for oppression and
degradation.
The arrest of this
French comedian so soon after the epic
Paris free speech march underscores this
point more powerfully than anything
than I could have written about the
selectivity and fraud of this week’s
“free speech” parade. It also shows –
yet again – why those who want to
criminalize the ideas they most dislike
are at least as dangerous and tyrannical
as the ideas they target: at
least.
Photo: Chesnot/Getty
Images
Correction: This
post originally identified Dieudonné as
Muslim. That was in error, and the
article has been edited to reflect that
correction.