Canadian Government Says Free Speech is for Offending
Muslims — Not Opposing Israel
By Glenn Greenwald
May 12, 2015 "Information
Clearing House" - "The
Intercept"-
Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper, January 8, 2015, on Charlie Hebdo
shootings:
“When a trio of hooded men struck at some of our most
cherished democratic principles, freedom of expression, freedom of the
press, they assaulted democracy everywhere . . . They
have declared war on anybody who does not think and act exactly as they
wish they would think and act . . . . they have declared war on any
country, like ourselves, that values freedom, openness and tolerance.”
CBC, today:
“Ottawa threatening hate charges against those
who boycott Israel”
The Harper government is signaling its intention to
use hate crime laws against Canadian advocacy groups that encourage
boycotts of Israel.
Such a move could target a range of civil society
organizations, from the United Church of Canada and the Canadian Quakers
to campus protest groups and labour unions.
If carried out, it would be a remarkably aggressive
tactic, and another measure of the Conservative government’s lockstep
support for Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. . . .
The government’s intention was made clear in a
response to inquiries from CBC News about statements by federal
ministers of a “zero tolerance” approach to groups participating
in a loose coalition called Boycott, Divest and Sanction (BDS),
which was begun in 2006 at the request of Palestinian non-governmental
organizations.
Asked to explain what zero tolerance means, and what
is being done to enforce it, a spokesperson for Public Safety Minister
Steven Blaney replied, four days later, with a detailed list of Canada’s
updated hate laws, noting that Canada has one of the most comprehensive
sets of such laws “anywhere in the world.”
Has a #JeSuisBDS hashtag started trending yet on Twitter?
Under the new Charlie Hebdo standard — it’s not enough to defend free
speech; one must praise and even express the speech targeted with
suppression — have all of the newfound free speech crusaders begun
organizing pro-Israel-boycott rallies in order to defy these
suppression efforts? In a zillion years, could anyone imagine the
popularity-craving officials who run PEN America bestowing one of their
glamorous awards on advocates of the Israel-targeted
Boycott/Divestment/Sanctions movement? The answer to all of those questions
is and will remain “no,” because (as I discussed last week
here with Bob Wright) the
Charlie Hebdo ritual (for most, not all) was about many agendas having
nothing to do with the free expression banner under which it paraded.
In that regard, Stephen Harper is the perfect Poster Boy
for how free expression is tribalistically manipulated and exploited in the
West. When the views being suppressed are ones amenable to those in power
(e.g., cartoons mocking Islam), free speech is venerated; attempts to
suppress those kinds of ideas show that “they have declared war on
any country, like ourselves, that values freedom, openness
and tolerance.” We get to celebrate ourselves as superior and progressive
and victimized, and how good that feels. But when ideas are advocated that
upset those in power (e.g.
speech by Muslims critical of Western nations and their allies), the
very same people acquiesce to,
or expressly endorse,
full-scale suppression. Thus can the Canadian Prime Minister pompously
parade around as some sort of Guardian of Enlightenment Ideals only, three
months later, to act like the classic tyrant.
As I’ve argued many times — most comprehensively here
— all applications of hate speech laws are inherently tyrannical,
dangerous and wrong, and it’s truly mystifying (and scary) that
people convince themselves that their judgment is so unerring and their
beliefs so sacrosanct that it should be illegal to question or
dissent from them. But independent of that, what we see here again is the
utter foolishness of endorsing such laws on pragmatic grounds: they will
inevitably be used against not just the ideas you hate but the ones you
like, and when that happens, if you cheered when such laws were used to
suppress the ideas you hate, then you will have no valid ground to object.
UPDATE:
Various Israel devotees such as David Frum spent the morning insisting the
CBC story is false, and now the Canadian government has followed suit,
issuing a statement denouncing it. Unfortunately for them, the full email
exchange between the CBC reporter, Neil Macdonald, and a spokesman for the
Public Safety Department can be
read here, and it proves that the CBC story is 100% accurate.
- Email the author:
glenn.greenwald@theintercept.com