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Austria arrests Irving over Holocaust
Reuters ^ | Nov 17, 2005 | Staff

Posted on 11/17/2005 5:17:01 PM PST by Anti-Bubba182

VIENNA (Reuters) - Historian David Irving, known for his controversial views on World War Two, has been arrested in Austria on suspicion of denying the Holocaust, an interior ministry spokesman said on Thursday.

Irving was arrested on November 11 near the town of Hartberg in the southern province of Styria under a warrant issued in 1989, interior ministry spokesman Rudolf Gollia said.

"He is on remand in Vienna," Gollia said.

Asked what Irving had been arrested for, Gollia said: "It is to do with ... Holocaust denial."

The spokesman declined to comment on whether or when he would be charged.

A High Court ruling in 2000 rejecting Irving's libel action against an American professor and her publishers declared Irving "an active Holocaust denier ... anti-Semitic and racist".

Denying the holocaust is a crime in Austria which carries a sentence of 1-10 years.

Irving's Web site (www.fpp.co.uk) said he had been invited by students to address a university association in Vienna. In a message dated November 11, it said he was on a one-day visit to the Austrian capital.


TOPICS: Miscellaneous; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: davidirving; freespeech; hitler; holocaust; irving; nazi; pc
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To: GBA
GBA, with all due respect, I think you are missing the point. The problem with this type of law is who gets to determine what is allowed and not allowed to be "thought" or expressed?

This very law can at some point in the future be turned against the very same people that support it today.

If a law like this can be justified, then any law forbidding any type of speech can be justified.

Which is why our founding fathers gave us the first amendment.

Austria certainly has the right to pass such a law, and fortunately, we have the right to be critical of the law (with out it being assumed we support the views of the person being prosecuted).

That is what reasonable people do.

I know we all get frustrated with those that disagree with us from time to time, and secretly wish they would just shut up, or there was a way to shut them up, but preventing people from expressing their views does not mean you won them over to your side.

This type of outside force tends to keep people quiet on the surface, but it is like a boiler with the safety valve plugged up. Instead of the pressures being released safely, it builds until there is an explosion.

The best example of this is the old Soviet Union. They had plenty of laws that prevented people from speaking out until eventually it exploded.

41 posted on 11/18/2005 7:54:00 AM PST by CIB-173RDABN
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To: Alter Kaker
Well that's nice. You'd be amazed to learn that the First Amendment doesn't apply anywhere except in the United States.

Perhaps, but that's why the United States is better.

42 posted on 11/18/2005 8:27:08 AM PST by Young Scholar
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To: JABBERBONK

I have no problem with Austria censoring Irving's books or even banning him from the country. But jailing him, is beyond the pale IMHO. I agree it's their laws, whatever, but I'm just glad (at least for now) we don't have that in the US.


43 posted on 11/18/2005 8:32:09 AM PST by dfwgator
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To: Anti-Bubba182
Another pathetic headline effort by Reuters...It's accurate as far as it goes, but a half-truth can sometimes be a lie. It SHOULD read:

Austria Arrests Irving over Holocaust Denial


Obviously the man had nothing to do with the actual Holocaust, though he does threaten to dilute its historical by denying it today.

44 posted on 11/18/2005 8:35:40 AM PST by Petronski (Cyborg is the greatest blessing I have ever known.)
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To: R.W.Ratikal

Thought crimes are offensive, to be sure, but you're out of line when you say this:

"That's worse than the Holocaust."


Admit it: you wish you hadn't used that exponential bit of hyperbole.


45 posted on 11/18/2005 8:38:11 AM PST by Petronski (Cyborg is the greatest blessing I have ever known.)
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To: Petronski

Ach!


"...dilute its historical IMPACT by denying it..."


46 posted on 11/18/2005 8:40:18 AM PST by Petronski (Cyborg is the greatest blessing I have ever known.)
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To: JABBERBONK

They think it sucks to live in a nation with no guaranteed right to health care.

Because of our different histories--particularly, because we haven't had fascist governments and occupation armies--Americans and Europeans have completely different ideas of what everyone has to agree to in order for a democratic government to endure.

We're worried about losing our freedoms. Europeans are worried about fascism and the total destruction of war. Our laws reflect that difference.


47 posted on 11/18/2005 8:45:42 AM PST by HostileTerritory
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To: dfwgator

Yes, I'm grateful that the U.S. has had a strong democratic government for as long as we have. We're able to withstand the total free discourse of ideas--a discourse that, 15 years after the fall of Communism and 60 years after World War II, many European countries fear could once again lead them down the path of tyranny and murder.


48 posted on 11/18/2005 8:47:17 AM PST by HostileTerritory
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To: CIB-173RDABN
Thanks for your thoughtful post. For what it's worth, I agree with your philosophy and don't think I missed the point. You have no idea how frustrated I am at the demonrats current efforts to distort events prior to our fighting the war on terror in Iraq. They lie as a method of gaining political power. It's what politicians do. Truth in advertising doesn't exist in that arena, but it should. You can certainly be jailed for misleading people in business. Too bad the MSM is exempt. I'm getting close to the edge of that slippery slope, huh?

And I get the "slippery slope" argument, especially regarding freedom of speech. All dictatorial regimes have used censorship and propaganda as methods to control their citizens. But lets keep our perspective and stay with this one example rather than entertaining all hypothetical situations.

The Austrians have the right to decide this for themselves. If the Austrians want to jail Irving for what they consider to be inciteful speech or hate speech, then it is their right. Even we place limitations on the freedom of expression. My only hope is that we limit freedom of speech on a case by case basis and for reasons more substantial than just not liking what someone has to say.

You can't slander. You can't scream "FIRE" in a crowded theater. You can't lie in advertising. All violations of freedom of speech. That the holocaust happened is an objective FACT. That it was pure evil is a subjective opinion. To me, lying is a greater offense than having an opinion I find offensive. In all but extreme situations, we are free to have and express offensive opinions, but not to lie about facts.

49 posted on 11/18/2005 8:56:58 AM PST by GBA (I believe Congressman Weldon! MSM do your job.)
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To: GBA

If Irving is wrong on a point, he should be defeated with facts.


50 posted on 11/18/2005 8:59:53 AM PST by Deport Billary
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To: GBA
I don't think there is much we have to disagree about.
51 posted on 11/18/2005 10:34:21 AM PST by CIB-173RDABN
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To: Alter Kaker
No Holocaust denier here, I am just of the mind that the more the loonies speak, the more they are ridiculed, like Fharrakan ans his interplanetary trips on the "Astroplane"
52 posted on 11/18/2005 10:48:59 AM PST by JABBERBONK
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To: HostileTerritory
Europeans are worried about insulting the multicultural left, and our health care is far superior to theirs. What is disturbing is that a group of people on high can have their opinions mandated, in a supposedly democratic society.
53 posted on 11/18/2005 10:54:22 AM PST by JABBERBONK
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To: R.W.Ratikal
>>>Am I to understand that it's against the law in Austria to deny that the Holocaust happened? That's worse than the Holocaust.

You are kidding right? Forbidding highly inflammatory speech on a topic is (in my view) a bad thing, but it hardly compares to brutally murdering 6 million people, and savagely treating countless more.

patent
54 posted on 11/18/2005 11:03:21 AM PST by patent (A baby is God's opinion that life should go on. Carl Sandburg)
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To: Alter Kaker

Not amazed at all. Since THIS is an AMERICAN political board I assumed Americans were to whom I was talking to.

I am well aware of the lack of an First Amendment in Austria.

As well as of many other Freedoms which Americans proudly practice on a regular basis.

That's the difference between Europeans and Americans.

We are not sheep.


55 posted on 11/18/2005 2:16:22 PM PST by RedMonqey (Life is hard. It's even harder when you're stupid.)
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To: GBA
"State controlled truth? Get over yourself. Your emotionally charged rhetoric is way over the top and exactly what the Hitlers and the Gobbels used to advance their version of what is truth about those evil joos."


Hey, it isn't MY country that threatens to put a person in jail for over twenty years for merely stating his personal idiotic opinions.
It is Austrians who are "overblown" with not only their rhetoric but also theirs actions.

Making a martyr out of this fool just falls into the hands of the extremists who LOVE this sort of overreaction.

"Now, likely out of societal guilt for what DID happen, the Austrians have laws to see that the holocaust doesn't happen again"

No they're just laying the groundwork for the next one. Repression only breeds discontemptment and now they've just given another weapon in their cause(The Jews control everything)

I'm a First Amendment(Constitionalist) Defender and I don't "pick and choose" who opinion is "political correct".

For an American I'd think you above all would understand that but I guess I'm wrong.

In America we just ignore these fools and not give them a national platform to scream "Repression"

They just go on Jerry Springer and let them be known for the fools they are.



Can't


The time to stand up and save the Jews and millions more is long since past.

Fighting the last war with old outdated tactics never works. The new Fascists always come under the guise of saving us from the horrors of the past while using the same repressive tactics of the enemy.
56 posted on 11/18/2005 2:38:37 PM PST by RedMonqey (Life is hard. It's even harder when you're stupid.)
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To: crabapple joe
"Two of the twelve jurors (both "minorities") would not vote for the death penalty. "

It's called jury nullification and its an old racist tactic to nullify an otherwise justly deserved verdict.

Johnny Cochran's style.
57 posted on 11/18/2005 3:04:50 PM PST by RedMonqey (Life is hard. It's even harder when you're stupid.)
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To: RedMonqey
Just a couple of things. So you don't sound like one of the "extremists who LOVE this sort of overreaction", the article said 1 -10 years, not "over 20 years" as you seem to have read.

Second. Please hear me clearly now, if this had happened here, I would be outraged that someone had been jailed and threatened with prison for writing his twisted version of history. However, the Austrians, with a different culture and historical perspective than we have, especially about WWII and the holocaust, have a right to do what they believe about this issue. , up to a point.

He went there, to their country and this is what they feel is appropriate. If the Austrians want to line him up and shoot him or turn him into soap or some other Nazi atrocity, I'd most definitely be outraged, but the mere threat of 1-10 years (not a sentence at this time) hasn't risen to my threshold for outrage yet. If they cut off his head and showed the video on tv? That would more than do it, but detaining him and a possible threat of Austrian prison? Not there yet.

Again, it's their country. But: If our government tried that here, I'll stand with you.

58 posted on 11/18/2005 6:41:31 PM PST by GBA (I believe Congressman Weldon! MSM do your job.)
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To: GBA
My mistake on the sentencing. I stand corrected.

I'm sure the Austrians have a different prospective on WW2 however principles are either sound or unsound on their merits alone.


I hate Michael Moore. I believe him and his ilk have damaged our reputation and prolonged this war just as their sixties counterculture hippies worsen the Vietnam war.


However denying them their First Amendment rights of Free Speech is horrid to me.
It takes a mature society to allow ALL VIEWS and if Vienna cannot tolerant the writings of a lone dingbat. Well then Austria has bigger problems than that of ghosts of events long past.

Hitler arose from the ashes of the Great War in which many believed they were "stabbed in the back" by politicians willing to compromise their rights away to foreign powers.

This action will only give ammunition to those Austrian malcontents who believe their rights are already suppressed by,as you put it "the Jooooos"
59 posted on 11/18/2005 7:36:20 PM PST by RedMonqey (Life is hard. It's even harder when you're stupid.)
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