Posted on 01/14/2015 5:43:46 AM PST by Kaslin
It might sound a bit pompous to say, Stéphane Charb Charbonnier, editor of Frances satirical Charlie Hebdo, told Le Monde in 2012, but I prefer to die standing than live on my knees. The interview was conducted as the newspaper was once again publishing cartoons of the Prophet Mohammad, something it had already been sued, hacked and firebombed for by Islamic extremists in previous years. Charbonnier, and the staff knew they might one day be victims of terrorism to silence them, but they refused to surrender their rights to intimidation from armed thugs or those in the government.
The savagery of the assassination of those on Charlie Hebdo staff, as well as the symbolic nature of the target, was an unequivocal message of war against not just those who insult Islam, but the very pillar of free expression a principle that holds the West above societies founded on fear and repression. Je Suis Charlie! [translated: I am Charlie] became the rallying cry for not just the 1.6 million people, including 40 world leaders, who marched through the streets of Paris in solidarity against extremism last weekend, but millions around the world as well.
Of course, like most cause célèbre that involve a popular, feel-good position, bleeding-heart liberals could not wait to jump on the Je Suis Charlie bandwagon; to pound their chests and declare how much in favor of free speech they are. The irony is, these chest-pounders are the ones stifling that very freedom here in the United States. Thanks to the insidious and continuing creep of political correctness rampant in governments at all levels, and especially in academia, rarely has it been so dangerous to express oneself in America.
The Left likes to pretend to support free expression, but rather than fight speech that is ignorant, hateful, or unpleasant with, say, more speech, it seeks to silence that speech with threats of lawsuits, or worse, outright criminalization. Today, people are going to jail for composing rap music on social media as a means to cope with a divorce (a case currently being decided by the Supreme Court). At supposedly prestigious institutions of higher education, we have trigger warnings for objectionable content so students are not offended; even codifying the words college students must use to legally engage in sex without risk of being accused of sexual harassment.
To cap it all off, a study conducted last year found that 51 percent of Democrats favor the criminalization of hate speech. Given the strong, anti-expression forces at work here at home, it is strange that so many liberals feel compelled to support the work of a foreign newspaper they would have condemned only a few weeks ago.
For example, New York Democrat Rep. Hakeem Jeffries posted to Twitter following the Paris terror attack: We all stand with the people of France in the face of terror. Vive la liberté. Yet, last year, Jeffries sponsored a bill that would have mandated the federal government study hate speech on the Internet, which the Washington Times described as the latest effort to deputize the federal government as the online speech police. Jeffries then went a step further and used the Paris attacks as further justification for fully funding the Department of Homeland Security, another federal agency that places the rights of Americans at the bottom of its priority list.
It is this duplicitous attitude about free speech that has allowed the culture of political correctness to take hold as it has; and all without needing to fire a single bullet.
In the immediate aftermath of 9/11, President George W. Bush visited Ground Zero, where he stood on top of a fire truck and shouted through a bullhorn to the first responders trying to clear the still-smoldering rubble of the Twin Towers: I can hear you! The rest of the world hears you! And the people -- and the people who knocked these buildings down will hear all of us soon! For all of his faults, President Bush, if just for a few seconds, captured the true essence of the American spirit in that moment; unbroken and unyielding to the powers that try to destroy it. His impromptu and unscripted speech also had a much more significant meaning than merely reassuring the people of New York that the nation was with them. It also said, loudly and clearly, that American freedom our freedom -- will never be silenced by the actions of our enemies. Unfortunately, far-reaching laws passed, and executive policies implemented in the aftermath of 9-11, have severely dimmed Bushs lofty words and sentiments.
As we move forward from the Paris attacks, we must ask ourselves if truly we are prepared to defend free expressions from all its enemies, not just against those who use guns, bombs, and planes. Clever hashtags, symbolic profile pictures, and public demonstrations in support of French cartoonists are popular right now, and are easy steps to take; but these are superficial, quickly forgotten, and easily pushed aside. The real test comes when we look in the mirror and see how the silent killer of political correctness and soft censorship here at home is destroying and chilling free speech at a far deeper substantive level than a couple of terrorists are able to do: Today we are Charlie Hebdo, writes Nick Gillespie at Reason. But what about tomorrow, and the day after tomorrow?
Perish the thought.
Slowly and painfully Europeans are coming to understand that Islamic culture is simply not compatible with Western values and practices. They had forgotten the hard lessons learned at the battles of Tours, Grenada, Malta, Lepanto, Constantinople and Vienna. Their ancestors sacrificed much to give them the legacy they now enjoy and are squandering.
> To cap it all off, a study conducted last year found that 51 percent of Democrats favor the criminalization of hate speech. Given the strong, anti-expression forces at work here at home, it is strange that so many liberals feel compelled to support the work of a foreign newspaper they would have condemned only a few weeks ago.
Only applies tof conservative Christians . They will vote themselves an exemption.
I understand the reasons our founding fathers wrote the Constitution more and more and more with each passing day with this administration in power.
I have no doubt that America will, eventually, take its place in the forefront of the battle for freedom. If not voluntarily, it will be dragged into the fight by an unrelenting foe. This will not happen with the present leadership. Think 2017.
but I prefer to die standing than live on my knees.
brave quote from a guy that likely votes liberal and always has and will.
When you study the American Revolution, you begin to understand what leadership is. When you study the small group of men faced down the most powerful military on the earth for the cause of Liberty, you realize what a bunch of sniveling, whining, self interested cowards we now have in our government leadership.
I have no doubt that America will, eventually, take its place in the forefront of the battle for freedom.
I don't share your optimism. I don't see enough liberty loving patriots in our leadership or in our future. We have long ago forgotten the sacrifices made by our forefathers to give us the liberty that we so eagerly piss away.
There are too many black swans out there right now. The economic situation is balancing on a knife's edge. Terrorists and terror cells abound.
I am somewhat optimistic for countries North America. No army can land here. We are self sufficient in food and energy. We will prevail.
The US media has for the most part has not published the cover cartoon of the latest issue of Charlie Hebdo. Political correctness triumphs again.
The only problem that liberals have with the Charlie Hebdo attack is that it was not the government that was suppressing free speech. As long as it is the All-Powerful State, they are fine with it.
For those thinking new leadership will arise, as in the American Revolution, remember that the Founding Fathers were extremists. Why do you think Obama is having a conference on how to suppress extremists? He certainly doesn’t think Muslims can be extremists.
George III did not have the ability to tap phones, cell phones, and Internet, nor could he put locator beacons on carriages. Patriot meetings today would likely soon bring on a drone strike. They would be extremists, after all.
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