Thank God for the Danish Cartoons

On 31 January 2006 the British House of Commons narrowly defeated – with just 283 votes against 282 – New Labour’s Racial and Religious Hatred Bill, intended to prohibit speech or artistic expressions deemed insulting by religious communities. This was a narrow yet historic victory for freedom of expression, as well as a victory for Parliament against a despotic-minded Government. Liberal-Democratic spokesman Evan Harris commented: “The Government just failed to understand that they can’t take liberties with freedom of expression.”

On the occasion of the House of Commons vote, familiar maxims on liberty were aptly invoked in various debates, e.g. against the British Government’s plea that the bill was “necessary” to make multicultural coexistence possible (an argument invoked by governments across Europe to impose similar censorship laws). William Pitt the Younger was quoted:

“Necessity is the plea for every infringement of human freedom; it is the argument of tyrants; it is the creed of slaves.”

Regarding the argument that this curtailment of freedom of speech is only a small concession to an acute societal need, Edmund Burke’s words were repeated:

“The true danger is when liberty is nibbled away for expedience and by parts.”

Against the argument that many things people say about other religions are ill-informed or prejudiced, Mahatma Gandhi was quoted:

“Freedom isn’t worth having if it does not connote the freedom to err.”

Undoubtedly the British parliamentary vote boosted the morale of the Danish government and media. The Danes need all the support they can get now that they are being terrorized by Muslim fanatics but also attacked, openly or indirectly, by an international establishment that speaks a.o. through Bill Clinton, the Council of Europe and various EU bureaucrats. The Danes’ freedom of expression is decried as “Islamophobia”, a notion which was introduced by Tariq Ramadan and is now being promoted and inserted into international policy by people such as Karel De Gucht, Belgium’s Foreign Affairs Minister and the current Chairman of the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE).

So far the Danish Government and Jyllands-Posten have, while making some conciliatory gestures, stood firm against pressure. Other courageous European newspapers have expressed their support by republishing the controversial cartoons in their own pages.

What seems to cause people most offence are, however, not errors, but hearing things that are undeniably right on the mark. Depicting Mohammed with a bomb in his turban, as in one of the controversial cartoons, hurts because the perpetrators of the most recent acts of Islamic terror, from 9/11 suicide hijacker Mohammed Atta to Mohammed Bouyeri (Theo van Gogh’s assassin), have explicitly affirmed that they were motivated by their zeal for Islam and by the teaching and precedent of the Prophet. Mohammed in fact organized armed raids on caravans, took hostages for ransom, permitted his men to rape the hostages, and ordered the assassination of poets who mocked or criticized him.

Does a scholarly paper documenting the link between Mohammed and terrorism, or a cartoon making the same point, hurt the feelings of all the truly peace-loving, ordinary Muslims? Certainly, but this is where George Orwell’s observation applies:

“If liberty means anything at all, it means the right to tell people what they do not want to hear.”

Millions of Muslims have constructed for themselves a version of Islam that reconciles a veneration for the Prophet and the Quran with an acceptance of more enlightened values of pluralism and tolerance. To them it may come as a shock to see that not everyone shares their views. But that kind of shock therapy is a healthy thing. Those Danish cartoonists may be among the greatest benefactors the Muslims ever had.

Oh dear

we must ban islam faith till they open their countries to others.

What a great way to preserve freedom of speech.

Freedom of Speech v. religious intolerance

There has been much hoo-ha in the media of late about this bill to curtail free speech^W^W^W^outlaw "inciting religious hatred." If anything's going to cause religious hatred, it's using religion to outlaw free speech.

I am getting a little tired of walking around on eggshells in case someone cries, "Blasphemy! You've insulted (...insert name of god of choice...). I find this very offensive!"

Well, I find that whole attitude very offensive. I'm quite happy for people to believe in the god of their choice and to treat it with all due reverence. It's their god. But it isn't mine.

So, I figure it's time to start my own religion. If folks want me act like a follower of their faith, then they're going to have act like a follower of mine. Or I will take offence and accuse them of blasphemy and insulting my goddess.

Therefore, may I introduce:
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The Church of the Ethereal Butterfly

Founded 2nd February, 2006
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The Gospel according to Morpho, the first High Priestess.

1. i. In the beginning was the Aether, wherein dwelt the spirits, the butterflies. Papilia Regina, Great Queen of the Aether, kept watch over her charges as they lived in eternal happiness, consuming nectar and singing of their joy. And all was as it should be.

ii. But not all was well in the aether. The moth, Acherontios, grew jealous and so decided to create a territory of his own. First, he created a bubble of atmosphere, denser than the heavenly aether, and called it his.

iii. Papilia watched but did not intervene.

iv. Acherontios soon tired of his atmosphere and wanted something of more substance, so within his bubble of atmosphere, he created a sphere of water. Still he was unsatisfied for although he had dominion over his territory, yea, it was a dead world.

v. Therefore he created creatures to fly through the water as the butterflies fly through the aether. But they survived only a short while, and Acherontios was angry for his creatures did not live for ever as the butterfly spirits do.

vi. And Papilia continued to watch but did not interfere.

vii. Acherontios decided, in his divine wisdom, that weightier substance was required. Thus, in his impatient anger, he created a misshapen lump of clay and flung it into the waters. Some of the clay stood out above the water and Acherontios called it The Earth.

viii. Then Acherontios created beings to walk upon the land. But still, they did not survive for long.

ix. Papilia watched and took pity on the dying creatures. When death took them, she made their outer bodies to split and release the butterfly spirit within. The spirits flew up into the aether to join the others who dwelt there already, and there was great rejoicing.

x. But Acherontios raged against his Queen and against his destiny.

xi. So at last, Papilia was moved to act. She set upon his back a death's head and named him Atropos. Then she cast him from the aether to live upon the Earth with his creations.

xii. Yet she was not without mercy. When he loses his desire for power over others, then will he be welcomed back into the Aether.
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to sue

hey sue stop mocking God u lil minded wicked soul God is not something to be mocked at He is ur creator sustainer n provider , do u have a any brains in ur head??/ think abt the purpose of ur life n as to why u r here n wat will be ur end? don’t think of something that ur lil mind is never going to comprehend n stop humiliating urself
may Allah guide u , u por soul ameen