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(Download) "Changing Our Minds About the Cartoon Controversy (Canada)" by University of New Brunswick Law Journal * Book PDF Kindle ePub Free

Changing Our Minds About the Cartoon Controversy (Canada)

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eBook details

  • Title: Changing Our Minds About the Cartoon Controversy (Canada)
  • Author : University of New Brunswick Law Journal
  • Release Date : January 01, 2006
  • Genre: Law,Books,Professional & Technical,
  • Pages : * pages
  • Size : 250 KB

Description

When a student newspaper at our university recently published an original editorial cartoon showing Mohammed and Jesus kissing in a "tunnel of tolerance," we viewed this as a clear case of freedom of expression. And we were relieved when university officials, as we expected, likewise defended it as a legitimate exercise of free speech. The incident was, of course, a spin-off from the broader controversy over the twelve caricatures depicting the Prophet Mohammed originally published in the Danish newspaper Jyllands-Posten. Truth be told, we tended to think of the cartoon issue almost entirely as a matter of free speech. So we accepted pretty much at face value the claim made by the publisher of The Western Standard in defending the decision to give some of the now infamous Danish cartoons their Canadian debut. He said that "the only appropriate response to free speech is more free speech." (1) And so we were pleased when Alberta prosecutors decided, as we knew they should, that republication of the cartoons should not be prosecuted under Canadian laws against hate speech. For those of us who tend to think of ourselves as civil libertarians, the notion of imposing limits on freedom of expression is particularly troublesome and should only be done, if at all, with great and deliberate care. The violent reaction throughout the Muslim world, and in some extreme cases the calls to behead the Danish cartoonists, shocked us nearly into smugness over our own appreciation for the fundamental principle of liberty underlying our democratic life in Canada. And we were discomforted by the decision of some Canadian bookstores in choosing to ban the cartoon-carrying issue of The Western Standard, citing a potentially heightened risk to Canadian troops in Afghanistan. So we read with interest the critical commentary in the national press suggesting that the response in the Muslim world was largely an instance of Islamic elite manipulation, designed to place the West on the defensive, using tactics of moral intimidation.


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