dmetzcher
Metzcher.com
People are entitled to their beliefs. Though I do not agree that Islam is evil, or any major religion, people are entitled to disagree with me, and publish such disagreements in their papers.Ynought said:I don't have a lot of time but I will say this, we haven't seen the *prophets* of other religions mocked in a way that I think Muhammad was mocked. You don't see Jesus or Moses dipicted as a killer. It's one thing to mock how people have corrupted a religion, I think quite another to insuate that another's religion is inherantly evil.
I would have to agree with this statement. I say, "oh well, get over it". Do you know why I say that? I say it simply because I think that those claiming to be religious shoud rise above the pettiness of the "non-believers". Is that not what both Christianity and Islam both speak about?Ynought said:Also, it is really not our place to try to qualify the level of anger that muslims should feel. That, to me, is kind of the point. When you do that, you cease to respect the other. A normal person, having unintentionally offended someone would say, 'I'm sorry. I didn't think that would offend you.' If you don't care you say, 'oh well, get over it.'
Correct, because that is meant to cause panic, and can be immediately proven to cause panic. Study what the Supreme Court of our country has, in previous cases, determined to be free speech. Simply because something is offensive, and might cause people to act out in a similarly offensive way, does not remove the First Amendment protection granted to speech. Your analogy does not fit. To put it another way, people fleeing a supposedly burning theater, because some ass declared that there was a fire, are terrified, and are fleeing for their lives. People burning a building because someone offended their religion are simply angry. That's all it is, one of humanity's basest emotions - anger (hatred, really) toward another - even if that anger is well-founded, and I think it was, in this case. Simply put, the Supreme Court does not agree with you, the forefathers did not agree with you, and your argument does not hold water. So, it would seem that the "freedom of speech argument", as you put it, is not a joke.Ynought said:Also, the freedom of speech argument is a joke. Like Oliver Wendel Holmes said, 'The most stringent protection of free speech would not protect a man falsely shouting fire in a theater and causing a panic.' I think it's safe to say that the Danes have done at least that.
What is a joke is how easily my fellow Americans are able to give up their freedoms simply because they are not doing what the person in question is. The idea is, "well, I'm not a [insert whatever group you want here], so it doesn't affect me." When they come for you, and you have let everyone else be rounded up in years prior without ever examining the broader implications, who will stand with you in defense of your freedoms? No one. They'll all be gone.
Martin Niemöller said it in a more profound way than I ever could have above:
=================================================
"First the Nazis came
First they came for the communists, and I did not speak out
because I was not a communist;
Then they came for the socialists, and I did not speak out
because I was not a socialist;
Then they came for the trade unionists, and I did not speak out
because I was not a trade unionist;
Then they came for the Jews, and I did not speak out
because I was not a Jew;
Then they came for me
and there was no one left to speak out for me."
=================================================
I stand by the freedoms we were granted by birth, not by any god or gods. This is not an American ideal, in my opinion (how arrogant of us to think that it ever was), it is a human ideal.