Peter Tatchell says free speech is under attack and needs defending
Saturday 25 March 2006
Freedom of Expression Rally
2pm Trafalgar Square, London
"The strength and survival of free society and the advance of human
knowledge depend on the free exchange of ideas. All ideas are capable
of giving offence, and some of the most powerful ideas in human
history, such as those of Galileo and Darwin, have given profound
religious offence in their time. The free exchange of ideas depends on
freedom of expression and this includes the right to criticise and
mock. We assert and uphold the right of freedom of expression and call
on our elected representatives to do the same. We abhor the fact that
people throughout the world live under mortal threat simply for
expressing ideas and we call on our elected representatives to protect
them from attack and not to give comfort to the forces of intolerance
that besiege them."
This is the statement of principle that Saturday’s freedom of
expression rally has been called to defend. How can anyone disagree
with these progressive values? I can’t, and that is why I will be
joining the thousands in Trafalgar Square.
The rally is backed mostly by secular, humanist and libertarian
groups, but with support from some left-wingers and liberal Muslims.
Some of my friends on the left are refusing to take part. Preferring
to remain marginal but pure, they object to the involvement of
right-wing groups like the Libertarian Alliance and the Freedom
Association. I share their distaste for these groups. But my
participation on Saturday is based on supporting the statement of
principle, not on who else is taking part. I will not let the dubious
politics of others dissuade me from supporting what are important,
progressive humanitarian values.
Sections of the left moan that the rally is being supported the right.
Well, if these socialists object so strongly why don’t they organise
their own demo in support of free speech?
The truth is that is that some of the left would rarely, if ever,
rally to defend freedom of expression because they don’t
wholeheartedly believe in it. Mired in the immoral morass of cultural
relativism, they no longer endorse Enlightenment values and universal
human rights. Their support for free speech is now qualified by so
many ifs and buts. When push comes to shove, it is more or less
worthless.
As a left-wing Green, committed to human rights and social justice, I
do not share the politics of some other speakers and rallyists. But
this is the whole point of Saturdays’ demo – to defend the free speech
of those with whom we disagree.
While I support the right of newspapers to publish cartoons satirising
any religious or atheist leader, there are bigger, more important free
speech issues to fight.
When I speak in Trafalgar Square on Saturday, I will defend Muslim
communities against prejudice and discrimination, attack the BNP and
the war on terror, and condemn the government’s erosion of civil
liberties and individual freedom.
My speech will also assert the right to condemn British troops in Iraq
and Afghanistan, urge less state secrecy and more freedom of
information, and call for the disestablishment of the Church of
England and the freedom to insult the Queen, Prime Minister and
Archbishop of Canterbury.
When it comes to free speech, I am an equal opportunities free
speecher. I even defend the right of others to mock and ridicule me. I
may not like it. It might be unfair. But that’s democracy.
Some critics are mischievously portraying Saturday’s protest as an
anti-Muslim rally. I condemn any attempt to demonise or scapegoat my
Muslim brothers and sisters. I also reject the suggestion of a clash
of civilisations.
Both fundamentalists and progressives can be found in all faiths,
politics, ethnicities and cultures. No society has a monopoly of
enlightenment and plurality. Muslim societies like Bangladesh have
produced Enlightenment icons like the feminist writer Taslima Nasreen;
while supposedly cultured nations like Britain and France have spawned
the Dark Ages ignorance of the British National Party and the Front
National.
When considering the vexed question of the limits to free speech,
perhaps we should start with first principles:
Article 19 of the UN Universal Declaration of Human Rights states
that: “Everyone has the right to freedom of opinion and expression.”
By this standard, freedom of expression is a fundamental human right
for every person on this planet. It is a right for all, not some. If
we expect free speech for ourselves, then we are duty bound to ensure
that it also exists for others.
Contrary to what the cultural relativists try to suggest, freedom of
expression is not a western value; it is a universal humanitarian
value that every member state of the United Nations has pledged to
uphold. By demanding the right to free speech, we are not seeking to
impose western values on non-western nations. We are merely asking the
governments of the world to honour the human rights commitments they
agreed when they signed up to the UN.
Free speech is one of the litmus tests of a free and democratic
society. Alas, not everyone shares a commitment to democracy. To
maintain their power, political and religious tyrants have always
censored ideas and opinions. Some liberals and left-wingers, often
with the honourable motive of tackling prejudice, have also attempted
to place constraints on what can be publicly said on issues such as
race and sexuality. This authoritarianism lite has its downside too.
Suppressing intolerant ideas doesn’t make them go away. They just go
underground and fester. This is not a solution.
While many people of faith have been recently up-in-arms over
cartoons, plays and operas they find offensive, ironically it is the
free expression they oppose that is the precondition for genuine
political and religious freedom. It is in the interests of people of
all political and religious beliefs - and of none - to defend freedom
of expression. By defending the freedom of others we are also
defending our own freedom.
The right to free speech is the surest guarantor of religious freedom.
Without freedom of expression, religious minorities tend to be
persecuted by religious majorities. Witness, in theocratic Iran, the
victimisation of Sunni Muslims by Shia Muslims.
A democratic secular state is the true protector of all religions. It
guarantees religious freedom and equality, ensuring that no one faith
lords it over others. That is why, among other things, I favour the
disestablishment of the Church of England, to end the privileged
constitutional and legal status of this increasingly diminished
protestant sect.
Freedom of expression should not, of course, be abused. A harmonious,
good natured society is one where people are civil and courteous to
each other. Prejudice and discrimination have no place in civilised
discourse. Offensive language - whether sexist, anti-gay or racist –
is rude and divisive and should always be challenged.
Those who justify legal limits to free speech need to answer a number
of questions:
When it comes to censorship and bans, where do you start and where do
you stop? Who decides what is sufficiently offensive to merit
restriction? At what point do you draw the line? Isn’t this an
inevitably subjective judgement? When does a well-meaning desire to
protect vulnerable communities spill over into the dangerous territory
of giving some communities privileged protection and immunity from
criticism?
All human beings are worthy of respect, but not all ideas deserve
respect. There is, for example, no obligation to respect Nazism,
misogyny, white supremacism, homophobia or creationism.
I grew up in Australia in the 1960s, during a period of
McCarthyite-style red-baiting. Because I opposed the US and Australian
war against Vietnam, I was denounced as a communist and nearly lost my
job. From firsthand experience, I know freedom of expression is a
precious freedom that must be safeguarded.
That is why I argue the right to free speech can be legitimately
restricted only when it involves incitement to violence or
libel/defamation. The threat of violence and the spreading of untruths
diminish free, honest and open debate. Otherwise, speech must remain
free. The rare exceptions are instances like not being free to publish
terrorist bomb-making instructions.
The price of living in a free society is that we are sometimes
confronted with views we find offensive and insulting. Faced with
bigoted, intolerant opinions, the most effective way to challenge them
is by calm, reasoned debate to dispel ignorance and prejudice – not by
bans and censorship. Physical threats and violence are unacceptable.
In January, I challenged Sir Iqbal Sacranie of the Muslim Council of
Britain when he denounced homosexuality as immoral, harmful and
diseased. But I did not seek to ban him, nor did I support calls for
his prosecution. I defended Sir Iqbal’s right to free speech. Will he
and his fellow MCB leaders now defend my right to freedom of
expression? Or is Sir Iqbal another of those selective free speech
proponents? Freedom of expression for me, but not for you?
Further information:
Peter Tatchell 020 7403 1790
www.petertatchell.net
Ends
-------------------------------------------------
Comments
Display the following comment