If France Wants To “Stand With Charlie Hebdo,” It Must Stand First With Free Speech

300px-Eugène_Delacroix_-_La_liberté_guidant_le_peupleBelow is my column in the Sunday Washington Post on the free speech implications of the massacre in Paris and what it means to “stand with Charlie.” Rather the piece explores the status of free speech in France and The murders themselves are clearly the work of Islamic extremists who need little reason to kill innocent people in their twisted view of faith. However, the victims were journalists who had struggled with rising speech limitations and regulations in France as well as other European nations. (Indeed, at least one surviving journalist expressed contempt for those who now support free speech but remained silent in the face of past efforts to shut down the magazine). We have previously discussed the alarming rollback on free speech rights in the West, particularly in France (here and here and here and here and here and here) and England ( here and here and here and here and here and here and here and here and here and here). Much of this trend is tied to the expansion of hate speech and non-discrimination laws. We have seen comedians targets with such court orders under this expanding and worrisome trend. (here and here).

Liberte-egalite-fraterniteAs many on this blog know, I have a particular affection for France and its people. I was moved to see the protest spontaneously protest as thousands can out to defend liberty and French culture. It was a quintessential moment for the French. Indeed, it reminded many of us of how the French once voiced the “Rights of Man” and rallied around civil liberties at a defining moment for all of Western Civilization. We all felt victims of these attacks and most of us were moved to see our French counterparts joining together in one voice to support free speech. However, there needs to be some frank discussion of threat posed by increasing speech regulations and prosecutions. Ironically, while thousands have demonstrated against immigration as a threat to national identity, the real threat is not the immigrants themselves but the loss of national identity from these prosecutions. What is France if it is not its liberties and freedoms? France cannot simply be defined by brie and baguettes. Those who want to join Western countries must accept their core commitment to free speech as part of a social convenant not just with the government but with each other.

(The title of the piece is selected by the Post, not the author. (We usually learn of the titles when the reader does). The print version includes a title that the “threat” comes not terrorism but the French. Many may conclude that the piece somehow blames the French for these attacks which is obviously not true. Rather, with the rallies (including the huge rally today) in support of free speech, the column explores the primary cause of the erosion of free speech in France — and what can be done to restore it. Likewise, this article is not meant to suggest that any criticism of religion is no longer tolerated in France. After all, the magazine continued to publish despite efforts to prosecute the editors and journalists. Moreover, French courts have ruled in favor of free speech in some critical cases. However, while some efforts have been curtailed by the French courts, government censorship has been increasing, particularly when the challenged speech is directed at living individuals. Other restrictions are broader and the appetite for such regulation appears to be increasing. For example, a few years ago, when the government made the denial of the genocide of Armenians by Turkey a crime, the drafter of the law Senator Valerie Boyer dismissed the objections and said “That’s democracy.” Indeed, Boyer exemplified why John Adams warned that “ democracy never lasts long. It soon wastes, exhausts, and murders itself. There is never a democracy that did not commit suicide.” The clash between democracy and free speech is growing as different groups demand that others be silenced in the name of pluralism and tolerance.

Here is the column:

230px-Statue_place_République_ParisWithin an hour of the massacre at the headquarters of the Charlie Hebdo newspaper, thousands of Parisians spontaneously gathered at the Place de la Republique. Rallying beneath the monumental statues representing Liberty, Equality and Fraternity, they chanted “Je suis Charlie” (“I am Charlie”) and “Charlie! Liberty!” It was a rare moment of French unity that was touching and genuine.

Yet one could fairly ask what they were rallying around. The greatest threat to liberty in France has come not from the terrorists who committed such horrific acts this past week but from the French themselves, who have been leading the Western world in a crackdown on free speech.

Indeed, if the French want to memorialize those killed at Charlie Hebdo, they could start by rescinding their laws criminalizing speech that insults, defames or incites hatred, discrimination or violence on the basis of religion, race, ethnicity, nationality, disability, sex or sexual orientation. These laws have been used to harass the satirical newspaper and threaten its staff for years. Speech has been conditioned on being used “responsibly” in France, suggesting that it is more of a privilege than a right for those who hold controversial views.

In 2006, after Charlie Hebdo reprinted controversial cartoons of the prophet Muhammad that first appeared in a Danish newspaper, French President Jacques Chirac condemned the publication and warned against such “obvious provocations.”

“Anything that can hurt the convictions of someone else, in particular religious convictions, should be avoided,” he said. “Freedom of expression should be exercised in a spirit of responsibility.”

The Paris Grand Mosque and the Union of French Islamic Organizations sued the newspaper for insulting Muslims — a crime that carries a fine of up to 22,500 euros or six months’ imprisonment. French courts ultimately ruled in Charlie Hebdo’s favor. But France’s appetite for speech control has only grown since then.

The cases have been wide-ranging and bizarre. In 2008, for example, Brigitte Bardot was convicted for writing a letter to then-Interior Minister Nicolas Sarkozy about how she thought Muslims and homosexuals were ruining France. In 2011, fashion designer John Galliano was found guilty of making anti-Semitic comments against at least three people in a Paris cafe. In 2012, the government criminalized denial of the Armenian genocide (a law later overturned by the courts, but Holocaust denial remains a crime). In 2013, a French mother was sentenced for “glorifying a crime” after she allowed her son, named Jihad, to go to school wearing a shirt that said “I am a bomb.” Last year, Interior Minister Manuel Valls moved to ban performances by comedian Dieudonné M’Bala M’Bala, declaring that he was “no longer a comedian” but was rather an “anti-Semite and racist.” It is easy to silence speakers who spew hate or obnoxious words, but censorship rarely ends with those on the margins of our society.

Notably, among the demonstrators this past week at the Place de la Republique was Sasha Reingewirtz, president of the Union of Jewish Students, who told NBC News, “We are here to remind [the terrorists] that religion can be freely criticized.” The Union of Jewish Students apparently didn’t feel as magnanimous in 2013, when it successfully sued Twitter over posts deemed anti-Semitic. The student president at the time dismissed objections from civil libertarians, saying the social networking site was “making itself an accomplice and offering a highway for racists and anti-Semites.” The government declared the tweets illegal, and a French court ordered Twitter to reveal the identities of anti-Semitic posters.

Recently, speech regulation in France has expanded into non-hate speech, with courts routinely intervening in matters of opinion. For example, last year, a French court fined blogger Caroline Doudet and ordered her to change a headline to reduce its prominence on Google — for her negative review of a restaurant.

While France long ago got rid of its blasphemy laws, there is precious little difference for speakers and authors in prosecutions for defamation or hate speech. There may also be little difference perceived by extremists, like those in Paris, who mete out their own justice for speech the government defines as a crime. To them, this is only a matter of degree in responding to what the government has called unlawful provocations. As the radical Muslim cleric Anjem Choudary wrote this past week, “Why in this case did the French government allow the magazine Charlie Hebdo to continue to provoke Muslims?” Stéphane Charbonnier

It was the growing French intolerance of free speech that motivated the staff of Charlie Hebdo — and particularly its editor, Stéphane Charbonnier — who made fun of all religions with irreverent cartoons and editorials. Charbonnier faced continuing threats, not just of death from extremists but of criminal prosecution. In 2012, amid international protests over an anti-Islamic film, Charlie Hebdo again published cartoons of Muhammad. French Prime Minister Jean-Marc Ayrault warned that freedom of speech “is expressed within the confines of the law and under the control of the courts.”

Carbonnier wasn’t cowed — by the government pressure, the public protests or the inclusion of his name on a list of al-Qaeda targets. In an interview with the French newspaper Le Monde, he echoed Mexican revolutionary Emiliano Zapata and proclaimed, “I would rather die standing than live on my knees.” Carbonnier was the first person the gunmen asked for in their attack on the office, and he was one of the first to be killed.

The French, of course, have not been alone in rolling back protections on free speech. Britain, Canada and other nations have joined them. We have similar rumblings here in the United States. In 2009, the Obama administration shockingly supported Muslim allies trying to establish a new international blasphemy standard. And as secretary of state, Hillary Clinton invited delegations to Washington to work on implementing that standard and “to build those muscles” needed “to avoid a return to the old patterns of division.” Likewise, in 2012, President Obama went to the United Nations and declared that “the future must not belong to those who slander the prophet of Islam.”

The future once belonged to free speech. It was the very touchstone of Western civilization and civil liberties. A person cannot really defame a religion or religious figures (indeed, you cannot defame the dead in the United States). The effort to redefine criticism of religion as hate speech or defamation is precisely what Charbonnier fought to resist. He once said that by lampooning Islam, he hoped to make it “as banal as Catholicism” for the purposes of social commentary and debate.

220px-LibertyEqualityorDeathCharbonnier died, as he pledged, standing up rather than yielding. The question is how many of those rallying in the Place de la Republique are truly willing to stand with him. They need only to look more closely at those three statues. In the name of equality and fraternity, liberty has been curtailed in France. The terrible truth is that it takes only a single gunman to kill a journalist, but it takes a nation to kill a right.

Jonathan Turley is the Shapiro professor of public interest law at George Washington University.

Washington Post (Sunday) January 11, 2015

118 thoughts on “If France Wants To “Stand With Charlie Hebdo,” It Must Stand First With Free Speech”

  1. Yes, of course. Nothing says unity like not receiving an invitation to a national celebration of unity event.

  2. Marine Le Pen was not banned from the march. She was not invited as a honored participant and therefore she advised her supporters to boycott the marches. To not be invited as an honored participant is not the same as being banned.

  3. How ironic to hear all the folks here so in favor of publishing these cartoons, (which I’m in favor of, because religious people don’t deserve more rights or protections than anyone else), yet these very same people had a hissy fit over the publishing of the Torture Report. Such hypocrisy. I tend to think they aren’t as against censorship as they profess.

  4. Terrific column, professor. We have major problems of our own here at home. The First Amendment is under attack (actually, they all are, but we’ll focus on the First). Democrats announced last year that they have made it part of their long term agenda to amend it so they can regulate speech to try to rig elections. The IRS is no long non-partisan. It uses its power to silence speech of people who are not Democrats. We have a government that prosecutes journalists (James Risen) for writing stuff the government does not like. The John Doe investigations in Wisconsin were a blatant abuse of power intended to silence conservative speech with the hope of stealing elections.

    Extra-judicially, we have what are absurdly called “free speech zones” on college campuses that serve to regulate and silence speech. We have progressive mobs form on twitter and social media who seek to ruin financially people who don’t agree with them about gay marriage (Mozilla guy, Duck Dynasty guy, etc.) or who used the word “nigger” 30 years ago (Paula Deen) or used it during what he believed was a private conversation in the privacy of his own home (Donald Sterling).

    My ideological free speech hero, Harvey Silverglate, says that eventually the people will turn against the tyrants who seek to suppress speech and the suppressors will end up in the gulags. It can’t come soon enough.

  5. It’s interesting how quite a few commenters here called a Snowden a traitor, for engaging in whistleblowing, which is free speech. I think we are a nation of too many hypocrites.

  6. Jill, Good comment. Here in the US our President is turning the Constitution and our rights, on their head. JT has a lawsuit that may help turn that around.

  7. JT’s column is about the collusion of natural born citizens (as well as all persons) currently living in France against their own right of free speech.

    If France held to secular law in a secular state, then the rights of the people, whether immigrants or natural born citizens would be the same. Free speech would be a right protected by the state and its people.

    To remain protected by the state, citizens cannot back down on fundamental rights for all. Yet, this is exactly what has happened in France. This is why the newspaper feels there is hypocrisy in the behavior of French citizens. If they truly valued free speech they would have been in the streets protesting the govt.’s taking of it. Instead, citizens willingly agreed to give up that right. Now that the rights are violated through violence people are upset.

    Of course killing is horrible but the newspaper is trying to say they needed the French people to stand up for everyone’s rights all along. We don’t do this in the US either and we are living to regret our stupidity and cowardice.

  8. All the details I mentioned in the Paris 9/11 story that are consonant with false flags have now emerged. The siege ending in a standoff with reported hostages has the tell-tale signs of a false flag event. In fact, Amedi Coulibaby, one suspect, met with Sarkozy in 2009 as the below article shows. On top of that, Pentagon-dining guest and CIA asset Anwar al-Awlaki was also affiliated with the Kouachi suspects, sending funding according to reports. The story sounds like a Taken film, but I guess Liam Neeson was too busy filming part 17 to save the day. Aren’t the people the terrorists consort with relevant?.

    http://www.activistpost.com/2015/01/paris-terror-suspect-met-with-sarkozy.html

  9. Barkin,
    Thank you and your point about the comments is noteworthy. Nothing will subdue partisan ideologies quicker than a threat to the very freedoms that allow us to express them.

  10. English was spoken in my home growing up by all the kids, my parents often addressed us in German in the early years and we answered in oEnglish. Later on my parents spoke English to us and only rarely was German spoken. I think this was a mistake, as all four of us siblings speak German now with much difficulty. It was a point of pride among the adults in my extended family to be fluent in English.

  11. Po, being an immigrant myself, I can say you are correct in my own familiy’s experience. I do however see more immigrants now a days, who don’t assimilate well at all, never learning the language (mostly among the older folks). My parents made a point of learning the language and becoming “American” as soon as they could, while at the same time honoring the traditions of the old country. It’s a difficult dance for some. I think that some Americans are put off by immigrants who don’t seem thrilled to be here. That doesn’t mean however that immigrants cannot voice their first amendments rights, just like those born here.

  12. Thanks, Barkin. Italian was spoken in my grandparents home but English spoken virtually everywhere else. My grandma learned English reading murder mysteries. She loved Perry Mason books and TV show.

  13. I like the quote from Theodore Roosevelt which OLLY posted. But I also admire Nick’s comment about how a person who migrates here can still respect and revere his own culture and country back in Europe or elsewhere.

    There are some good comments today. And no one is barking at each other. Now If I can just keep some peace in the dogpack here on the marina. itchinBayDog thinks that all Muslims need to be deported.

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