Free speech in Europe is dying. On January 20 the
Netherlands, once thought to be a tolerant, liberal country,
opened criminal proceedings against Geert Wilders, head of the
Dutch Freedom Party. He is accused of religious hate speech
for his film Fitna, which pointed out the obvious, that
Islam ain't the most tolerant of religions, as well as statements
made in support of proposals to limit Muslim immigration and ban
the Quran just as the Netherlands bans Adolf
Hitler's Mein Kampf.
The American media's silence about the Geert Wilders trial is
puzzling - the trial is explosive, much more so than most of
America's perennial "trials of the century." Wilders, leader of
the Freedom party, is arguably the Netherlands's most popular
politician, but for years he has had to live in safe houses,
including on military bases. He now faces the possibility of
imprisonment on charges of "group insult" and "incitement to
hatred," as defined by articles 137 (c) and (d) of the Dutch
penal code, for his public speeches and op-eds criticizing
Islam.
Apart from its direct and immediate threat to free speech, the
trial exposes the growth of political violence and repression
in the Netherlands, long lauded as the most tolerant country in
Europe, if not the world. Thirty years ago, I interviewed
then-prime minister Dries van Agt simply by strolling into his
unguarded parliamentary office and asking his secretary if he
could spare me a couple of minutes. Now it is a country where
politicians and artists are targeted by vigilantes and the
state.
In 2002, popular Dutch politician and gay activist Pim Fortuyn
was murdered by an environmentalist who took offense at
Fortuyn's criticism of Islam. In 2004, one of the country's
leading documentarians, Theo Van Gogh, was murdered, and almost
beheaded, on the streets of Amsterdam in retaliation for a film
he made about Islam (Submission). In 2006, a
gathering of scholars and commentators critical of Islam and
Islamism led the Dutch security service to invoke an alert
level just short of "national emergency." In 2008, the
prospective release of Wilders's film Fitna
led to special sessions of the Dutch cabinet. The country's
best-known member of parliament, Ayaan Hirsi Ali, for many
years had to live in hiding, and even briefly fled the country.
This is the situation in the heart of liberal Europe.
The worst religious persecutors abroad are Islamic states--think
Saudi Arabia, for instance. Persecuting Islamic states like
Pakistan are leading the campaign against the
"defamation" of religion through the United Nations. And
even more ominously, as evidenced by the Wilders
case, intolerant Islamic extremists are turning European
governments into their de facto agents.
One does not have to agree with every proposal and
statement made by Wilders to recognize the danger posed
by his prosecution. Americans have to remain on alert to
ensure that this sort of outrageous political correctness is not
allowed to curb free speech in America, including the right to
criticize Islam and Islamic extremists.
This is what passes for bravery in Europe and Liberal America
these days - let's not upset the animals, maybe they will leave
us alone. The "I only have to run faster than my friend to escape
the lion's jaws" school of survival. Take this war seriously or
prepare to start speaking Farsi. "Allah Akbar! pass the baba
ganoush!
Ole Sandberg| 2.9.10 @ 1:15PM
The headline is misleading. It is not free speech in general that
is dying in Europe, it is truthful speech about Islam that is
outlawed. You may say what you want so long as you don't mention
the most momentous topic: the islamization of Europe and its
horrific consequences for Western freedom and culture.
iphonecontactsbackup| 2.9.10 @ 8:16AM
This is the situation in the heart of liberal Europe
Warrior| 2.9.10 @ 9:29AM
Mr. Wilders is an infidel as are you Mr. Bandow.
Eric Cartman| 2.9.10 @ 9:44AM
This is what passes for bravery in Europe and Liberal America these days - let's not upset the animals, maybe they will leave us alone. The "I only have to run faster than my friend to escape the lion's jaws" school of survival. Take this war seriously or prepare to start speaking Farsi. "Allah Akbar! pass the baba ganoush!
Ole Sandberg| 2.9.10 @ 1:15PM
The headline is misleading. It is not free speech in general that is dying in Europe, it is truthful speech about Islam that is outlawed. You may say what you want so long as you don't mention the most momentous topic: the islamization of Europe and its horrific consequences for Western freedom and culture.