Hamza Kashgari |
By Barbara Kay
A few months ago, a young
Saudi man, Hamza Kashgari, expressed his views on the prophet Mohammed in a
Tweet: “I have loved things about you and I have hated things about you and
there is a lot I don’t understand about you. I will not pray for you.” A
Facebook group of 20,000 soon demanded his execution for apostasy under sharia
law. He is imprisoned awaiting trial and possible execution.
Execution for religious
blasphemy? How primitive. In Canada, we merely have blasphemers called up
before human rights commissions, to be humiliated and occasionally bankrupted.
These commissions, in their speech-suppressive mode, are ugly things. But they seem benign by comparison with what’s going on in the U.K., where the system seems to hover somewhere between Canada and Saudi Arabia in its treatment of blasphemers.
Welsh university student Liam
Stacey has been sentenced to 56 days in jail for a crime that, whatever its
formal name, essentially amounts to the secular Western equivalent of
blasphemy. On March 17, when soccer player Fabrice Muamba collapsed during a
playoff game, and seemed to have died (he later recovered, though is still in
serious condition), Stacey tweeted: “LOL, F–k Muamba. He’s dead.” A torrent of
hostile blowback evoked several more tweets from Stacey containing racist
material such as “wog” and “go pick some cotton.”
His racist comments were
reported to the police and he was arrested, handcuffs and all. Stacey’s abject
apologies cut no ice with the judge. Days later, an appeal court upheld the
first decision, agreeing 56 days of incarceration was an appropriate
consequence for speech with “racist intent.” (Canadian human rights commissions
may be a threat to freedom — but at least, they can’t send you to jail.)
This case is not an isolated
example of the Brits’ obsession with protecting minority sensitivities. In
2009, David Booker, an employee at a homeless shelter run by the Church of
England’s Society of St. James, confided in a conversation with a colleague
that he didn’t hold with vicars marrying their gay partners. The colleague
casually passed his opinion on to a superior, who immediately suspended
Brooker, announcing that “action has been taken to safeguard both residents and
staff.”
Sometimes citizens are
successful in reclaiming their rights. Last September, the owner of Salt &
Light Coffee House, a Christian café in Lancashire, was told by police he must
stop showing DVDs displaying New Testament biblical texts, because of a complaint
regarding “insulting” and “homophobic” material. The owner was informed that
the display of “insulting” words was a breach of the Public Order Act. A
communication spokesman for the Christian Institute, a national charity that
defends the religious liberty of Christians, remarked: “We’ve all seen the
police stand by while extremist Muslims hold placards calling for infidels to
be beheaded, but woe betide a Christian café displaying Bible texts.” The owner
of the café has resumed playing his DVDs on the advice of a lawyer.
You might think the Lancashire
police would have learned their lesson in 2005, when they had to shell out
£10,000 to a Christian couple they interrogated for telling their town council
that they didn’t agree with homosexuality. But once the state’s rank and file
have been indoctrinated into political correctness, neither reason nor
experience can deflect them from their perceived duty of harassing the thought
criminals they have been trained to hate.
In sentencing Stacey, the
first judge acknowledged that Stacey was drunk during the exchanges, but
nevertheless concluded, “I have no choice but to impose an immediate custodial
sentence to reflect the public outrage.”
Really — “no choice”? The
judge could have ordered a public letter of apology to Muamba’s family. Or
community service. Or a course in substance abuse.
Or … nothing. In a free
country, why shouldn’t the shame and ridicule of your peers (and, in this case,
total strangers) not be sufficient to punish disgusting utterances, racist or otherwise?
(Stacey was about to write his final exams leading to a career in forensic
biology. That’s over, and his life may be ruined.)
This appalling judgment sets a
troubling precedent. One would think that the draconian treatment we see meted
out to critics of Islam in undemocratic countries would result here in a deeper
appreciation of the treasure we hold in freedom of speech. Strangely, it’s the
other way around. They should be emulating us, but we’re emulating them.
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