A Journalist Finally Defends A Free Press
February 19, 2006, 1:50 pm![]() |
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Donnel Jones
Fleming Rose publishes an editorial in the Washington Post, explaining why he published the cartoons that satirized Muhammed in the Jyllands-Posten.
This is exactly why Karl Popper, in his seminal work “The Open Society and Its Enemies,” insisted that one should not be tolerant with the intolerant. Nowhere do so many religions coexist peacefully as in a democracy where freedom of expression is a fundamental right. In Saudi Arabia, you can get arrested for wearing a cross or having a Bible in your suitcase, while Muslims in secular Denmark can have their own mosques, cemeteries, schools, TV and radio stations.
Rose also addresses lessons from the recent past:
As a former correspondent in the Soviet Union, I am sensitive about calls for censorship on the grounds of insult. This is a popular trick of totalitarian movements: Label any critique or call for debate as an insult and punish the offenders. That is what happened to human rights activists and writers such as Andrei Sakharov, Vladimir Bukovsky, Alexander Solzhenitsyn, Natan Sharansky, Boris Pasternak. The regime accused them of anti-Soviet propaganda, just as some Muslims are labeling 12 cartoons in a Danish newspaper anti-Islamic.
The lesson from the Cold War is: If you give in to totalitarian impulses once, new demands follow. The West prevailed in the Cold War because we stood by our fundamental values and did not appease totalitarian tyrants.
Special Report: Danish Cartoons
Related: Arab/Muslim World, War Against Islamo-fascism, Europe, Political Correctness







February 20th, 2006 at 2:02 am
That’s the wonderful thing about blogging.. even had the rest of the Western media remained silent and not printed the cartoons, we all would have anyway (millions of us i might add). It’s a wonderful world.