What's good for the goose, is good for the gander in a democracy, isn't it?
MUSLIM
PUTS ‘FREE SPEECH’ TO THE TEST; JOKES ABOUT HOLOCAUST, 9/11
Hot
dog seller now subject of police investigation
15
January, 2015
UPDATE: Jerry
Reddick’s Twitter account has now been deleted.
A
Muslim in Canada decided to put ‘free speech’ to the test in the
aftermath of the Charlie Hebdo shootings by joking about 9/11 and the
Holocaust on Twitter. He is now the subject of a police
investigation.
Hot
dog seller Jerry Reddick took to the social media network yesterday
to experiment with how far he could take freedom of expression,
writing, “Let’s test just how free freedom of speech is when it’s
not Muslims being disrespected.”
What
followed was a series of tweets which were undoubtedly offensive but
for many wouldn’t be construed as any more odious than material
published by Charlie Hebdo.
They say the best cooked Jews can be found in Poland and Germany where the ovens are made from the best clay.#Freedomofspeech?
— Dawgfather PHD (@dawgfatherphd) January 14, 2015
In 2001 I thought Americans could fly by the way they were jumping from the twin towers in New York.#FreedomofspeechMUHAMMAD
— Dawgfather PHD (@dawgfatherphd) January 14, 2015
Hitler asked his people, "How do you like your Jews"? Well done with a bagel and a kosher pickle. Freedom of speech goes both ways #Muhammad
— Dawgfather PHD (@dawgfatherphd) January 14, 2015
If
I made a cartoon about Hitler and some Jews going into a oven; would
it be accepted like the cartoon of Muhammad as free speech?
— Dawgfather PHD (@dawgfatherphd) January 14, 2015
Within
hours of sending out the tweets, Reddick was reported to Halifax
police and is now
under investigation by
authorities.
“I
know you didn’t think freedom to insult worked both ways,” wrote
Reddick, adding, “My point about free speech being limited was made
loud and clear!”
Reddick’s
free speech experiment seems to confirm that making offensive jokes
about Muslims is acceptable under the banner of free speech, but
insulting Jews or victims of terror attacks or crimes against
humanity is not.
Many
would say this highlights hypocrisy, whereas others would point out
that the consequences of making jokes about Jews – criminal
investigation – is far less severe than the punishment metered out
by Islamic extremists to the publishers of Charlie Hebdo in Paris
last week.
The
main point of contention seems to be whether or not it represents an
act of hate speech to ridicule a crime against humanity, which in
countries like France is illegal, rather than a religion itself. In
Canada,
people have been charged with anti-Semitism despite it being
acknowledged that this was an infringement on their free speech
rights.
As Glenn
Greenwald highlighted,
the west’s new found support for ‘free speech’ is something of
a sham given that French comedian Dieudonné was arrested yesterday
for a Facebook post about the Charlie Hebdo attack in which he wrote,
“Tonight, as far as I’m concerned, I feel like Charlie
Coulibaly.”
Since
last weekend’s free speech march in Paris, French authorities have
opened 54 criminal cases as part of a move to crackdown on “hate
speech, anti-Semitism and glorifying terrorism.”
See also -
Dieudonné arrested over Facebook post on Paris gunman
French
comedian accused of justifying terrorism after linking attacker to
tribute slogan by writing ‘I feel like Charlie Coulibaly’
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