Salman Rushdie and the conflict between expression and blasphemy

Salman Rushdie on BlasphemyChristiane Amanpour discusses the conflict between creative expression and blasphemy with author Salman Rushdie.

via Yahoo! News – Latest News & Headlines http://news.yahoo.com/blogs/around-the-world-abc-news/salman-rushdie-conflict-between-creative-expression-blasphemy-030729304.html

Free Speech in the Muslim World? Ask the Egyptian TV Station That First Aired the Anti-Islam Movie

The story of Al Nas TV shows that there is room in Muslim societies for tolerating religiously offensive ideas.

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Egyptian TV host Khaled Abdallah discusses Innocence of Muslims on Al Nas. (YouTube)

For all the damage that mobs and armed groups have done in majority-Muslim nations in the past week, there is one target that they missed. The mobs in Cairo, one of many cities where protests followed the Innocence of Muslims video ridiculing the Prophet Muhammed, overlooked the Egyptian TV station that had actually broadcast it, Al Nas TV. Egyptian prosecutors have now issued arrest warrants for eight people in the United States with connections to the film — but they, too, overlooked the TV station.

While the film’s creators have received the attention they craved, it’s more illuminating to focus on Al Nas TV, which made them famous. The station’s story even suggests one possible answer to the problem of offensive speech in a number of volatile majority-Muslim societies.

The video, aired by Al Nas, was the latest slight to Islam that has prompted widespread violence. Now the new Arab democracies may be forced to consider how to balance speech rights with popular demands for blasphemy restrictions. Egypt’s Muslim Brotherhood has repeated its call for an international convention against giving offense to religion. Tunisian leaders said the crisis underlined the need for a blasphemy law, of the sort that already exists in countries such as Pakistan. We’re told of a cultural divide between the West, with its traditional freedoms, and majority-Muslim countries extraordinarily sensitive to insults to Islam.

A lesson of Al Nas TV is that maybe this divide is not so great after all. The Egyptian station was broadcasting in a manner that Westerners would recognize — airing a controversy and discussing its implications — and its staff has reason to hope for Western-style protection of speech.

Al Nas, the name of which translates as “the people,” is financed by the Saudi government and associated with the conservative Salafist movement. Its Muslim employees broadcast the crude portrayal of the Prophet Mohammad to fellow Muslims, even though Muslims are forbidden from making images of the Prophet.

A reconstruction of events by the McClatchy news service indicates the TV station was more than a bystander. The offensive film clip was almost unknown — an irrelevant piece of trash on the Internet — until a film producer managed to place a tiny item in an Egyptian newspaper. But it wasn’t until the TV broadcast that things really blew up.

The hosts played an extended clip of the video dubbed in Arabic, pondering what should be done. One, Khalid Abdullah (whose past enlightened statements include the analysis, “Iran is more dangerous to us than the Jews”), asked if anyone had apologized. His co-host Mohammed Hamdy declared, “An apology is not enough. I want them convicted.”

Hamdy’s anger is understandable. But if he wants someone convicted for offensive speech, shouldn’t he start with himself?

After all, Hamdy is in Egypt, where the government need not follow America’s Constitutional protection of free speech. If Egyptian prosecutors can accuse a filmmaker in the United States of “threatening national unity” or “assaulting Islam,” crimes that carry the death penalty, surely they can actually arrest the men in Cairo who propagated the video.

Of course, I’m not suggesting that Egyptian authorities should arrest Hamdy; I hope that they don’t. But there is a way he could defend his role in this incident: by invoking the principle of free speech.

This is essentially what the station has already done. In presenting the video, the broadcasters explained that they spread offensive speech because the public needed to be informed of in injustice. “No other TV channels would do this,” Abdullah declared on the air. “Respectable media should bring this out. We have nothing more precious than the Prophet.”

In other words, Al Nas was using the freedom of speech in the same way it is exercised in other countries, including those in the West. Exposing outrages is a central role of the free media, after all. Informing the public is a vital part of democracy, and will be essential in the Arab world as democracy spreads.

Now that even conservative Islamists have proven themselves reliant on free speech, it’s hard to see how Egypt can go back. The next logical step would be for Egyptians of all beliefs to insist upon free speech. The best response to offensive speech is usually not to convict the speaker, ban their words, or storm some foreign embassy. It’s far more effective to answer speech with speech, to engage with the offending idea openly and, hopefully, discredit it.

The public can even use free speech to question the media if it behaves irresponsibly. Some public questioning of Al Nas has begun, and the TV station is on the defensive. “We did not mean… to harm the national unity,” insisted Essam Rady, the editor of the program, in an interview with NPR. He said the program merely “monitors what happens on the Egyptian street,” and that if Al Nas really wanted to incite riots, the station would have played even more of the video than it did.

Rioters bear responsibility for rioting, not TV anchors. But Al Nas broadcasters must now ask, as Western journalists sometimes do, if they lunged at an incendiary story and ended up getting used. Film producers who were salivating to smear Muslims must have been thrilled when Al Nas became a distributor for their product. If they’re going to have a democracy, Egyptians are stuck with free speech — and also with the responsibility to use it better than Al Nas did this month.

via International : The Atlantic http://www.theatlantic.com/international/archive/2012/09/free-speech-in-the-muslim-world-ask-the-egyptian-tv-station-that-first-aired-the-anti-islam-movie/262567/

I didn’t expect the world to be so big

Xkcd Big World

Today’s XKCD must have taken Randall several years to draw…if you click and drag, it goes on forever. Or not quite forever, but Dan Catt did some figuring and:

Ok, so the XKCD map printed at 300dpi is around 46 foot / 14 meters wide, half that at magazine 600dpi quality.

Here’s a better Google Maps-like way to explore the entire world.

Tags: Dan Catt   Randall Munroe   XKCD

via kottke.org http://kottke.org/12/09/i-didnt-expect-the-world-to-be-so-big

France Rushes to Shut Down Embassies and Schools After Satirical Magazine Makes Fun of Muhammad [International Incident]

France Rushes to Shut Down Embassies and Schools After Satirical Magazine Makes Fun of Muhammad Not deterred by the explosive reaction to its last depiction of the Prophet Muhammad, the French satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo has once again published caricatures of the revered Islamic figure, prompting the French Foreign Ministry to order the closure of embassies, diplomatic missions, and schools in some 20 countries as a “security precaution.”

The Muhammad cartoons, which appear in the Parisian publication’s latest issue, were printed in response to violent protests around the world sparked by the anti-Islam film Innocence of Muslims.

According to the AFP, one of the more controversial drawings depicts Muhammad “exposing his posterior to a film director, a scene inspired by a 1963 film starring French film star Brigitte Bardot.”

Charlie Hebdo‘s last attempt to ridicule Muhammad resulted in the firebombing of its offices. This time around, riot police were stationed around the premises to prevent a similar attack.

Despite the enhanced security measures, the French government said it stood by the magazine’s right to publish the cartoons. However, Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius cautioned against “throwing oil on the fire.”

Muslim organizations in France, which has more Muslims than any other western European nation, asked community members to “rise above their anger” and respond to the magazine’s “stupid provocation” through legal means.

Speaking with the AP, one of Charlie Hebdo’s cartoonists, Tignous, defended the publication’s actions, saying “it’s just a drawing, it’s not a provocation.”

[Photo via Getty]

via Gawker http://gawker.com/5944498/france-rushes-to-shut-down-embassies-and-schools-after-satirical-french-magazine-makes-fun-of-muhammad

Four Big Trends of TV Development Season


From “Homeland” copycats to Big Name Reboots, what’s on deck as the season picks up.

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via Hollywood Reporter http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/news/fall-tv-shows-2012-homeland-ellen-degeneres-371374

Fox’s Regime Change: Why Tom Rothman is Out, and What’s Next


Rupert Murdoch dismisses a top exec amid morale issues as Jim Gianopulos sets his plan – and how Jeffrey Katzenberg fits in.

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via Hollywood Reporter http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/news/fox-tom-rothman-rupert-murdoch-avatar-371454

Mitt Romney’s Undelivered Speech: I’ve Never Believed in ‘Makers and Takers’

The Wall Street Journal editorial page published excerpts of what it calls a “draft” of a speech provided to the newspaper by the Romney campaign at some point in the past, but apparently was never delivered by Mitt Romney. In it, Romney touches on the same topics that drew criticism this week, but goes in the opposite direction, saying that he has “never believed” that Americans are divided between “makers and takers.”

“You’ve probably also heard some people—some even in my own party—divide Americans between ‘makers’ and ‘takers,’” the speech reads. “As if half the country wants to live off the other half. I’ve never believed that. That’s no different from the kind of divisive politics that the President practices when he pits the wealthy against everyone else.”

The speech also takes note of those on food stamps, disability and the unemployed: “This is a national scandal. Not because those fellow Americans are free-loaders, but because they aren’t able to get a good job that pays enough to be self-sufficient and lets them fulfill their human potential. “

via Homepage http://www.nationaljournal.com/2012-presidential-campaign/mitt-romney-s-undelivered-speech-i-ve-never-believed-in-makers-and-takers–20120919

Calling it a bombshell would be a bit corny

A new study on GM corn [fr], conducted in secret by a french team of researchers led by Gilles-Eric Séralini, is to be published today by Food and Chemical Toxicology. Its results are chilling.

Started in 2006, the study managed to covertly acquire bags of Monsanto’s NK 603. After a few years of feeding it to rats, while maintaining secrecy (encrypted mails, no phone, misdirection through decoy studies), the results are in: GM-fed rats show an explosion of tumors with two to five times the rate of the non-GM-fed control group, and those tumors happen far earlier than in the control group: 20 months before for males, 3 for females. Considering an average life expectency of 2 years, the difference is huge.

A documentary is set to be released on the september 26, based on an upcoming book by Gilles-Eric Séralini, to be released next week.

via MetaFilter http://www.metafilter.com/120061/Calling-it-a-bombshell-would-be-a-bit-corny

‘Raped by My Teacher’

She was a student at Horace Mann when a teacher began assaulting her. As told to Abigail Pesta.

via The Daily Beast – Latest Articles http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2012/09/19/raped-by-a-teacher-one-woman-s-tragic-past-at-horace-mann-school.html?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+thedailybeast%2Farticles+%28The+Daily+Beast+-+Latest+Articles%29

AT&T FaceTime plan draws fire

Three public interest groups say they will file a net neutrality complaint with the FCC.

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via POLITICO – TOP Stories http://www.politico.com/news/stories/0912/81348.html