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Postscript: Facts and free speech

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  • Postscript: Facts and free speech

    Los Angeles Times
    Dec 24 2011


    Postscript: Facts and free speech

    Readers object to The Times' stance opposing a proposed law in France
    to criminalize denial of the Armenian genocide.

    December 24, 2011

    Should people have the right to deny historical fact? The Times'
    editorial board thinks so, writing on Dec. 21 that a proposed law in
    France to criminalize denial of the Armenian genocide would be a
    "monstrous violation of free speech."

    Reader Janet Gross of Los Angeles took issue with the editorial
    board's view that genocide denial is an opinion worthy of free-speech
    protection:

    "The right to the opinion that the Armenian genocide in 1915
    perpetrated by the Turks never happened should be protected? How is
    that an opinion?

    "Here's how dictionary.com defines opinion: 'a belief or judgment that
    rests on grounds insufficient to produce complete certainty.' There is
    sufficient proof to show that what happened to Armenians was, in fact,
    genocide.

    "If you're saying that deliberately making false statements about
    historical events should be protected under law, fine. I think. How
    inflammatory that is will be set aside for now.

    "But let's keep the Universal Declaration of Human Rights' right to
    freedom of opinion for things like, 'I don't like our right-wing
    dictator.'"

    Senior editorial writer Michael McGough responds:

    People deny facts all the time - think of creationists and evolution -
    and we consider that an opinion, albeit a wacky one. I don't think we
    would support a law making it a crime to doubt Charles Darwin.

    The Supreme Court wrote in Gertz vs. Robert Welch Inc., a 1974 libel
    case: "Under the First Amendment, there is no such thing as a false
    idea. However pernicious an opinion may seem, we depend for its
    correction not on the conscience of judges and juries, but on the
    competition of other ideas. But there is no constitutional value in
    false statements of fact."

    But this is too neat a dichotomy. It would be one thing if the
    genocide deniers said, falsely, that France or some other country
    didn't recognize the Armenian massacre as a genocide. But "it was not
    a genocide" isn't disprovable in the same sense; one can have a crazy
    opinion about the definition of "genocide."

    When it comes to opinion, people are allowed to be subjective even
    where reasonable people agree that there is objective truth, whether
    it's the Armenian genocide or President Obama's birthplace.

    As we noted, the Universal Declaration of Human Rights calls for broad
    and robust freedom of opinion and expression. If the genocide denial
    bill passes, France will take a much narrower view of free speech than
    the declaration it endorsed in 1948.

    http://www.latimes.com/news/opinion/la-le-postscript-armenian-genocide-20111224,0,5656847.story?track=rss

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