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Sarkozy's Free Speech Faux Pas

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  • Sarkozy's Free Speech Faux Pas

    SARKOZY'S FREE SPEECH FAUX PAS

    Los Angeles Times
    http://www.latimes.com/news/opinion/opinionla/la-ed-genocide-20120305,0,679559.story
    March 5 2012
    CA

    The French president's plan to revisit a failed law to criminalize
    denial of the Armenian genocide is ill-considered and alarming.

    If you live in a country that truly values free speech, then no
    matter what opinion you hold - whether it's rational or irrational -
    you have the right to voice it. You can deny the Holocaust happened,
    or that men walked on the moon, without fear that you will be brought
    up on criminal charges. (Of course, you still risk public rebuke or
    humiliation from people who hold the opinion that you are ridiculous.)
    That freedom is generally considered a fundamental human right.

    So it was reassuring when France's Constitutional Council last week
    struck down a proposed law that would have criminalized the denial or
    minimizing of the genocide of Armenians at the hands of Ottoman Turks
    in the early 20th century. The law would have punished such a denial
    with up to a year in prison and a maximum fine of roughly $60,000.

    Last year, when France's Parliament was first considering the bill,
    we said on this page that we found it to be a particularly egregious
    encroachment on civil liberties. The French council has now concluded
    much the same, saying such a law "infringed unconstitutionally on
    the exercise of the liberty of expression and communication."

    Just to be clear: There is no doubt in our minds that more than 1
    million Armenians were killed by Turks beginning in 1915 in an act of
    genocide. It happened. It's history. And the sooner the whole world
    understands that and accepts it, the better. Nevertheless, the way to
    win an argument is not by throwing your opponents in prison. That's
    counterproductive - the strategy of dictators. Instead, misinformation
    should be fought with more and better information.

    That's why it was bad news when President Nicolas Sarkozy announced
    that he would resubmit the bill - revising it, in ways he didn't
    specify, to take into account the council's objections.

    This is an ill-considered and puzzling move on the French president's
    part. What new version of this law could possibly levy penalties for
    denial of the Armenian genocide but not harm the right to free speech
    that the French council correctly noted?

    Sarkozy's office released a statement that said, in part, that denial
    of genocide is "not only an insult to the memory of victims and the
    dignity of their descendants, but also a threat against our national
    community." He's correct about the insult to the memory of the
    victims. But it is criminalizing speech that poses a threat to France.

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