Tuesday, January 15, 2008

Australians for Ezra Levant


It's not getting much attention from Canada's big newspapers, but the show trial of Ezra Levant, the former publisher of the Western Standard, for publishing the Danish Mohammed cartoons was featured in The Australian on Tuesday.

Janet Albrechtsen warns about the impact well-meaning, politically-correct, human rights tribunals could have if they were adopted in Australia.


Canada shows where we will end up in due time: with a system of governance where large swaths of social policy have been delegated by parliament to the unelected grey bureaucrats, who get to implement "progressive" policies that could never get through a body of elected politicians.

As the jurisdiction of these commissions expands into areas never originally intended, fundamental freedoms contract. When state bodies start enforcing the religious prohibitions of Muslims, which forbid the depiction of the prophet Mohammed, it destroys a few fundamental Western values, namely the separation of mosque and state and, more critically, the freedom of speech.

This is not simply a defence of Levant because he is a conservative columnist. Far from it. If a bleeding heart on the Left was dragged before a human rights commission for thinking and saying unpalatable things, even stupid things, the defence would remain the same. Defending the right to say the right things is easy. Defending the right to say the wrong things, even offensive things, is what counts if we are serious about free speech.

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