Commentary
By Harry Roque
An
allegedly anti-Islam trailer has reopened the debate on where the
limits to freedom of expression should be. While the movie “Innocence
of Muslims” that depicts Mohammad as a fraud, a womanizer and a
pedophile has had a very limited release, it is the film’s trailer
uploaded on YouTube that has caused massive unrest in Islamic
societies. The unrest appears to have subsided, but at its peak, it
claimed the life of no less than the US ambassador to Libya. And
already, international media groups have expressed alarm that the
decision of YouTube and Google to ban the trailer in certain
countries, obviously in response to the outcry against it, is a
“slippery slope” as far as freedom of expression is concerned.
Others, though, have expressed the view that expression that prods
members of a religious group to violent reaction should not be
protected by freedom of expression.
While
the outcry against the trailer is unprecedented in terms of the
violence it has elicited, the debate on where the boundaries of
expression lie is not new. In the United States, a member of
Jehovah’s Witnesses who addressed a police officer as a “Goddamned
racketeer” and “a damned fascist” was found guilty of violating
a New Hampshire statute penalizing hate speech. In Chaplinsky v. New
Hampshire, the US Supreme Court declared: “There are certain
well-defined and narrowly limited classes of speech, the prevention
and punishment of which have never been thought to raise any
constitutional problem. These include x x x insulting or ‘fighting’
words, those which by their very utterance inflict injury or tend to
incite an immediate breach of the peace.”
That
Chaplinsky is legal basis for penalizing hate speech is disputed.
Prof. Fredrick Schauer of the University of Virginia Law School
argues: “In contrast to this international consensus that various
forms of hate speech need to be prohibited by law and that such
prohibition creates no or few free speech issues, the United States
remains steadfastly committed to the opposite view. … all such
speech remains constitutionally protected.”
As
if to validate this view, the US Supreme Court in the subsequent case
of Hustler v. Falwell appeared to have downplayed its own ruling in
Chaplinsky: “Debate on public issues will not be uninhibited if the
speaker must run the risk that it will be proved in court that he
spoke out of hatred; even if he did speak out of hatred, utterances
honestly believed contribute to the free interchange of ideas and the
ascertainment of truth.”
In
the discourse on whether or not hate speech should be accorded
protection, effort is exerted to uphold freedom of expression to the
fullest degree possible. As explained by the US Supreme Court: “At
the heart of the First Amendment is the recognition of the
fundamental importance of the free flow of ideas and opinions on
matters of public interest and concern. The freedom to speak one’s
mind is not only an aspect of individual liberty—and thus a good
unto itself—but also is essential to the common quest for truth and
the vitality of society as a whole. We have therefore been
particularly vigilant to ensure that individual expressions of ideas
remain free from governmentally imposed sanctions. The First
Amendment recognizes no such thing as a ‘false’ idea. As Justice
Holmes wrote, ‘When men have realized that time has upset many
fighting faiths, they may come to believe even more than they believe
the very foundations of their own conduct that the ultimate good
desired is better reached by free trade in ideas—that the best test
of truth is the power of the thought to get itself accepted in the
competition of the market…’”
In
fact, freedom of expression extends even to offensive speech: “The
fact that society may find speech offensive is not a sufficient
reason for suppressing it. Indeed, if it is the speaker’s opinion
that gives offense, that consequence is a reason for according it
constitutional protection. For it is a central tenet of the First
Amendment that the government must remain neutral in the marketplace
of ideas.”
This
is why, although the death of Ambassador J. Christopher Stevens is to
be condemned as an act of barbarity, he did not die in vain. He died
as a symbol of a freedom that has made democracy worldwide possible.
He died in the hands of those who are bereft of both capacity and the
will to compete in the free market of ideas.
But
is not inciting against a religion equally an affront on freedom of
religion?
Certainly
not. In our constitutional tradition, freedom of religion consists of
two negative state obligations: not to endorse a religion, referred
to as the nonestablishment clause; and not to interfere with its free
exercise. Were the state to prohibit the showing of a film clip
because it would offend a religious group, this is tantamount to
endorsement of a religion which is prohibited. In any case, even
caustic attacks against a religion are protected speech. Said the
Philippine Supreme Court in INC v. CA: “In a State where there
ought to be no difference between the appearance and the reality of
freedom of religion, the remedy against bad theology is better
theology. The bedrock of freedom of religion is freedom of thought
and it is best served by encouraging the marketplace of dueling
ideas. When the luxury of time permits, the marketplace of ideas
demands that speech should be met by more speech for it is the spark
of opposite speech, the heat of colliding ideas that can fan the
embers of truth.”
Without
a doubt, Muslims must have a reason to be bitter about a film that
they see as an affront to their most important religious figure. But
the remedy in a democratic society is not to ban such a film, but for
Muslims to prove in both word and deed that the affront is apparent
and real. Certainly, the resort to mob rule is not the means to
prevail in the free marketplace of ideas.
Harry
Roque teaches constitutional and international Law at the University
of the Philippines College of Law. He is also president of Media
Defense Southeast Asia, a group of lawyers that defends the media and
espouses freedom of expression.
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