DebateGate

General Category => 3DHS => Topic started by: The_Professor on April 18, 2007, 04:42:09 PM

Title: EU aims to criminalise Holocaust denial
Post by: The_Professor on April 18, 2007, 04:42:09 PM
EU aims to criminalise Holocaust denial
By Tobias Buck in Brussels

Published: April 17 2007 19:56 | Last updated: April 17 2007 19:56

Laws that make denying or trivialising the Holocaust a criminal offence punishable by jail sentences will be introduced across the European Union, according to a proposal expecting to win backing from ministers Thursday.

Offenders will face up to three years in jail under the proposed legislation, which will also apply to inciting violence against ethnic, religious or national groups.

Diplomats in Brussels voiced confidence on Tuesday that the controversial plan, which has been the subject of heated debate for six years, will be endorsed by member states. However, the Baltic countries and Poland are still holding out for an inclusion of “Stalinist crimes” alongside the Holocaust in the text – a move that is being resisted by the majority of other EU countries.

The latest draft, seen by the Financial Times, will make it mandatory for all Union member states to punish public incitement “to violence or hatred directed against a group of persons or a member of such a group defined by reference to race, colour, religion, descent or national or ethnic origin”.

They will also have to criminalise “publicly condoning, denying or grossly trivialising crimes of genocide, crimes against humanity and war crimes” when such statements incite hatred or violence against minorities.

Diplomats stressed the provision had been carefully worded to include only denial of the Holocaust – the Nazi mass murder of Jews during the second world war – and the genocide in Rwanda in 1994.

They also stressed that the wording was designed to avoid criminalising comical plays or films about the Holocaust such as the Italian comedian Roberto Benigni’s prize-winning Life is Beautiful . The text expressly upholds countries’ constitutional traditions relating to the freedom of expression.

Holocaust denial is already a criminal offence in several European countries, including Germany and Austria. It is not a specific crime in Britain, though UK officials said it could already be tackled under existing legislation.

In an attempt to assuage Turkish fears, several EU diplomats said the provisions would not penalise the denial of mass killing of Armenians by Ottoman troops in the aftermath of the 1915 collapse of the Ottoman empire. Turkey strongly rejects claims that this episode amounted to genocide.

The proposal draws what is likely to be a controversial distinction between inciting violence against racial or ethnic groups and against religious groups. Attacks against Muslims, Jews or other faiths will only be penalised if they go on to incite violence against ethnic or racial groups, the draft text states.

http://www.ft.com/cms/s/122134be-ed14-11db-9520-000b5df10621.html
Title: Re: EU aims to criminalise Holocaust denial
Post by: Amianthus on April 18, 2007, 07:50:22 PM
Next step: "Thought Police".
Title: Re: EU aims to criminalise Holocaust denial
Post by: sirs on April 18, 2007, 07:53:42 PM
BAD Move
Title: Re: EU aims to criminalise Holocaust denial
Post by: Plane on April 19, 2007, 12:39:42 AM
I can't favor legislation to tell people how to think.
Title: Re: EU aims to criminalise Holocaust denial
Post by: sirs on April 19, 2007, 01:03:44 AM
I can't favor legislation to tell people how to think.

Precisely
Title: Re: EU aims to criminalise Holocaust denial
Post by: _JS on April 19, 2007, 09:50:32 AM
Excellent move by the European Union. The only groups that use this rubbish in Europe are the BNP, National Front, and other neo-fascists who do their best to incite riots and harm the public anyway.

It is already law in many European nations and:

Quote
They also stressed that the wording was designed to avoid criminalising comical plays or films about the Holocaust such as the Italian comedian Roberto Benigni’s prize-winning Life is Beautiful . The text expressly upholds countries’ constitutional traditions relating to the freedom of expression.

The law has been in place in West Germany (now Germany) for years and has never led to "thought crime" or any other absurd extremist notion.
Title: Re: EU aims to criminalise Holocaust denial
Post by: sirs on April 19, 2007, 11:53:56 AM
Excellent move by the European Union.  

So sad.  My respect for Js's opinions has just dropped a notch, I'm afraid      :-[
Title: Re: EU aims to criminalise Holocaust denial
Post by: Plane on April 19, 2007, 12:17:52 PM
Excellent move by the European Union. The only groups that use this rubbish in Europe are the BNP, National Front, and other neo-fascists who do their best to incite riots and harm the public anyway.

It is already law in many European nations and:

Quote
They also stressed that the wording was designed to avoid criminalising comical plays or films about the Holocaust such as the Italian comedian Roberto Benigni’s prize-winning Life is Beautiful . The text expressly upholds countries’ constitutional traditions relating to the freedom of expression.

The law has been in place in West Germany (now Germany) for years and has never led to "thought crime" or any other absurd extremist notion.



  Is there no right to be wrong?
Title: Re: EU aims to criminalise Holocaust denial
Post by: _JS on April 19, 2007, 12:56:16 PM
Did you all read what the article says:

Quote
They will also have to criminalise “publicly condoning, denying or grossly trivialising crimes of genocide, crimes against humanity and war crimes” when such statements incite hatred or violence against minorities.

Tell me again why this is a problem for you? You realise of course that the Freedom of speech in the United States is conditional, correct?
Title: Re: EU aims to criminalise Holocaust denial
Post by: sirs on April 19, 2007, 01:25:09 PM
So, Js, are you going to be interviewing for the position of deciding what does and doesn't incite hatred?  And if it's egregious rhetoric aimed at the "majority", that's perfectly ok then, right?

Do you have any idea how bad an idea this is.  This isn't yelling "fire" in a crowded theatre.  This is some organization body deciding what is and isn't "inciting hatred".  This is precisely what Plane & ami have been referining, the road to the thought police.  And you don't have a problem with that??     :-\
Title: Re: EU aims to criminalise Holocaust denial
Post by: _JS on April 19, 2007, 03:23:32 PM
Sirs, why must you take this to extreme absurdity? West Germany (now Germany) has had this law for many years and is there "thought crime" in that country? Of course not.

You realise of course that "inciting a riot" is a crime in the United States as well, I presume. We limit the freedom of speech in this country all the time beyond the cliche of "yelling 'fire!' in a crowded theatre."

You cannot walk up to a co-worker and threaten them. Advertisers cannot claim anything they like about their product. You cannot engage in slander.

Incitement to racial hatred has become more common as a law in European nations, especially if you know something about their recent histories (Brixton Riots, Yugoslav Wars, for examples).

Also note that you are comparing the American system with non-compatible systems of government.
Title: Re: EU aims to criminalise Holocaust denial
Post by: Amianthus on April 19, 2007, 03:33:34 PM
West Germany (now Germany) has had this law for many years and is there "thought crime" in that country? Of course not.

Quote
Holocaust denier arrested in Austria
HARTBERG, Austria Nov. 18 (UPI) -- A writer who claims the Nazi gas chambers were a fiction has been arrested in Austria on a 16-year-old warrant.

David Irving was picked up in Hartberg after police received a tip that he was in the country, the Times of London reported. He had gone to Austria to address a far-right group.

Irving was considered a serious historian of the Nazi era until 1988, when he first emerged as a Holocaust denier. In 2000, he lost a libel suit in London when a judge found that he had falsified history. He has also been fined in Germany.
Article (http://www.upi.com/NewsTrack/Top_News/2005/11/18/holocaust_denier_arrested_in_austria/)

What riots did David Irving incite? Seems like he was arrested for doing nothing other than speaking out his opinion - wrong as it may be.
Title: Re: EU aims to criminalise Holocaust denial
Post by: _JS on April 19, 2007, 03:37:13 PM
I cannot speak for Austrian law, but that is clearly not the model for the EU law or did you not read this?

Quote
They will also have to criminalise “publicly condoning, denying or grossly trivialising crimes of genocide, crimes against humanity and war crimes” when such statements incite hatred or violence against minorities.

That seems rather specific. Austrian law is what it is, yet it is not EU law.


Title: Re: EU aims to criminalise Holocaust denial
Post by: modestyblase on April 19, 2007, 03:42:28 PM
Since it's not in the U.S., they can do as they wish.
I would rather see them appeal to reason. It may be difficult and time consuming and it may take years-decades-but the end effect would be more impressive. "Outlawing" it could well turn Neo-Nazi's into speech and idea-defending martyrs. Sticky implications.
Title: Re: EU aims to criminalise Holocaust denial
Post by: Amianthus on April 19, 2007, 03:48:36 PM
That seems rather specific. Austrian law is what it is, yet it is not EU law.

The Austrian law is nearly identical to the German law, which you were defending, seeming to claim that arresting and imprisoning someone for just speaking an incorrect opinion would not happen.
Title: Re: EU aims to criminalise Holocaust denial
Post by: Plane on April 19, 2007, 03:51:14 PM
So, Js, are you going to be interviewing for the position of deciding what does and doesn't incite hatred?  And if it's egregious rhetoric aimed at the "majority", that's perfectly ok then, right?

Do you have any idea how bad an idea this is.  This isn't yelling "fire" in a crowded theatre.  This is some organization body deciding what is and isn't "inciting hatred".  This is precisely what Plane & ami have been referining, the road to the thought police.  And you don't have a problem with that??     :-\


Just what I was going to say.

(what a saveing of effort)

Let me add.

If someone wants to say something demonstrably false , the thing to do is demonstrate that falsity , useing governmental fiat to enforce the truth does not make it more credible , rather otherwise.

Rosie O'Donnell is denying the truth in terms that make her look stupid, government action to shut her up would repair her credibility , even with people who know that heat softens steel.
Title: Re: EU aims to criminalise Holocaust denial
Post by: _JS on April 19, 2007, 03:55:46 PM
So in your all's estimation it is not feasible for reasonable people or judges to determine if condoning genocide has led to a riot?

Quote
The Austrian law is nearly identical to the German law, which you were defending, seeming to claim that arresting and imprisoning someone for just speaking an incorrect opinion would not happen.

Neither of which are examples of the EU law.

Out of curiosity Plane, Ami, and Sirs. Should Israel overturn its similar law on holocaust denial?
Title: Re: EU aims to criminalise Holocaust denial
Post by: Amianthus on April 19, 2007, 03:57:43 PM
Neither of which are examples of the EU law.

West Germany (now Germany) has had this law for many years and is there "thought crime" in that country? Of course not.

So, which is it? Germany has this law, or it does not?

I will add that while the David Irving case is recent, there are similar accounts of arrests made in Germany under their laws.
Title: Re: EU aims to criminalise Holocaust denial
Post by: Amianthus on April 19, 2007, 03:59:12 PM
Out of curiosity Plane, Ami, and Sirs. Should Israel overturn its similar law on holocaust denial?

Yes.
Title: Re: EU aims to criminalise Holocaust denial
Post by: sirs on April 19, 2007, 04:09:10 PM
So in your all's estimation it is not feasible for reasonable people or judges to determine if condoning genocide has led to a riot?

No.  It's blatantly supporting the idea of a thought police.  Remember you specifically referenced if it incites hatred, not just a riot.  There are many things that can incite hatred.  It's emotion driven.  That's precisely the road this is heading


Out of curiosity Plane, Ami, and Sirs. Should Israel overturn its similar law on holocaust denial?

Absolutely
Title: Re: EU aims to criminalise Holocaust denial
Post by: _JS on April 19, 2007, 04:19:58 PM
OK.

Quote
Under the agreement, incitement to hatred or violence against a group or a person based on colour, race, national or ethnic origin must be punishable by at least a year in jail. However, member states can choose to limit prosecutions to cases likely to disturb public order.

Quote
Officials said the wording was carefully designed to avoid criminalising films or plays about genocide, or discouraging academic research.

Quote
The text of the decision says the new rules will not modify the obligation to respect fundamental legal principles, including freedom of expression and association. Countries where it is already a crime to deny the Holocaust will stick to their existing rules, but other countries will not be obliged to help them with judicial investigations.

Link (http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/europe/6573005.stm)

*sigh*

Project your American view elsewhere please.
Title: Re: EU aims to criminalise Holocaust denial
Post by: Plane on April 19, 2007, 04:21:28 PM
So in your all's estimation it is not feasible for reasonable people or judges to determine if condoning genocide has led to a riot?

Good greif how much power do Judges need over what is allowed to be said?
What little of our lives is not presently under the Law we should guard against the encrochment .
Quote


Quote
The Austrian law is nearly identical to the German law, which you were defending, seeming to claim that arresting and imprisoning someone for just speaking an incorrect opinion would not happen.

Neither of which are examples of the EU law.

Out of curiosity Plane, Ami, and Sirs. Should Israel overturn its similar law on holocaust denial?


I was not aware that they had one , if it is much like what we have been discussing then there of all places they can do well without it.
Title: Re: EU aims to criminalise Holocaust denial
Post by: sirs on April 19, 2007, 04:25:57 PM
*sigh*  Project your American view elsewhere please.

Freedom to speak your mind isn't a concept you support I see.  gotcha.  Keep in mind Js, this isn't supporting the notion of yelling "Let's start a riot, because we hate those f'ing  (fill in the blank)."   This is supporting the notion that despite how much you might disagree with another person's POV, even make you boil inside that someone would dare deny the holocaust happened, to support the right for them to say it & be a moron.

You apparently think otherwise..........................which is really, really sad
Title: Re: EU aims to criminalise Holocaust denial
Post by: Plane on April 19, 2007, 04:26:11 PM
OK.

Quote
Under the agreement, incitement to hatred or violence against a group or a person based on colour, race, national or ethnic origin must be punishable by at least a year in jail. However, member states can choose to limit prosecutions to cases likely to disturb public order.

Quote
Officials said the wording was carefully designed to avoid criminalising films or plays about genocide, or discouraging academic research.

As long as it is within the orthodox government approved version of the truth.

Quote
The text of the decision says the new rules will not modify the obligation to respect fundamental legal principles, including freedom of expression and association. Countries where it is already a crime to deny the Holocaust will stick to their existing rules, but other countries will not be obliged to help them with judicial investigations.

Link (http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/europe/6573005.stm)

*sigh*

Project your American view elsewhere please.


I am indeed glad it is happening thousands of miles away , let the result be a lesson to us as onlookers .

Seems to me that they could have learned this particular lesson long ago from how poorly the enforcement of orthodoxy on Gallileo turned out.
Title: Re: EU aims to criminalise Holocaust denial
Post by: _JS on April 19, 2007, 04:42:30 PM
Actually Israel's law on genocide is rather remarkable. They, according to their own law, may arrest anyone for any genocidal act (or conspiracy, incitement, attempt, complicity in and thereof) that takes place anywhere in the world meeting their criteria which is not limited only to the Hebrew people, though to my knowledge they have not enforced this on anyone else (though I could be wrong).

Quote
Keep in mind Js, this isn't supporting the notion of yelling "Let's start a riot, because we hate those f'ing (fill in the blank)."

On the contrary, that seems to be the very notion that you, Ami, and Plane are supporting. Starting a riot does not have to be that implicit (it rarely is) but even the United States has laws against it. I really don't understand why you are having a difficult time with this (especially you Sirs, someone who has supported wiretapping, overseas CIA prisons, and even certain degrees of torture!).

Quote
As long as it is within the orthodox government approved version of the truth.

Plane, do you honestly believe that European countries run their film industries this way?

Quote
Seems to me that they could have learned this particular lesson long ago from how poorly the enforcement of orthodoxy on Gallileo turned out.

Your analogy would conclude that the Holocaust deniers were correct all along. (Sort of, actually Galileo's trial has been somewhat susceptible to myth. Much of it had to do with politics of the day and the many enemies he made. Heliocentrism was never held as heretical by the Church ;) ).
Title: Re: EU aims to criminalise Holocaust denial
Post by: sirs on April 20, 2007, 06:51:37 AM
Quote
Keep in mind Js, this isn't supporting the notion of yelling "Let's start a riot, because we hate those f'ing (fill in the blank)."

On the contrary, that seems to be the very notion that you, Ami, and Plane are supporting. Starting a riot does not have to be that implicit (it rarely is) but even the United States has laws against it.

Not even close, as this never was about supporting someone's right to yell fire.  This has always been about supporting the right for someone to hold a POV that you might find absolutely reprehensible, and even say it publically.  If that someone is taking that POV to then attempt to initiate a riot, that's completely different, as that's no longer simply expressing a different position.  That's now an attempt to actively illicit a violent response.  Do you see the difference yet?  You're too smart a fella not to


I really don't understand why you are having a difficult time with this (especially you Sirs, someone who has supported wiretapping, overseas CIA prisons, and even certain degrees of torture!)

Now here's an interesting, albeit Tee-like tactic.  Have an absolutely non-defensible position, and try to bring in a completely unrelated topic that you think you can then put me on the defensive with.  If you want to talk about wiretapping suspected foreign terrorists, and what I support in the way of "torture", then by all means, initiate another thread.  You're support of policing one's thoughts is the problem you have in this thread, and trying to tell me to "project my American view elsewhere" apparently makes me feel all the better that I live in a country, where I could say reprehensible garbage like what Barbara Streisand, Danny Glover, Alec Baldwin, Harry Belafonte, Rosie O'Donnel, Sean Penn, Julia Roberts, Michael Moore, Al Franken, Keith Olberman, etc., etc., etc., say on a nearly 24/7 basis



Title: Re: EU aims to criminalise Holocaust denial
Post by: Plane on April 20, 2007, 08:14:25 AM


Quote
As long as it is within the orthodox government approved version of the truth.

Plane, do you honestly believe that European countries run their film industries this way?

Quote
Seems to me that they could have learned this particular lesson long ago from how poorly the enforcement of orthodoxy on Gallileo turned out.

Your analogy would conclude that the Holocaust deniers were correct all along. (Sort of, actually Galileo's trial has been somewhat susceptible to myth. Much of it had to do with politics of the day and the many enemies he made. Heliocentrism was never held as heretical by the Church ;) ).


No, I hope that most of the film industrys igtnore this law and that it is never enforced anywhere.

No, the people who procicuted Gallileo were quite sure that he was wrong , and that he had no right to spread such error  so they threatened him with severe consequences unless he recanted . Not too long before in a simular case , the heriutic that professed helio centricism was exicuted.

You and I are quite sure that the historical record of the Holocaust is not a grand conspiracy to lie to everyone , but governments do not have any business enforceing an orthodox truth.
Title: Re: EU aims to criminalise Holocaust denial
Post by: _JS on April 20, 2007, 09:40:31 AM
Quote
This has always been about supporting the right for someone to hold a POV that you might find absolutely reprehensible, and even say it publically.

Which is not in conflict Sirs. The EU Law clearly leaves this up to the nations and even says that: "states can choose to limit prosecutions to cases likely to disturb public order." Why do you have a problem with that? Please tell me what is wrong with that.

Quote
No, the people who procicuted Gallileo were quite sure that he was wrong , and that he had no right to spread such error  so they threatened him with severe consequences unless he recanted

That is simply untrue. Copernicus and Kepler had already made their views known. Moreover, Copernicus was very well liked by a number of Church officials and his writings were very well received, especially by the later formed Jesuit community (which became more prominent in Galileo's time). Though in fairness it was also ridiculed, especially by the scientists of the day and Protestant clerics - especially Luther and Melanchthon.

Heliocentrism was not heretical, nor was it forbidden for astronomers to learn. Part of Galileo's problem was his own arrogance, his inability to refute Aristotle (who was very widely respected in that time), and the faults of literal interpretation of Bible verses.
Title: Re: EU aims to criminalise Holocaust denial
Post by: sirs on April 20, 2007, 11:33:20 AM
Quote
This has always been about supporting the right for someone to hold a POV that you might find absolutely reprehensible, and even say it publically.

Which is not in conflict Sirs. The EU Law clearly leaves this up to the nations and even says that: "states can choose to limit prosecutions to cases likely to disturb public order." Why do you have a problem with that? Please tell me what is wrong with that.

My "problem" is in your own response.  "states can choose to limit prosecutions to cases likely to disturb public order..."   Which means they can also choose not to, and instead choose simply to crimimalize language that someone(s) decide is simply hateful, MINUS public order disturbance.  Do you see the diff yet?  Please say you do, as I've already made it painfully clear that this isn't about someone yelling "fire", nor in support of "Death to all *fill-in-the-blank*, let's burn them all" attempt at initiating a riot
Title: Re: EU aims to criminalise Holocaust denial
Post by: _JS on April 20, 2007, 11:59:36 AM
Quote
My "problem" is in your own response.  "states can choose to limit prosecutions to cases likely to disturb public order..."

First, to understand that you have to understand the European Union and how it functions. That will require a lot of time and I don't want to get into that unless you wish to sincerely discuss it.

Quote
Which means they can also choose not to, and instead choose simply to crimimalize language that someone(s) decide is simply hateful, MINUS public order disturbance.

But are you consistent here? You have no problem with people publishing tracts on how the Holocaust was fake. Fine.

How about publishing health reports on why adult sex with children has positive aspects in fighting cancer, complete with explicit pictures? Surely this would also fall under your "Freedom of Speech." And if the pictures are too much and violate the rights of others, then drawings would be OK, right?

There could be a film included, because we would not want the tyrannical governments of Europe to disturb the film industry with government approved "orthodox views." They can always use a boy and girl who are legally 18 and use modern technology to make them appear much younger.

So, there should be no laws preventing this? It is not "hate speech" but it is a serious academic look into the possible positive health effects of pedophillia.

You're on board, right Sirs?
Title: Re: EU aims to criminalise Holocaust denial
Post by: Plane on April 20, 2007, 12:40:18 PM
 I think that Gallileo is a good example of my point , but Bruno is an even better one and one that Gallileo would have known about.

The Church was defending the truth , as far as they knew.



In particular Bruno held firm to his belief in the plurality of worlds, although he was admonished to abandon it. His trial was overseen by the inquisitor, Cardinal Robert Bellarmine, who demanded a full recantation, which Bruno eventually refused. Instead he appealed in vain to Pope Clement VIII, hoping to save his life through a partial recantation. The Pope expressed himself in favor of a guilty verdict. Consequently, Bruno was declared a heretic, handed over to secular authorities on February 8, 1600. At his trial he listened to the verdict on his knees, then stood up and said: "Perhaps you, my judges, pronounce this sentence against me with greater fear than I receive it." A month or so later he was brought to the Campo de' Fiori, a central Roman market square, his tongue in a gag, tied to a pole naked and burned at the stake, on February 17, 1600.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Giordano_Bruno



In 1612, opposition arose to the Sun-centered solar system which Galileo supported. In 1614, from the pulpit of Santa Maria Novella, Father Tommaso Caccini (1574–1648) denounced Galileo's opinions on the motion of the Earth, judging them dangerous and close to heresy. Galileo went to Rome to defend himself against these accusations, but, in 1616, Cardinal Roberto Bellarmino personally handed Galileo an admonition enjoining him neither to advocate nor teach Copernican astronomy.[2] In 1622, Galileo wrote his first book, The Assayer (Saggiatore), which was approved and published in 1623. In 1624, he developed the first known example of the microscope. In 1630, he returned to Rome to apply for a license to print the Dialogue Concerning the Two Chief World Systems, published in Florence in 1632. In October of that year, however, he was ordered to appear before the Holy Office in Rome.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Galileo_Galilei

Galileo made at least one major scientific error, in addition to opposing Kepler's hypothesis that the gravity of the moon is the origin of the tides. This was his view on the origin of the comets of 1618. He argued vehemently in The Assayer that they were an optical illusion, in opposition to the interpretation of the Jesuit Orazio Grassi that they were real, and quite distant from the Moon. His alienation of both Scheiner and Grazzi likely contributed to the hostile response of the Jesuit order to his publication of "Dialogue Concerning the Two Chief World Systems" in 1632, and the inquisition that followed.




Cardinal Bellarmine had written in 1615 that the Copernican system could not be defended without "a true [physical] demonstration that the sun does not circle the earth but the earth circles the sun".[7] Galileo considered his theory of the tides to provide the required physical proof of the motion of the earth. This theory was so important to Galileo that he originally intended to entitle his Dialogue on the Two Chief World Systems the Dialogue on the Ebb and Flow of the Sea.[8] For Galileo, the tides were caused by the sloshing back and forth of water in the seas as a point on the Earth's surface speeded up and slowed down because of the Earth's rotation on its axis and revolution around the Sun. Galileo circulated his first account of the tides in 1616, addressed to Cardinal Orsini.[9]

If this theory were correct, there would be only one high tide per day. Galileo and his contemporaries were aware of this inadequacy because there are two daily high tides at Venice instead of one, about twelve hours apart. Galileo dismissed this anomaly as the result of several secondary causes, including the shape of the sea, its depth, and other factors.[10] Against the assertion that Galileo was deceptive in making these arguments, Albert Einstein expressed the opinion that Galileo developed his "fascinating arguments" and accepted them uncritically out of a desire for physical proof of the motion of the Earth.[11]

Galileo dismissed as a "useless fiction" the idea, held by his contemporary Johannes Kepler, that the moon caused the tides.[12] Galileo also refused to accept Kepler's elliptical orbits of the planets,[13] considering the circle the "perfect" shape for planetary orbits.

Title: Re: EU aims to criminalise Holocaust denial
Post by: sirs on April 20, 2007, 12:45:53 PM
Quote
Which means they can also choose not to, and instead choose simply to crimimalize language that someone(s) decide is simply hateful, MINUS public order disturbance.

But are you consistent here? You have no problem with people publishing tracts on how the Holocaust was fake. Fine.  How about publishing health reports on why adult sex with children has positive aspects in fighting cancer, complete with explicit pictures? Surely this would also fall under your "Freedom of Speech." And if the pictures are too much and violate the rights of others, then drawings would be OK, right?  

You've moved smoothly from what I support have been referencing all this time, "freedom to speak your POV" to trying to sell one's POV with publications and pictures??  OK, let's play your new game.  No, I don't have a problem with the publishing tracts", as they can be ridiculed and shown to be the fraud that it is.  The 2nd effort of yours is simply an effort to evoke an emotional response.  Show me somewhere, anywhere that someone(s) are claiming sex with chidren can fight cancer.  That's neither political nor even controversial.  That's just perverse.  They'd have to have some damn impressive medical background and healthcare related support to pull that one off, as that's no longer someone simply expressing their POV.  And the riot it might cause would be aimed at them.  Care to try again?


There could be a film included, because we would not want the tyrannical governments of Europe to disturb the film industry with government approved "orthodox views." They can always use a boy and girl who are legally 18 and use modern technology to make them appear much younger.

Yea.....and.  Hollywood and the movie indiustry have their own gudelines.  It's a private industry, and requires the market to make them a success or not.  Let's see what kind of backlash such a movie gets.  Hasn't stopped egregiously distorted garbage like the docufictions Farenheit 911 or An Illicit Truth now has it


So, there should be no laws preventing this? It is not "hate speech" but it is a serious academic look into the possible positive health effects of pedophillia.   You're on board, right Sirs?

Correct
Title: Re: EU aims to criminalise Holocaust denial
Post by: Plane on April 20, 2007, 12:46:08 PM
Quote
My "problem" is in your own response.  "states can choose to limit prosecutions to cases likely to disturb public order..."

First, to understand that you have to understand the European Union and how it functions. That will require a lot of time and I don't want to get into that unless you wish to sincerely discuss it.

Quote
Which means they can also choose not to, and instead choose simply to crimimalize language that someone(s) decide is simply hateful, MINUS public order disturbance.

But are you consistent here? You have no problem with people publishing tracts on how the Holocaust was fake. Fine.

How about publishing health reports on why adult sex with children has positive aspects in fighting cancer, complete with explicit pictures? Surely this would also fall under your "Freedom of Speech." And if the pictures are too much and violate the rights of others, then drawings would be OK, right?

There could be a film included, because we would not want the tyrannical governments of Europe to disturb the film industry with government approved "orthodox views." They can always use a boy and girl who are legally 18 and use modern technology to make them appear much younger.

So, there should be no laws preventing this? It is not "hate speech" but it is a serious academic look into the possible positive health effects of pedophillia.

You're on board, right Sirs?


If any actual harm to any actual child can be demonstrated , then the book should be thrown at them.
Otherwise I have tolarance for ideas I do not like.

There is a marginal case  discussed recently by Bill O'Riley in which a man was operateing a website that offered advice on how to get away with Pedophilla crime , but there was no evidence that  he had actually done this.

This guy defends the first admendment by abuseing it , he does us no favors , it is much like Clide Barrows efforts to defend the second admendment.
Title: Re: EU aims to criminalise Holocaust denial
Post by: Plane on April 20, 2007, 12:49:25 PM
Should the government have the right to limit Rosie O'Donnell speech about the 9-11 conspiracy?

She is not helping , one might assert that she is aiding an enemy.


Title: Re: EU aims to criminalise Holocaust denial
Post by: _JS on April 20, 2007, 01:05:38 PM
Quote
Show me somewhere, anywhere that someone(s) are claiming sex with chidren can fight cancer.  That's neither political nor even controversial.  That's just perverse.

No more perverse than saying the Holocaust never happened, in my opinion. It doesn't matter if the issue is perverse or not. It is a point of view (and no I'm not going to look it up, I'm a bit afraid of what might be out there to be honest).

Quote
And the riot it might cause would be aimed at them.

Perhaps, perhaps not. You can't prove there will be a riot.

Quote
It's a private industry, and requires the market to make them a success or not.  Let's see what kind of backlash such a movie gets.

I never mentioned Hollywood, you did (which is strange really). The adult movie industry is actually very succesful and the tactic I mentioned is used (and I saw that documented on a BBC program you perverts!).

So I never got a real sense of your consistency on this issue Sirs. You seemed more emotional than anything. I'm going to ask again.

A. You oppose any law that limits freedom of speech concerning hate speech and specifically Holocaust denial.

B. You oppose any law that limits freedom of speech concerning pedophillia and even using art to illustrate points of view on that subject.

Am I correct?
Title: Re: EU aims to criminalise Holocaust denial
Post by: _JS on April 20, 2007, 01:08:40 PM
Plane, I still fail to see that you refuted anything I said about Galileo.

Quote
If any actual harm to any actual child can be demonstrated , then the book should be thrown at them.

Kind of like if a racist incites a riot that harms a minority population?


Title: Re: EU aims to criminalise Holocaust denial
Post by: sirs on April 20, 2007, 01:35:41 PM
Quote
Show me somewhere, anywhere that someone(s) are claiming sex with chidren can fight cancer.  That's neither political nor even controversial.  That's just perverse.

No more perverse than saying the Holocaust never happened, in my opinion.  

People say the former, not the latter.  So why bring up a strawman?


Quote
And the riot it might cause would be aimed at them.

Perhaps, perhaps not. You can't prove there will be a riot.

Which is the basis to my point.  Rhetoric designed and meant to instill a "disturbance" is not what I'm arguing about or suppotive of.  My issue is about the criminalizing of rhetoric simply because it sounds bad and supposedly includes hateful thoughts


I never mentioned Hollywood, you did (which is strange really). The adult movie industry is actually very succesful and the tactic I mentioned is used (and I saw that documented on a BBC program you perverts!).

Yea....and?  You haven't seen me claiming they should be prevented from distributing their garbage either.  If the ages get under 18, then there are laws on the books they do have to deal with


So I never got a real sense of your consistency on this issue Sirs.

Because you're purposely ignoring it, and instead trying to bring in 1 strawman after the other to deflect from the position, you've taken.  Your position of contining to support the notion of criminalizing offensive rhetoric simply because some body deems it hateful, is as clear as rain   


Title: Re: EU aims to criminalise Holocaust denial
Post by: Universe Prince on April 20, 2007, 01:55:32 PM

Did you all read what the article says:

Quote
They will also have to criminalise “publicly condoning, denying or grossly trivialising crimes of genocide, crimes against humanity and war crimes” when such statements incite hatred or violence against minorities.

Tell me again why this is a problem for you? You realise of course that the Freedom of speech in the United States is conditional, correct?


Yes, I read what the article said:

Quote

Laws that make denying or trivialising the Holocaust a criminal offence punishable by jail sentences will be introduced across the European Union, according to a proposal expecting to win backing from ministers Thursday.

Offenders will face up to three years in jail under the proposed legislation, which will also apply to inciting violence against ethnic, religious or national groups.


An important word there being 'also'. If the goal to punish people for inciting hatred or violence against minorities, then why isn't the law just about that? Why the need to include language specific to denying the Holocaust? Obviously the point is to make denying the Holocaust a crime. Maybe you agree with that, but it does smell of thoughtcrime to me. Yes, people who deny the Holocaust are generally hateful morons who deserve a good, solid whack upside the head with a 2x4, but a law about what people can and cannot say regarding their personal beliefs certainly seems like only a step or so away from thoughtcrime laws. And while there are laws on the books here in America about inciting a riot and such, we also have precedent for allowing objectionable speech even if it seems hateful. The ACLU has more than once defended the free speech rights of American Nazis. As utterly repugnant and disgusting as I find the American Nazi rhetoric, I agree with the ACLU's decision. And the ACLU won those cases as I recall. While I disagree completely with Holocaust deniers, I believe they should also have their right to speak protected. Rights belong to everyone, not just to those who agree with us.
Title: Re: EU aims to criminalise Holocaust denial
Post by: sirs on April 20, 2007, 02:01:19 PM
Prince.....you realize you're just trying to "project your American view" onto others, right?
Title: Re: EU aims to criminalise Holocaust denial
Post by: Universe Prince on April 20, 2007, 02:19:41 PM

Prince.....you realize you're just trying to "project you American view" onto others, right?


Heh. Possibly.
Title: Re: EU aims to criminalise Holocaust denial
Post by: _JS on April 20, 2007, 03:01:40 PM
Sirs, I am making a hypothetical argument. It is not a "strawman."

But if you insist, we can do this a different way.

The Playbook for Kids about Sex: with brightly coloured pictures that showed all about homosexuality and how it was done for children as young as five.

The Milkman's on his Way: explicitly described homosexual intercourse and, indeed, glorified it, encouraging youngsters to believe that it was better than any other sexual way of life.

Now, you support these books being written for children?
Title: Re: EU aims to criminalise Holocaust denial
Post by: _JS on April 20, 2007, 03:23:23 PM
Prince,

You provide a good synopsis of your case as usual. Yet, there is an aspect that I don't think you are considering which goes beyond the limitations of a simple argument over rights. It also goes beyond the simply mockery given by Sirs.

The truth is that your all's argument really is an American perspective. As much as we like to think how great we are (and let's be honest, as a nation we do tend to be rather chauvinistic) the truth is that the European theatre of World War II was primarily fought without us.

The tragedy and absolute horror of the Holocaust was a degredation of humanity with an efficiency not seen in modern times to that date. For Europeans, and especially those nations and peoples who were complicit in the Holocaust, it is a stain on their national conscience. It goes beyond Germany to the many nations that deported Jews, Roma, Slavs, and all those who met their end after reading the cruelly ironic "Arbeit Macht Frei" signs.

More than that, European people still have a strong sense of society. This is a very foreign concept to Americans. We have a very individualist philosophy. You won't find American newspapers and politicians and the public discussing the issue of slavery or the treatment of the Native Americans in a large national debate. Whereas you may find this in the UK or France when discussing past colonies. I'm not saying either view is right or wrong, just that we are more likely to say, "hey, I never owned a slave or hurt a Native American, so this has nothing to do with me." Whereas a European might be more likely to say, "we treated them like shite before, we cannot tell them to bugger off now!"

Lastly, please realise that Europe faces these problems today, just as they once did. The Yugoslav Wars were a horrifying reminder of that.
Title: Re: EU aims to criminalise Holocaust denial
Post by: Plane on April 20, 2007, 03:50:44 PM
Plane, I still fail to see that you refuted anything I said about Galileo.

Quote
If any actual harm to any actual child can be demonstrated , then the book should be thrown at them.

Kind of like if a racist incites a riot that harms a minority population?





Sure, he should be punished as much as possible in purportion to the harm the riot causes.

Inciteing and leading a riot is a crime not protected by the first admendment.
Title: Re: EU aims to criminalise Holocaust denial
Post by: sirs on April 20, 2007, 04:14:22 PM
Inciteing and leading a riot is a crime not protected by the first admendment.

BINGO
Title: Re: EU aims to criminalise Holocaust denial
Post by: Plane on April 20, 2007, 04:28:07 PM

Lastly, please realize that Europe faces these problems today, just as they once did. The Yugoslav Wars were a horrifying reminder of that.



What Europe did about the Balkins is a demonstration of how they still need us to distract them from symbols and direct their attention to reality.


I can't believe that you think of the US involvement in the European Theater as peripheral and not critical.

Do you know what Eisenhower's responsibility was? Or his title during the war?
Title: Re: EU aims to criminalise Holocaust denial
Post by: _JS on April 20, 2007, 04:48:03 PM
Quote
What Europe did about the Balkins is a demonstration of how they still need us to distract them from symbols and direct their attention to reality.

That makes no sense. Bush did nothing, as did his European counterparts (for various reasons including problems understanding what to do about the collapse of the USSR).

The first to act was the United Nations, but that was only after the Croatian War had already seen terrible acts of nationalist violence. These acts were not stopped by the United States at all, or even addressed as a priority. John Major tended to follow Bush's lead.

It was only after the war had spread to Bosnia and the Clinton administration had viewed this as a more important priority that the United States took a more active role.

Your comment on "symbols" has no evidence.

Quote
I can't believe that you think of the US involvement in the European Theater as peripheral and not critical.

Where did I say that or downplay the role of Eisenhower?

My point was that the European Theatre primarily effected the everyday lives of (you guessed it) Europeans. Americans tend to think that we rushed in and saved the day in both World War I and World War II, but that tends to present a false view in both cases (as well as completely dismissing the role of the other forces).

Ask yourself which people and which country really broke the back of the German Army. Which nations really saw the devestation of the European war?

We tend to downplay the role of others in our viewpoint, don't we?
Title: Re: EU aims to criminalise Holocaust denial
Post by: _JS on April 20, 2007, 04:49:38 PM
Sirs,

These are real books:

Quote
The Playbook for Kids about Sex: with brightly coloured pictures that showed all about homosexuality and how it was done for children as young as five.

The Milkman's on his Way: explicitly described homosexual intercourse and, indeed, glorified it, encouraging youngsters to believe that it was better than any other sexual way of life.

I assume you support them being written for children? Afterall, you don't want to commit a thought crime.
Title: Re: EU aims to criminalise Holocaust denial
Post by: The_Professor on April 20, 2007, 05:39:45 PM
Quote
What Europe did about the Balkins is a demonstration of how they still need us to distract them from symbols and direct their attention to reality.

That makes no sense. Bush did nothing, as did his European counterparts (for various reasons including problems understanding what to do about the collapse of the USSR).

The first to act was the United Nations, but that was only after the Croatian War had already seen terrible acts of nationalist violence. These acts were not stopped by the United States at all, or even addressed as a priority. John Major tended to follow Bush's lead.

It was only after the war had spread to Bosnia and the Clinton administration had viewed this as a more important priority that the United States took a more active role.

Your comment on "symbols" has no evidence.

Quote
I can't believe that you think of the US involvement in the European Theater as peripheral and not critical.

Where did I say that or downplay the role of Eisenhower?

My point was that the European Theatre primarily effected the everyday lives of (you guessed it) Europeans. Americans tend to think that we rushed in and saved the day in both World War I and World War II, but that tends to present a false view in both cases (as well as completely dismissing the role of the other forces).

Ask yourself which people and which country really broke the back of the German Army. Which nations really saw the devastation of the European war?

We tend to downplay the role of others in our viewpoint, don't we?


In World War I, we came in late and provided the bulk of the fighting men, untrained as they were and killed in droves because of it. We also provided massive material and logistical support. In Word War II, we did, indeed, "save their bacon" both both manpower, material and logistics. To think otherwise is sheer folly. The French, by 1941, were a shell of a force, the Brits were literally backed up against a wall, the Aussies were few in number and on and on. Js, your statements are inaccurate.

What this means today, however, is different. We shouldn't expext them to act "kinder" toward us today for it. We did it because it was the right thing to do. Gosh, sometimes, your postings are interesting and then other times they are off the mark. I recommend consistency, please, in quality.
Title: Re: EU aims to criminalise Holocaust denial
Post by: Universe Prince on April 20, 2007, 06:11:37 PM

The truth is that your all's argument really is an American perspective.


Perhaps it is. But that doesn't mean it's wrong.


As much as we like to think how great we are (and let's be honest, as a nation we do tend to be rather chauvinistic) the truth is that the European theatre of World War II was primarily fought without us.


What? You mean they weren't waiting for Van Johnson to come save them? Huh. Ingrates.     (That's a joke, folks.)


The tragedy and absolute horror of the Holocaust was a degredation of humanity with an efficiency not seen in modern times to that date. For Europeans, and especially those nations and peoples who were complicit in the Holocaust, it is a stain on their national conscience. It goes beyond Germany to the many nations that deported Jews, Roma, Slavs, and all those who met their end after reading the cruelly ironic "Arbeit Macht Frei" signs.


Of that I have no doubt. But I have to say, that seems like it should be all the more motivation to protect the rights even for those society does not like.


More than that, European people still have a strong sense of society. This is a very foreign concept to Americans. We have a very individualist philosophy. You won't find American newspapers and politicians and the public discussing the issue of slavery or the treatment of the Native Americans in a large national debate. Whereas you may find this in the UK or France when discussing past colonies. I'm not saying either view is right or wrong, just that we are more likely to say, "hey, I never owned a slave or hurt a Native American, so this has nothing to do with me." Whereas a European might be more likely to say, "we treated them like shite before, we cannot tell them to bugger off now!"


I don't believe overall American philosophy is nearly so individualist as all that. I think it may be that we just have a different concept of society.


Lastly, please realise that Europe faces these problems today, just as they once did. The Yugoslav Wars were a horrifying reminder of that.


Yes, I know that. I am not suggesting there are not immediate and important issues involved. I just happen to believe that making denial of the Holocaust a crime is the wrong response.


Yet, there is an aspect that I don't think you are considering which goes beyond the limitations of a simple argument over rights.


It might seem simple, but I think it is a fundamental matter. I realize you and I disagree on the nature of rights, and I do honestly understand the desire of people to want to make denying the Holocaust a crime. I easily sympathize with their situation, and I don't blame them for wanting to ban the behavior. From my perspective, however, rights are not something to be overlooked so easily. Society is not protected from hate by making certain subjects taboo. All that accomplishes is making it socially acceptable to hate the people who want to break the taboo, or in this case, the law. That entrenches the acceptable hate and creates resentment if not more hate on the part of those who find their beliefs becoming a crime. Right now, it is easy to say the Holocaust deniers are wrong because the historical facts are available for anyone to find. But one of the basic reasons to protect rights is to protect the rights of those in the minority. I think protecting the rights of the minority and least popular is vitally important to society. (Please don't bring up murderers and thieves and such. That is a whole other conversation.) If the rights of the least popular are not protected, then society ceases to be free and becomes oppressive. So while you may think the situation goes beyond an argument over rights, from where I sit, the argument over rights is at the heart of the situation.

I see the law against denial of the Holocaust as detrimental to society. Now maybe that is a wholly American position to take, but I'm not making this an argument about nationalities. This is about the ideas. You're right that I probably see things differently because I'm not there, was not raised in that culture. But I still think I'm right, and I don't see how chalking my position up to being American refutes the ideas in any way.
Title: Re: EU aims to criminalise Holocaust denial
Post by: Lanya on April 20, 2007, 06:26:19 PM

If I may offer an opinion, it is this:
We helped a great deal to win the war.  No denying that, no doubt.  It was our blood, our soldiers, our machinery, our plants; our food and silk and rubber and gas and so on rationed, our money that we gave and gave, and from what I read, it was crucial.
But: Our cities were not bombed. Our children were not sent from their families to the countryside so they'd have a better chance of survival.   We didn't have to join the Resistance and fight against our own.   We didn't have to have village after village occupied by the enemy. We had no enemies on our land at all. 
That is a BIG difference, to my mind. 
Consider that food rationing in Great Britain lasted for 14 years, until 1954. 
Not so in the US.
Title: Re: EU aims to criminalise Holocaust denial
Post by: domer on April 20, 2007, 06:36:36 PM
The proposed ban on denial of the Holocaust, as crafted in the proposed legislation, is, first of all, a European affair, plain and simple. Not only has it been produced by authorized representatives of that constituency for later ratification in the authorized legislatures, but in the end will be accomplished in the wake of meaningful public debate, should the issue prove burning enough, which it may not, European sensibilities being so much different on this issue. Indeed, second, those sensibilities are tied to, arguably, a unique set of thoughts and feelings produced by a unique -- unparalleled -- history, which saw that great continent ravaged not only by the most monstrous wars ever known to mankind but also the most dehumanizing insult and degradation: the Holocaust. Unless one takes a European perspective, or abstracts the ideas (and thus bleeds the issue of emotional power and historical context) to having the situs of an imagined or idealized state or region, one has no business talking about the matter ... responsibly. Finally, there is nothing whatsoever, to my way of thinking, that makes the ban on denial antithetical to "Western-style democracy" as an overt matter of democratic theory or the practice of statehood.
Title: Re: EU aims to criminalise Holocaust denial
Post by: The_Professor on April 20, 2007, 06:36:56 PM
Good point, Lanya. I concur.
Title: Re: EU aims to criminalise Holocaust denial
Post by: Universe Prince on April 20, 2007, 06:46:27 PM

Unless one takes a European perspective, or abstracts (and thus bleeds the issue of emotional power and historical context) the ideas to having the situs of an imagined or idealized state or region, one has no business talking about the matter ... responsibly.


Bullshit.
Title: Re: EU aims to criminalise Holocaust denial
Post by: The_Professor on April 20, 2007, 06:53:08 PM
"...Unless one takes a European perspective, or abstracts (and thus bleeds the issue of emotional power and historical context) the ideas to having the situs of an imagined or idealized state or region, one has no business talking about the matter ... responsibly."

Kinda arrogant to say this, isn't it?
Title: Re: EU aims to criminalise Holocaust denial
Post by: domer on April 20, 2007, 07:48:49 PM
To the contrary, Professor (are you really a professor?), I think it's right on the money.
Title: Re: EU aims to criminalise Holocaust denial
Post by: modestyblase on April 20, 2007, 09:14:33 PM
"...Unless one takes a European perspective, or abstracts (and thus bleeds the issue of emotional power and historical context) the ideas to having the situs of an imagined or idealized state or region, one has no business talking about the matter ... responsibly."

Kinda arrogant to say this, isn't it?

Actually, it is more arrogant to assume an American perspective on European matters. Ergo, understanding a European issue from a European perspective is then only way to effectively debate this issue. Knowledge of the culture, daily life and lifestyles, etc. certainly would help as well.

If this were happening in America, I would be the first to shout out against it. But its not, and all the indignations evident in this thread are "american arrogance" at its worst.
Title: Re: EU aims to criminalise Holocaust denial
Post by: domer on April 20, 2007, 09:17:50 PM
Thank you, Modesty.
Title: Re: EU aims to criminalise Holocaust denial
Post by: sirs on April 20, 2007, 09:35:00 PM
Sirs,  These are real books:.....I assume you support them being written for children? Afterall, you don't want to commit a thought crime.

JS, I recognize that the're real books.  They are absolutely inappropriate for children.  Does that mean they be prevented from being made?  NO.  It means children should have no access to them, and let the market determine if anyone else wants to wallow in that kinda garbage.  Capice'?
Title: Re: EU aims to criminalise Holocaust denial
Post by: Amianthus on April 21, 2007, 12:28:12 AM
If this were happening in America, I would be the first to shout out against it. But its not, and all the indignations evident in this thread are "american arrogance" at its worst.

But I am in America, and I am free to state my opinion that this is the first step to "Thought Police."
Title: Re: EU aims to criminalise Holocaust denial
Post by: The_Professor on April 21, 2007, 01:56:39 AM
To the contrary, Professor (are you really a professor?), I think it's right on the money.

Yep. Ask Plane or Ami.

B.A., M.A., M.Div., Ph.D
Title: Re: EU aims to criminalise Holocaust denial
Post by: The_Professor on April 21, 2007, 01:59:00 AM
"...Unless one takes a European perspective, or abstracts (and thus bleeds the issue of emotional power and historical context) the ideas to having the situs of an imagined or idealized state or region, one has no business talking about the matter ... responsibly."

Kinda arrogant to say this, isn't it?

Actually, it is more arrogant to assume an American perspective on European matters. Ergo, understanding a European issue from a European perspective is then only way to effectively debate this issue. Knowledge of the culture, daily life and lifestyles, etc. certainly would help as well.

If this were happening in America, I would be the first to shout out against it. But its not, and all the indignations evident in this thread are "american arrogance" at its worst.

Bull chips.

You can understand the fundamental issues, regardless of whether you live there on not. JS claims to understand American issues all the time. Understanding nuances, though, now THAT is an entirely different matter.
Title: Re: EU aims to criminalise Holocaust denial
Post by: BT on April 21, 2007, 02:11:24 AM
Quote
JS claims to understand American issues all the time.

As well he should. He lives in America. Across the state line from Dalton. And even though he is a Vols fan, we share a distaste for all things Gator.
Title: Re: EU aims to criminalise Holocaust denial
Post by: The_Professor on April 21, 2007, 02:59:50 AM
Heck, I've lived here all my live and I do not understand all of it!

Got that message; time to bow out...

And, you are just jealous of our success! Ha!

GO GATORS! And, after that, Go DAWGS!
Title: Re: EU aims to criminalise Holocaust denial
Post by: Universe Prince on April 22, 2007, 08:03:52 AM

Actually, it is more arrogant to assume an American perspective on European matters. Ergo, understanding a European issue from a European perspective is then only way to effectively debate this issue. Knowledge of the culture, daily life and lifestyles, etc. certainly would help as well.

If this were happening in America, I would be the first to shout out against it. But its not, and all the indignations evident in this thread are "american arrogance" at its worst.


Bullshit. If we were talking about the experience of the Holocaust or the experience of being subjected to denials of the Holocaust, you and Domer might have a point. But we're not, and you don't. There is nothing arrogant about discussing ideas from outside the direct experience of others. (If there is, then all of us here at the Saloon are as arrogant as can be.) I don't believe I've seen anyone suggest that there is anything invalid about the experience of those who want Holocaust denial illegal. The problem with the law is not the experience of those who want it. The problem with the law is the idea that the law represents. And there is nothing about that idea that excludes anyone non-European from having a legitimate opinion about it.

I'm sure there are good arguments to be made for the law (not saying I'd agree with them, but disagreement does not equal bad). Yes, I may have an American perspective, and how can I not since I am an American born and reared in America, but that doesn't mean the objection to the law is not valid. The argument that Americans cannot have an opinion about the law without being guilty of "American arrogance", however, is not a valid argument, and it only serves as a device to try to silence those whose opinion on the matter you don't like.
Title: Re: EU aims to criminalise Holocaust denial
Post by: domer on April 22, 2007, 05:29:27 PM
No, Prince, they (the Europeans) are simply considering how to set the rules for THEIR lives (and THEIR society) in light of a horrible history that happened on THEIR continent. You have no business telling them how to manage their affairs on such an issue. Period.
Title: Re: EU aims to criminalise Holocaust denial
Post by: sirs on April 22, 2007, 08:11:56 PM
No, Prince, they (the Europeans) are simply considering how to set the rules for THEIR lives (and THEIR society) in light of a horrible history that happened on THEIR continent. You have no business telling them how to manage their affairs on such an issue. Period.

Funny how in Domer's mind criticising a blatantly bad idea is somehow analogus to "telling them" how they're to run themselves & their society.  So basically, Domer is "telling us" how we're to run our lives and government everytime he critiques anyone else.      :-\
Title: Re: EU aims to criminalise Holocaust denial
Post by: Plane on April 22, 2007, 08:24:59 PM
No, Prince, they (the Europeans) are simply considering how to set the rules for THEIR lives (and THEIR society) in light of a horrible history that happened on THEIR continent. You have no business telling them how to manage their affairs on such an issue. Period.


Doesn't this depend on how we do it?

Our right to use force is absent and our right to use leverage is limited , but why should our right to kibitz have a limit?

What our American Experience has taught us is available to them to evaluate , accept or reject , should they be better off with their provincialism protected?
Title: Re: EU aims to criminalise Holocaust denial
Post by: Universe Prince on April 22, 2007, 09:27:37 PM
No, Domer, you're not paying attention. I did not criticize them for deciding on their own laws. I criticized a single law and the idea that the law represents. I am not telling them how to do anything. I am expressing disagreement with one of their decisions, and I gave my reason for that disagreement. There is nothing unreasonable about that. Your insistence that Americans cannot dare to express disagreement with the law because Americans are not European is not only unreasonable, it's nonsense.
Title: Re: EU aims to criminalise Holocaust denial
Post by: Plane on April 22, 2007, 10:15:30 PM
No, Domer, you're not paying attention. I did not criticize them for deciding on their own laws. I criticized a single law and the idea that the law represents. I am not telling them how to do anything. I am expressing disagreement with one of their decisions, and I gave my reason for that disagreement. There is nothing unreasonable about that. Your insistence that Americans cannot dare to express disagreement with the law because Americans are not European is not only unreasonable, it's nonsense.


Does this mean that ,reciprocally ,Europeans actually have a right to express an opinion on American law and custom?
Title: Re: EU aims to criminalise Holocaust denial
Post by: Universe Prince on April 22, 2007, 11:56:30 PM

Does this mean that ,reciprocally ,Europeans actually have a right to express an opinion on American law and custom?


I don't see why they would not. Do you?
Title: Re: EU aims to criminalise Holocaust denial
Post by: Plane on April 23, 2007, 12:32:45 AM

Does this mean that ,reciprocally ,Europeans actually have a right to express an opinion on American law and custom?


I don't see why they would not. Do you?


Oh horror!

That European opinions can run rampant  in the USA without being tempered by actually having the American experience.

It is hard to imagine the extent of harm potential in this.
Title: Re: EU aims to criminalise Holocaust denial
Post by: _JS on April 23, 2007, 09:23:57 AM
My point gentlemen, was not that you cannot have a valid opinion because of course you can. In fact, the world is a better place because various nations learn from one another's experiences, procedures, and ideas.

My point was not that anyone here could not make valid assertions about the European Unions new law (well, it is more of a proclamation of a framework from which the EU states must build a law).

What I was advising was that one should consider where the EU is coming from in determining this law. I'm sure that Domer and any other legal experts we have around can tell you that law is anything but black and white (most of the time). There are many cultural and societal elements to the legal system in any nation. These stem from collective histories and national events that affect the population at large and thus the legislatures. Laws are also affected by the political system involved.

My point was that many of you are arguing from one very manichaen viewpoint: freedom of speech - end of.
Title: Re: EU aims to criminalise Holocaust denial
Post by: _JS on April 23, 2007, 09:33:15 AM
Quote
To think otherwise is sheer folly. The French, by 1941, were a shell of a force, the Brits were literally backed up against a wall, the Aussies were few in number and on and on. Js, your statements are inaccurate.

Lanya began explaining it to you.

The French, the Brits, the Aussies...seems like you're leaving someone out...

I'm not saying we didn't do a hell of a job, especially in the Pacific. Yet, in Europe we were not the country that really stopped the German Army. We were not the front that German soldiers feared to fight on. Our casualties were low and we like to think it was because we fought with better tactics and an improved western style. But it also helped that we never really fought in the major land campaigns of Europe until the war was nearly won.

That doesn't mean that we didn't do a great job and that Eisenhower wasn't a great general. I'm just saying that the High School version of American History is a little skewed (as it likely is in quite a few countries).

And yeah, Dalton really is the carpet crapital of the world. Though I live a little ways to the North West today. Are the Gators still paying their players?

Title: Re: EU aims to criminalise Holocaust denial
Post by: Universe Prince on April 23, 2007, 11:15:28 AM

My point gentlemen, was not that you cannot have a valid opinion because of course you can.


I know that was not your point. It appears to have been, however,  Domer's and Blase's point.


My point was that many of you are arguing from one very manichaen viewpoint: freedom of speech - end of.


I think by manichean you mean dualistic, black-and-white. I don't agree. Saying that freedom of speech is an important right worthy of protection does not mean I see this as a simplistic good vs. evil. I'm not arguing there should never be any laws about speech. I'm merely arguing that this law against Holocaust denial is, imo, wrong.
Title: Re: EU aims to criminalise Holocaust denial
Post by: Lanya on April 23, 2007, 12:25:48 PM
<<I'm merely arguing that this law against Holocaust denial is, imo, wrong.>>

As great a wrong as was the Holocaust?
Title: Re: EU aims to criminalise Holocaust denial
Post by: Plane on April 23, 2007, 12:39:45 PM
<<I'm merely arguing that this law against Holocaust denial is, imo, wrong.>>

As great a wrong as was the Holocaust?


An order of magnitude less, maybe three.

But what if freedom of speech was gradually reduced to nothing , by means of many sucyh well meaning laws.

Is it still a small matter?
Title: Re: EU aims to criminalise Holocaust denial
Post by: Universe Prince on April 23, 2007, 12:50:10 PM
No, Lanya. Of course not.
Title: Re: EU aims to criminalise Holocaust denial
Post by: _JS on April 23, 2007, 12:54:40 PM
Quote
But what if freedom of speech was gradually reduced to nothing , by means of many sucyh well meaning laws.

Yet, you have no evidence that this is the case. You have the slippery slope theory and it is unfair to use it in every possible situation.

Quote
I think by manichean you mean dualistic, black-and-white.

Yes. I think that probably is unfair to characterize you Prince.

Quote
I'm merely arguing that this law against Holocaust denial is, imo, wrong.

I think this is just an area where we honestly disagree.


I'd like to go back to the books I asked Sirs about. He said that in no way should children be able to get a hold of these books on homosexuality. Yet, free speech is useless without an audience, right? I mean, these people denying the Holocaust are writing books and expecting people to read them. My question is this, should these books be placed in a public library? Is that not part of free speech? If you never allow the material to see daylight, then you've just buried free speech by less transparent means, correct? At least this way the Government has a law for all to see. If you disallow books in public (or by whatever means) then you've just attacked free speech in a more covert manner.

So should the books I mentioned be allowed in libraries? Should they be allowed in state schools? What about these Holocaust denial books?

Title: Re: EU aims to criminalise Holocaust denial
Post by: Plane on April 23, 2007, 01:03:28 PM
Quote
But what if freedom of speech was gradually reduced to nothing , by means of many sucyh well meaning laws.

Yet, you have no evidence that this is the case. You have the slippery slope theory and it is unfair to use it in every possible situation.

Quote
I think by manichean you mean dualistic, black-and-white.

Yes. I think that probably is unfair to characterize you Prince.

Quote
I'm merely arguing that this law against Holocaust denial is, imo, wrong.

I think this is just an area where we honestly disagree.


I'd like to go back to the books I asked Sirs about. He said that in no way should children be able to get a hold of these books on homosexuality. Yet, free speech is useless without an audience, right? I mean, these people denying the Holocaust are writing books and expecting people to read them. My question is this, should these books be placed in a public library? Is that not part of free speech? If you never allow the material to see daylight, then you've just buried free speech by less transparent means, correct? At least this way the Government has a law for all to see. If you disallow books in public (or by whatever means) then you've just attacked free speech in a more covert manner.

So should the books I mentioned be allowed in libraries? Should they be allowed in state schools? What about these Holocaust denial books?




Such books ought to be vetted by parents , a liabrary that caters to children should not have them unless the parent is made aware of them.

Once that child is grown he should be fair game to persuasion even of the most drastic sort that free speech allows , but it is the right of a parent to raise a child in the way that he should go.

There is not a good reason to treat us all as children tho.
Title: Re: EU aims to criminalise Holocaust denial
Post by: sirs on April 23, 2007, 01:27:22 PM
There is not a good reason to treat us all as children tho.

I think that sums things up very nicely.  Well summized, Plane     8)
Title: Re: EU aims to criminalise Holocaust denial
Post by: domer on April 23, 2007, 01:33:15 PM
In one post, JS says to UP (paparphrase): "Sure, you can have a valid opinion [by the way, what does 'valid' mean, JS?] about the EU plan to ban Holocaust denial," but then says (and this is a direct quote): "What I was advising was that one should consider where the EU is coming from in determining this law. I'm sure that Domer and any other legal experts we have around can tell you that law is anything but black and white (most of the time). There are many cultural and societal elements to the legal system in any nation. These stem from collective histories and national events that affect the population at large and thus the legislatures. Laws are also affected by the political system involved." More or less (probably more), this (the latter quote) is my (Domer's) position, which remains the same as when I first uttered it, and equally valid. I have no problem, as I say, with people using this proposed ban as an abstract or imaginary platform to wax poetic about libertarian theories of speech, but I react quite dyspeptically to the pretense of any expertise, entitlement or authority whatsoever to chime in about how this -- ESPECIALLY THIS -- matter is to be handled by those that actually lived through its horrors and will live with its dark legacy. (If I can be charged with arrogance for voicing this opinion, then what can you be charged with for running willy nilly into the eye of the storm in a dilettante's get-up, not ready for substantive contribution but merely to chime in with reflexive libertarianism.
Title: Re: EU aims to criminalise Holocaust denial
Post by: domer on April 23, 2007, 01:35:47 PM
In one post, JS says to UP (paparphrase): "Sure, you can have a valid opinion [by the way, what does 'valid' mean, JS?] about the EU plan to ban Holocaust denial," but then says (and this is a direct quote): "What I was advising was that one should consider where the EU is coming from in determining this law. I'm sure that Domer and any other legal experts we have around can tell you that law is anything but black and white (most of the time). There are many cultural and societal elements to the legal system in any nation. These stem from collective histories and national events that affect the population at large and thus the legislatures. Laws are also affected by the political system involved." More or less (probably more), this (the latter quote) is my (Domer's) position, which remains the same as when I first uttered it, and equally valid. I have no problem, as I say, with people using this proposed ban as an abstract or imaginary platform to wax poetic about libertarian theories of speech, but I react quite dyspeptically to the pretense of any expertise, entitlement or authority whatsoever to chime in about how this -- ESPECIALLY THIS -- matter is to be handled by those who actually lived through its horrors and will live with its dark legacy. (If I can be charged with arrogance for voicing this opinion, then what can you be charged with for running willy nilly into the eye of the storm in a dilettante's get-up, not ready for substantive contribution but merely to chime in with reflexive libertarianism?)
Title: Re: EU aims to criminalise Holocaust denial
Post by: Amianthus on April 23, 2007, 02:11:26 PM
Thought it was so good, it needed to be posted twice, huh Domer?

 ;D
Title: Re: EU aims to criminalise Holocaust denial
Post by: Universe Prince on April 23, 2007, 02:19:20 PM

Quote
I'm merely arguing that this law against Holocaust denial is, imo, wrong.

I think this is just an area where we honestly disagree.


And I'm okay with that.


I'd like to go back to the books I asked Sirs about. He said that in no way should children be able to get a hold of these books on homosexuality.


To be fair to Sirs, I think he would say the same of similar books about heterosexuality. The position being that children should not be exposed to sexual issues. And as I recall, Sirs did not say the books should be prevented from being published or written.


Yet, free speech is useless without an audience, right? I mean, these people denying the Holocaust are writing books and expecting people to read them. My question is this, should these books be placed in a public library? Is that not part of free speech?


Most communication is useless without an audience. But as been pointed out many times, a right to free speech is not a guarantee of an audience. Whether the books make it into a public library should be up to the people who run the library, imo. If they decide not to allow the book in the library, no that isn't an infringement on free speech any more than is a theater owner's choice to allow or not allow a movie or play to be shown, or an individual's choice to block a cable channel from his home.


If you never allow the material to see daylight, then you've just buried free speech by less transparent means, correct? At least this way the Government has a law for all to see. If you disallow books in public (or by whatever means) then you've just attacked free speech in a more covert manner.


Um, no. There is a significant difference between "I choose not to spread or otherwise help make available this opinion," and "If you express this opinion, you're a criminal." Making the former choice does not attack someone else's freedom of speech. Making the latter choice does.


So should the books I mentioned be allowed in libraries? Should they be allowed in state schools? What about these Holocaust denial books?


That is something for the libraries and schools to decide, imo. What do you think? Do you agree with the law banning Holocaust denial? Should Mien Kampf be banned? Where is the line drawn to say these objectionable ideas are not allowed to exist in society while those objectionable ideas are allowed? If we support the law against Holocaust denial by saying it's Europeans making decisions about protecting their society from what they see as destructive influence, then how can we criticize people here who want to prevent by law homosexual marriage? Aren't those people arguing for protecting our society from what they see as destructive influence? I'm not saying you have to agree with me. I'm saying that from my perspective, protecting people's rights (a subject about which I know we disagree) is an issue at the heart of the matter, and asking for your opinion on the issues raised by the questions you asked.
Title: Re: EU aims to criminalise Holocaust denial
Post by: Universe Prince on April 23, 2007, 02:42:55 PM

I have no problem, as I say, with people using this proposed ban as an abstract or imaginary platform to wax poetic about libertarian theories of speech, but I react quite dyspeptically to the pretense of any expertise, entitlement or authority whatsoever to chime in about how this -- ESPECIALLY THIS -- matter is to be handled by those who actually lived through its horrors and will live with its dark legacy.


I adopted no such pretense, and I don't believe others did either, though I can speak only for myself in this. My criticism was of a single law and the idea that the law represents. I did not criticize the people involved in making the law. In point of fact, I said directly that "I easily sympathize with their situation, and I don't blame them for wanting to ban the behavior." A disagreement with the decision to make Holocaust denial a crime is in no way an assertion of authority or superiority over the Europeans. It's just a disagreement.


(If I can be charged with arrogance for voicing this opinion, then what can you be charged with for running willy nilly into the eye of the storm in a dilettante's get-up, not ready for substantive contribution but merely to chime in with reflexive libertarianism?)


I have no idea at whom you've aimed that odd question. Having seen you knee jerk your way to "You have no business telling them how to manage their affairs on such an issue", however, I am left wondering why you think you have grounds to accuse someone else of reflexive behavior.
Title: Re: EU aims to criminalise Holocaust denial
Post by: Lanya on April 23, 2007, 03:04:53 PM
Prince,
Thank you for your response.
The reason I asked....well, it's hard to explain.   
I think that people want to forget bad things, especially if their country has done those things.  They want to minimize, to pretend it maybe wasn't as bad as all that, and if you go down that road, eventually you have several generations past the actual horrible deed, and people may not believe it ever happened at all.  It didn't affect them.

This is why they are making it illegal in Europe, I believe: because it was so horrible.   And they don't want anyone to ever forget or deny that it actually did happen, so that it can never happen again. One must  face up to facts.  Denying them is not healthy in the long run.

I can't make a good comparison for the US except perhaps, if someone were to state that slavery never happened.  There's documentary evidence for both the Holocaust and for slavery too.  It may be a poor comparison, though.
Title: Re: EU aims to criminalise Holocaust denial
Post by: Universe Prince on April 23, 2007, 03:30:21 PM

The reason I asked....well, it's hard to explain.


Obviously not that hard, because you did a good job of it.

I'm not criticizing anyone for wanting to make Holocaust denial illegal. The Holocaust is a horror that we should never forget, and people who deny it, as my father might put it, need a good, solid whack upside the head with a 2x4 just to get their attention. They're hateful bastards, to put it mildly, and I feel hatred for them (Does that make me hateful? I don't know.) I just don't agree, for reasons already stated in this thread, that making Holocaust denial illegal is a good solution.

I hope that helps explain my position on the matter.
Title: Re: EU aims to criminalise Holocaust denial
Post by: _JS on April 23, 2007, 04:02:25 PM
Quote
In one post, JS says to UP (paparphrase): "Sure, you can have a valid opinion [by the way, what does 'valid' mean, JS?] about the EU plan to ban Holocaust denial," but then says (and this is a direct quote): "What I was advising was that one should consider where the EU is coming from in determining this law. I'm sure that Domer and any other legal experts we have around can tell you that law is anything but black and white (most of the time). There are many cultural and societal elements to the legal system in any nation. These stem from collective histories and national events that affect the population at large and thus the legislatures. Laws are also affected by the political system involved."

Ouch. You try and be diplomatic and this is where it gets you. :)

Quite clearly we agree on this issue Domer. This law, or more accurately this framework for a law being passed down by the European Union, is a product of much more than a question of freedom of speech.

Unlike the Europeans, we did not live the Holocaust. We did not live the horrors of World War II at all. We lost a lot of brave soldiers, but we did not have our cities turned to rubble, we did not lose millions of civilians. It was a different war from our perspective.

It is easy to point at Domer and say, "arrogance!" The truth is that there is a lot of arrogance in taking an American perspective and projecting it on everyone else. Not only that, it can also be very dangerous (Vietnam, Iraq).

And if I can perhaps be even more arrogant, in many ways I believe Europe is being very responsible in coming to terms with her actions and complicity in one of the world's worst atrocities. It is interesting to note the contrast in that and some of Britain's main colonies who have yet to come to terms with their atrocities towards their native populations (Canada, Australia, the United States).
Title: Re: EU aims to criminalise Holocaust denial
Post by: Plane on April 23, 2007, 05:02:40 PM
Prince,
Thank you for your response.
The reason I asked....well, it's hard to explain.   
I think that people want to forget bad things, especially if their country has done those things.  They want to minimize, to pretend it maybe wasn't as bad as all that, and if you go down that road, eventually you have several generations past the actual horrible deed, and people may not believe it ever happened at all.  It didn't affect them.

This is why they are making it illegal in Europe, I believe: because it was so horrible.   And they don't want anyone to ever forget or deny that it actually did happen, so that it can never happen again. One must  face up to facts.  Denying them is not healthy in the long run.

I can't make a good comparison for the US except perhaps, if someone were to state that slavery never happened.  There's documentary evidence for both the Holocaust and for slavery too.  It may be a poor comparison, though.

   It is an exelent thing to compare with , when I was small there were still texts in school that minimised the henious nature of slavery , woud you want it to be against the law for someone to state tha slavery "wasn't so bad"?

I am not going to agree with someone who thinks slavery was a reasonable or kind hearted institution  ,I might even argue otherwise , if the occasion seemed appropiate.

But for their right to say it .......?
Title: Re: EU aims to criminalise Holocaust denial
Post by: Plane on April 23, 2007, 05:18:00 PM
Would this count as a European perspecive?



(http://homepages.stayfree.co.uk/lss/voltaire.jpg)




I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it.

http://www.quotationspage.com/quotes/Voltaire

http://www.wsu.edu:8080/~wldciv/world_civ_reader/world_civ_reader_2/voltaire.html#6

Title: Re: EU aims to criminalise Holocaust denial
Post by: Universe Prince on April 23, 2007, 06:13:18 PM

This law, or more accurately this framework for a law being passed down by the European Union, is a product of much more than a question of freedom of speech.


Of course it is. The does not mean, however, the notion of freedom of speech has minimal or no bearing on the matter.
Title: Re: EU aims to criminalise Holocaust denial
Post by: Lanya on April 24, 2007, 12:10:55 AM
<<woud you want it to be against the law for someone to state tha slavery "wasn't so bad"?>>

No.   Let's say someone wrote a book on why internment camps were really a good idea, and maybe we should have some again today for people of  Middle Eastern origin.

I'd want to know who that person was and quick, so I could avoid them like the plague and warn others against them.

By their fruits ye shall know them.   

Title: Re: EU aims to criminalise Holocaust denial
Post by: Plane on April 24, 2007, 01:14:25 AM
<<woud you want it to be against the law for someone to state tha slavery "wasn't so bad"?>>

No.   Let's say someone wrote a book on why internment camps were really a good idea, and maybe we should have some again today for people of  Middle Eastern origin.

I'd want to know who that person was and quick, so I could avoid them like the plague and warn others against them.

By their fruits ye shall know them.   




Great!

I wish I had said that.
Title: Re: EU aims to criminalise Holocaust denial
Post by: Lanya on April 24, 2007, 04:14:33 AM
But, Plane, that may be because this is a vast country.   I'm not worried about immigrants taking over and denying history. 
If I lived in a small European country, I might very well worry about that, with good reason.
Title: Re: EU aims to criminalise Holocaust denial
Post by: BT on April 24, 2007, 10:22:28 AM
Seems to me the way you trump deniers is to preserve and document evidence to the contrary.

Not sure if making denial illegal solves the problem, in fact it may feed into their conspiracy mindset.
Title: Re: EU aims to criminalise Holocaust denial
Post by: The_Professor on April 27, 2007, 09:23:10 AM
I can't favor legislation to tell people how to think.

Precisely

Amen!

George Orwell anyone?

Someimtes, JS gets too Euro-centric in his thought processes.
Title: Re: EU aims to criminalise Holocaust denial
Post by: The_Professor on April 27, 2007, 09:31:24 AM
Quote
To think otherwise is sheer folly. The French, by 1941, were a shell of a force, the Brits were literally backed up against a wall, the Aussies were few in number and on and on. Js, your statements are inaccurate Are the Gators still paying their players?

You must mean Florida STATE. Peter Warrick is still shopping in Dilliards, last I heard. The Vols gonna go to the Basement Bowl again? Or, maybe the Citrus Bowl? Ya'll know THAT ONE really well, The Old Ball Coach says...
Title: Re: EU aims to criminalise Holocaust denial
Post by: Plane on April 27, 2007, 04:56:35 PM
But, Plane, that may be because this is a vast country.   I'm not worried about immigrants taking over and denying history. 
If I lived in a small European country, I might very well worry about that, with good reason.


Do they have better reason than we do?


Viva La Raza

http://www.aztlan.net/

http://insidewoodland.com/laraza.cfm


(http://images.cafepress.com/product/10492532_150x150_Front.JPG)
http://www.cafepress.com/lacucaracha/204113



One of these days the Nativists will triumph and the low birth rate of Europeans will be solved by the return of all the American cousins.
Title: Re: EU aims to criminalise Holocaust denial
Post by: Lanya on April 27, 2007, 07:08:00 PM
If my country were small, and had lost several million of its citizens during WW2, I would consider Holocaust denial as the possible beginning of just another such awful period.  And I'd think of it the same as shouting "FIRE" in a crowded theater. 

You must learn from history. You can't say, "Oh, that will never happen again, we are all over that."

As far as I know, Hispanics have never denied the Holocaust happened. 
Title: Re: EU aims to criminalise Holocaust denial
Post by: Plane on April 27, 2007, 07:16:38 PM
If my country were small, and had lost several million of its citizens during WW2, I would consider Holocaust denial as the possible beginning of just another such awful period.  And I'd think of it the same as shouting "FIRE" in a crowded theater. 

You must learn from history. You can't say, "Oh, that will never happen again, we are all over that."

As far as I know, Hispanics have never denied the Holocaust happened. 

An effort to rewrite hstory is going on.

I wouldn't want to forbid it , there are errors that can be corrected ,but to do so for political reasons tends to skew the result.

Since it is hard for a historians to exist outside of politics , a better solution is t encourage a competition.
Title: Re: EU aims to criminalise Holocaust denial
Post by: domer on April 28, 2007, 12:29:26 PM
Holocaust denial may be compared to either the match or the fuel for a feared conflagration that could again consume Europe, and all the smoky points short of that.
Title: Re: EU aims to criminalise Holocaust denial
Post by: sirs on April 28, 2007, 01:30:15 PM
This is a littbe bit besides the point, but I recall not that long ago, how I was being criticised because I kept referencing the holocaust in my apparent non-criticising of Israeli immigration practices.  How I was completely ignoring all other forms of "mass murders & ethnic clensing" at the hands of other countries, such as Turkey apparently. 

Why isn't that being brought up now?  Why is the Holocuast the end all be all of all mass murders, to the point it's even being advocated that denial of that event should be criminalized??  Where's the consistency?
Title: Re: EU aims to criminalise Holocaust denial
Post by: domer on April 28, 2007, 01:35:49 PM
The Holocaust is Europe's crowning entry in the category of outrage, much like slavery and Indian slaughter are for the United States.
Title: Re: EU aims to criminalise Holocaust denial
Post by: sirs on April 28, 2007, 01:51:03 PM
The Holocaust is Europe's crowning entry in the category of outrage, much like slavery and Indian slaughter are for the United States.

and......................?  Sudan & Turkey are no biggies?  It's ok to deny them, but to actually make it criminal to deny the Holocaust?  Hmmmmmm, I'm still sensing some major inconsistencies in that line of reasoning.  And since it's so on par with slavery & the Indian slaughter, perhaps we need to criminalize those such denials, right here in the U.S.  Wait, free speech you say?  Isn't our intimate perspective of what happened here on par with their perspective of what happened there?? 

How about a Global Thought Police on par with Interpol to deal with such irregularities
Title: Re: EU aims to criminalise Holocaust denial
Post by: domer on April 28, 2007, 01:54:14 PM
You're talking like a crackpot now, so I'll see you later.
Title: Re: EU aims to criminalise Holocaust denial
Post by: sirs on April 28, 2007, 02:02:28 PM
So, apparently the mass murdering massacres in the Sudan & Turkey, aren't a biggie.  At least not worthy of criminilizing their denials.  And while Domer supports what the EU wants to do in installing a Thought Police law, such equally egregious crimes perpetrated on African Americans & American Indians doesn't even warrant a response.

Gotta love the (in)consistency
Title: Re: EU aims to criminalise Holocaust denial
Post by: domer on April 28, 2007, 02:09:43 PM
Europe handles Europe's history and problems, consistent with their principles and traditions. If the US, for example, had a significant minority using the supposed absence of slavery as a potent tool to stoke the fires of hatred in a contemporary political movement with a hate message at its base, then maybe a "slavery-denial" law would have to be looked at. Yet, the US has an entirely different history from Europe and an organic political document proclaiming free speech as almost a consummate good, unlike in Europe.
Title: Re: EU aims to criminalise Holocaust denial
Post by: sirs on April 28, 2007, 02:12:46 PM
As I said, gotta love the inconsistency
Title: Re: EU aims to criminalise Holocaust denial
Post by: domer on April 28, 2007, 02:14:14 PM
Don't try to fit my mind into the shape of your own.
Title: Re: EU aims to criminalise Holocaust denial
Post by: sirs on April 28, 2007, 02:19:52 PM
Oh, I wouldn't dare try to match your obviously superior intellect       


 ::)
Title: Re: EU aims to criminalise Holocaust denial
Post by: domer on April 28, 2007, 02:21:28 PM
I said nothing about superior (just correct in this instance).
Title: Re: EU aims to criminalise Holocaust denial
Post by: sirs on April 28, 2007, 02:26:33 PM
Like I said           8)
Title: Re: EU aims to criminalise Holocaust denial
Post by: Amianthus on April 28, 2007, 10:21:33 PM
If the US, for example, had a significant minority using the supposed absence of slavery as a potent tool to stoke the fires of hatred in a contemporary political movement with a hate message at its base, then maybe a "slavery-denial" law would have to be looked at.

Can you show that there is a similar problem in Europe?
Title: Re: EU aims to criminalise Holocaust denial
Post by: domer on April 28, 2007, 10:45:15 PM
There are plenty of examples, Ami, which I'm not going to take the time now to document. Indeed, there's frank neo-Nazi activity in Eurpoe to a degree alarming to some, but on the broader front there's a nativist movement, perhaps fueled by North African immigrants and others not Jews, who will gladly clomp onto an anti-Semitic message either as a stepping-stone to anti-immigrant hatred or who realize that one good scapegoat (Jews) can serve to organize hatred against all "outsiders."
Title: Re: EU aims to criminalise Holocaust denial
Post by: Amianthus on April 28, 2007, 10:54:34 PM
There are plenty of examples, Ami, which I'm not going to take the time now to document.

"I'm too intellectual to bother backing up my arguments."
Title: Re: EU aims to criminalise Holocaust denial
Post by: domer on April 29, 2007, 12:51:49 AM
Search "anti-Semitism Europe" on Google, and take your pick, Ami.
Title: Re: EU aims to criminalise Holocaust denial
Post by: Plane on April 29, 2007, 01:15:51 AM
Holocaust denial may be compared to either the match or the fuel for a feared conflagration that could again consume Europe, and all the smoky points short of that.


Lets compare the denial to a spark , and the anti-semitic attitude to a fuel vapor , can I compare the  forbidding of certain ways of thinking to the containment vessel of the spark and fuel that will make the resulting explosion brisant?

Holocaust deniers seem stupid when they are surrounded by reliable evidence that is easily found and difficult to deny.

But to forbid them from saying what they want lends a sort of credibility to them that they haven't earned.

As a technique for preventing a conflagration ,this one is weak.

Another metaphor might be the small boil that needs lancing , it is not really good to prevent the gush of noxious puss , youmight get a lot more puss later in a bigger boil more painfull to lance.

Europe can't solve its problems with anti-semitism by stifling the freedom of expression , it does nothing to persuede the wrong thinking people , even if it may hide the puss a little while.



Title: Re: EU aims to criminalise Holocaust denial
Post by: domer on April 29, 2007, 01:19:52 AM
We disagree, Plane, though my position, oft-stated, is to defer to the Europeans.
Title: Re: EU aims to criminalise Holocaust denial
Post by: Plane on April 29, 2007, 01:24:47 AM
We disagree, Plane, though my position, oft-stated, is to defer to the Europeans.


I don't disagree about that particular part.

This is a clear European jurisdiction , our comments ar no more than the advice of an elder brother.
Title: Re: EU aims to criminalise Holocaust denial
Post by: Amianthus on April 29, 2007, 05:58:40 PM
Search "anti-Semitism Europe" on Google, and take your pick, Ami.

From the first link returned:

Quote
It is not that Europe has become more anti-Semitic, it is simply that, over the past few years, people have felt much more at ease in expressing their prejudices. In part this is to do with the situation in the Middle East.

Obviously people must have the right to criticise Israel, but it frequently appears to be the case that a standard is applied to Israel that isn't to the rest of the world. The US is also a victim of this kind of hypocrisy - thousands will turn out to protest against President Bush and yet they'll be silent when it comes to a genuinely bloody dictator.

It's not the far-right that are the problem, as they have been brought under control in Europe. It is the politically-correct, centre-left which simultaneously condemns acts of anti-Semitism while defending regimes which support terrorism against Israel.
Quoted from interview with Peter Sichrovsky

Doesn't seem to support your contention.
Title: Re: EU aims to criminalise Holocaust denial
Post by: Lanya on April 29, 2007, 06:34:36 PM
http://www.tau.ac.il/Anti-Semitism/asw2002-3/austria.htm
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Extreme Right Propaganda

In February 2002 Dr. Friedrich Romig, a Catholic conservative, published an article in the FPÖ weekly Zur Zeit in which he asked, “Who really rules Austria?” Romig’s answer is the US, which in turn is controlled by “the Jewish people.” In November 2002 Otto Habsburg, son of the last Austro-Hungarian emperor, claimed in an interview in Zur Zeit that “the Pentagon is now a Jewish institution as all key positions are occupied by Jews.” He labelled Russian president Vladimir Putin a “National Socialist,” and accused Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon of planning a genocide against all Arabs.

In March 2002 Zur Zeit commissioned an article by Richard Melisch on the Middle East conflict which according to Melisch has already been won by the Arabs. In the future, he sees no place for Jews (“a people that claims special rights based on their self-proclaimed chosenness”) in the region and foresees “a new exodus, this time in the other direction [which] should not pose a problem since most Israelis have more than one passport anyway.”

Melisch also wrote a pamphlet, “Krisengebiet Nahost,” published by the right-wing extremist Arbeitsgemeinschaft für demokratische Politik (AFP) and distributed by the local FPÖ subdivision in Kaumberg, Lower Austria. In it Melisch postulates the existence of three parties in the Middle East conflict, two of them exogenous: Zionism, organized globally and which acted both politically and economically, and the US. He claimed that “historical Palestine was inhabited by hard-working Muslims and Christians” while Jews were living in New York at the beginning of World War 1 because that is where “the big banks and credit houses, and the powerful stock exchange bosses” were located. While he avoids the word “Jews,” he uses euphemisms such as “Zionists” or “typical” Jewish family names as well as labels of his own invention such as “Masters of Credit and Interest.” The rest of the pamphlet contains classical antisemitic argumentation, such as the claim that the Jews (or “Zionists”) instigated and profited from wars between powerful nations.

In interviews on the Middle East in the media (Zur Zeit, al-Jazira, the Austrian weekly Profil) in 2002, Haider referred to “acts of state terrorism committed by Israel against the Palestinians” and accused Sharon and the Israeli army of “war crimes.” Helmut Müller, an Austrian contact of the German NPD, wrote in Zur Zeit “we know that… many [Palestinians were] humiliated and tortured and interned in concentration camp-style camps. So quickly have victims been turned into perpetrators. What a loss of prestige for the Jewish people, and a stimulus for latent antisemitism.” Müller also edits the extreme right journal Der Eckart (formerly, Der Eckartbote) where in January 2002 it was alleged that every time the Israeli army used tanks and heavy weapons against the Palestinian people, many German-bashing films were shown on German television. Like other antisemites Müller uses euphemisms, such as “those who secretly govern and try to manipulate us,” for Jews, or “the omnipotent “high finance,” for the US.
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This is a very long, involved article that I found when  googling  Peter Sichrovsky.   
Title: Re: EU aims to criminalise Holocaust denial
Post by: domer on April 29, 2007, 06:35:52 PM
Is that a representative sample? But further, the distinction drawn between "no increase in anti-Semitism" but "increased ease at voicing prejudices" has little meaning in terms of our discussion. The comment you cite seems to chronicle an increase in passion if not a widespread increase in total haters. I need not point out, I'm sure, that the "classic" anti-Semitic movement started with a vocal but limited cadre of operatives known as the Brownshirts.
Title: Re: EU aims to criminalise Holocaust denial
Post by: Amianthus on April 29, 2007, 06:37:53 PM
In interviews on the Middle East in the media (Zur Zeit, al-Jazira, the Austrian weekly Profil) in 2002, Haider referred to “acts of state terrorism committed by Israel against the Palestinians” and accused Sharon and the Israeli army of “war crimes.” Helmut Müller, an Austrian contact of the German NPD, wrote in Zur Zeit “we know that… many [Palestinians were] humiliated and tortured and interned in concentration camp-style camps.

Sounds just like Mikey, JS, et al.
Title: Re: EU aims to criminalise Holocaust denial
Post by: Amianthus on April 29, 2007, 06:41:37 PM
I need not point out, I'm sure, that the "classic" anti-Semitic movement started with a vocal but limited cadre of operatives known as the Brownshirts.

The SA was not so "limited" - it numbered in the thousands of members. Indeed, if you looked at only the military groups within the SA, they were regiment-strength early on. Plus you had all the support members and the political operatives, etc.