Thursday 25th of April 2024

not so free speech .....

not so free speech ....

from Crikey …..

authoritarianism, not terrorists, killed Charlie Hebdo ….

The Kouachi brothers' lethal attacks on the magazine Charlie Hebdo and the attack on a kosher grocery store called out worldwide solidarity, the former to a greater degree than the latter. They've come back into discussion due to some remarks by Doonesbury cartoonist Garry Trudeau concerning the aftermath of the attacks, when a 7 million-copy run of the magazine became little more than a state-sponsored initiative, wherein Trudeau's remarks have been wilfully misconstructed in the usual manner.

What's more telling is not what happened to Hebdo after the massacre, but what happened to free speech in France - and the silence of those who had purported to care about the issue.

Solidarity quickly turned to farce days after the massacre in January, when a march through Paris was reorganised as an international opportunity for world leaders to strut their stuff - including representatives of countries with a record of killing and jailing journalists, from Turkey to Israel via way of Saudi Arabia and the United States.

Much of their participation was simulation - photos of the world leaders marching at the "head" of the parade had actually been photographed in a side street, with extras behind them to give the appearance of a surging crowd. Never mind, said those defending the campaign: free speech, the idea of it matters above all.

They held the line even when the French state launched a simultaneous crackdown on "hate speech", targeting everyone from virulently racist groups to those expressing support for armed struggle overseas.

People were arrested under hate speech laws for arguing with police, with some reported cases of extraordinary repression that included people trying to wind the cops up when arrested on minor matters such as travelling without a ticket. One such man told cops "The Kouachi brothers were just the start. I wish I’d been with them to kill more" and got 10 months in prison.

Others were jailed for yelling their support for the brothers outside a police station. A drunk, intellectually disabled man was jailed for six months for saying, "They killed Charlie. I laughed". Police were called to a school because an eight-year-old had said, "I am with the terrorists" in class.

To call these arrests and inquiries ironic would be to miss the point. The remarks are provocative in the way that Charlie Hebdo was - and is - on paper. But after the Hebdo attack, only a certain type of "free" speech and certain types of speakers were authorised to exercise the glorious heritage of reason and "Western values". In order to allegedly protect this very narrowed domain of state-authorised free speech, others must be repressed.

What was most predictable was the way in which the right-wing and fellow travelling "free speech" crowd showed little interest in the crackdown and no interest at all in following up what happened to those people who had been arrested for acts of speech.

In the UK, free speech sergeant-majors rounding up recalcitrant troops - writers such as Spiked editor Brendan O'Neill, the former Stalinist David Aaronovitch and the self-regarding conscience of the left, Nick Cohen - have spent no time at all asking what happened to people who had been caught up in legal hysteria and vanished into the harsh French prison system for something they had said in the street.

In Australia there has been a similar silence of the hams, with Andrew Bolt, Tim Blair, Piers Akerman or the like showing no interest in recent months in whether the Hebdo massacre became an excuse to limit free speech (of a certain type), rather than a defence of it.

Now the French government has extended that crackdown further and deeper into French social life, with ongoing surveillance of schools and pupils' essays, and forceful messages of "authorised" republican values.

It's becoming clear that the "defence" of free speech in the wake of the Hebdo massacre was a disaster for free speech. The determination of the bully boys to make us all metaphorically link arms with the ambassador of Saudi Arabia, for godsake, rather than to engage critically with the way in which the state was using the cause for its own ends, has shown some people to be the proverbial useful idiots (one should stop using that phrase; it's become clear that Lenin never said it), and others to be simply uncaring about the application of repression to those with no cultural power. Indeed, whether there is any great concern about free speech is debatable.

"Free speech" is taken as a content-free marker of "Western civilisation" in what is really preparatory work for a renewed "clash of civilisations" i.e. renewed war of power blocs. Many of the "free speech" advocates, from left and right, are making the same trek that occurred in the '30s - from the centre across the right to the hard right, and something darker.

They protested against lethal killers who, by their actions, showed they had no interest in a dialogue of means and ends. Yet they say nothing to a republic that holds itself up to be the first modern state founded on reason, and thus presumably open to dialogue.

It's the sort of bleak absurdity that would find a place in Charlie Hebdo - if that publication had not been killed, not by ruthless killers, but by the tender embrace of the state and the creation of authorised satire. For the long war for freedom no sacrifice is too great, including freedom.

 

ah charlie, how could you ?...

Here let me mention another Charlie, the ABC's, pitiful, atrociously annoying attempt at satire by Charlie Pickering... Called the Weakly (sorry the Weekly) with Charlie Pickering, last night it replaced the finely-tuned high-octane satire Shaun Micallef's Mad as Hell... Was there discreet pressure from politicians on the ABC to get that biting show off our screens ? Were the ABC lawyers shitting in their pants, as usual with Shaun Micallef's satire that was close to the bone, after cutting into the rotten flesh of politics? Who knows... But it looks as if the Shaun Micallef's show had two more episode to go for the season with a promising sixth season since our politicians are getting madder and madder... I don't know. Possibly it could have been due to budgetary consideration. The Weakly (sorry the Weekly) with Charlie Pickering must has been produced on the smell of two used toilet rolls. Very well done if you "still" work for the ABC.

It appears as if the show was like the recycling of another poor rating ABC show which also pertained to dissect the funny bits of "news" from the media. Horribly unfunny, puerile, possibly designed to catch the non-watchers — the young adolescents who are busy twittering fart jokes and kids who should be in bed by 8 thirty.

There is satire and there's satire...

shame auntie shame...

charlie

Charlie Pickering says he wants to create TV similar to that made by veteran presenter Clive James, but some viewers think he's trying to be like US host, John Oliver.

Pickering's new ABC show The Weekly aired for the first time on Wednesday night, during which Pickering and co-presenters Kitty Flanagan and Tom Gleeson took a satirical look on the issues of the week, including internet piracy and vaccinations.

Before the show aired, Pickering revealed he had been re-watching old episodes of Australian presenter Clive James's TV show on YouTube.


Read more: http://www.smh.com.au/entertainment/tv-and-radio/charlie-pickerings-the-weekly-accused-of-copying-john-oliver-20150423-1mrc0b.html#ixzz3Y6Ut918e
Bring back Micallef, PLEASE ! And the show "The Weakly" reminds me of is the Tom Ballard's... "Reality Check?"... Juvenile... juvenile... juvenile...

dying for free speech...

 

SBS presenter Scott McIntyre has been sacked from the broadcaster after posting a series of comments about Anzac Day on Twitter that were described as "inappropriate and disrespectful".

McIntyre, a soccer reporter and presenter, referred to some Australians marking Anzac Day as "poorly-read, largely white, nationalist drinkers and gamblers" on his officially verified Twitter account on Saturday night.

"Remembering the summary execution, widespread rape and theft committed by these 'brave' Anzacs in Egypt, Palestine and Japan," he wrote to his 30,000 followers.

"Not forgetting that the largest single-day terrorist attacks in history were committed by this nation & their allies in Hiroshima & Nagasaki."

Communications Minister Malcolm Turnbull took the unusual step of criticising the presenter on Twitter.

"Difficult to think of more offensive or inappropriate comments," Mr Turnbull tweeted.

"Despicable remarks which deserve to be condemned."

But some commentators defended McIntyre's right to free speech. Ten News' Hugh Riminton tweeted that the presenter's comments were "untimely, immature and in one case offensively wrong. But lest we forget, Our Diggers also died for free speech."

http://www.smh.com.au/national/sbs-presenter-scott-mcintyre-sacked-over-inappropriate-anzac-day-tweets-20150426-1mtbx8.html

 

 

Not only free speech is not allowed here, but the truth is being denied...