snapped shot

now in ap-approved text mode

 

What happened to the pictures? Exhibit A, Exhibit B
Will they ever come back? Yes and no

Fitna: Second Edition

Geert Wilders has put the finishing touches on his updated, more copyright-compliant Fitna. The handful of you out there who haven't seen it yet can check it out below [Content warning—Violence not ordinarily shown in the news.]:

 

A Speech Everyone Needs To Read

The following is a speech by Geert Wilders, the maker of the film "Fitna". It was given in front of Holland's Parliament on, or around, March 15th 2008:

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'Reasonable Men' Respect Islam

Thomas Mann once said, "Tolerance becomes a crime when applied to evil."

The Freedom of Speech is a guarantee to protect the expression of thought. It is not, however, a guarantee that all expressed thoughts will be respected. It also does not guarantee your "religious sensitivities" will remain unscathed. The Wall Street Journal may have lost sight of this concept.

WSJ author Peter Hoekstra seems to confuse that point in his opinion piece about Geert Wilders' short film "Fitna":

Reasonable men in free societies regard Geert Wilders's anti-Muslim rhetoric, and films like "Fitna," as disrespectful of the religious sensitivities of members of the Islamic faith. But free societies also hold freedom of speech to be a fundamental human right. We don't silence, jail or kill people with whom we disagree just because their ideas are offensive or disturbing.

To Hoekstra's credit, he does go on in the article to defend the freedom of expression and criticize some aspects of radical Islam. But missing from his piece is the most important part of free speech - the right to scrutinize other people's beliefs. At what point does distasteful truth go from "offensive" or "disturbing" to acceptable? Is it still "respectable" to protect 'religious sensitivities' even when that religion destroys the lives of others? Do "reasonable men" become unreasonable when defending the life and liberty of those imprisoned by a cult-like dogma?

I think not.

(On a side note, I would like to thank Brian for giving me this opportunity to blog here at SnappedShot. I've always been a fan, and I am honored to be a new part of the SnappedShot team.)