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Monday, June 09, 2008
Rich Lowry :: Townhall.com Columnist
Mark Steyn: Enemy of the State?
by Rich Lowry
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At its best, Western civilization has fostered freedom of speech and of thought. But Canada has a better idea.

Last week, a Human Rights Tribunal in British Columbia considered a complaint brought against journalist Mark Steyn for a piece in the Canadian newsweekly Maclean's. The excerpt from Steyn's best-selling book "America Alone" argued that high Muslim birthrates mean Europeans will feel pressure to reach "an accommodation with their radicalized Islamic compatriots."

The piece was obviously within respectable journalistic bounds. In fact, combining hilarity and profound social analysis, the article could be considered a sparkling model of the polemical art -- not surprisingly, given that Steyn is one of North America's journalistic gems.

The Canadian Islamic Congress took offense. In the normal course of things, that would mean speaking or writing to counter Steyn. Not in 21st-century Canada, where the old liberal rallying cry "I hate what you say, but will fight for your right to say it" no longer applies.

The country is dotted with human-rights commissions. At first, they typically heard discrimination suits against businesses. But since that didn't create much work, the commissions branched out into policing "hate" speech. Initially, they targeted neo-Nazis; then religious figures for their condemnations of homosexuality; and now Maclean's and Steyn.

The new rallying cry is, "If I hate what you say, I'll accuse you of hate." The Canadian Islamic Council got the Human Rights Tribunal in British Columbia and the national Canadian Human Rights Commission (where proceedings are still pending) to agree to hear its complaint. It had to like its odds.

The national commission has never found anyone innocent in 31 years. It is set up for classic Alice-in-Wonderland "verdict first, trial later" justice. Canada's Human Rights Act defines hate speech as speech "likely to expose a person or persons to hatred or contempt." The language is so capacious and vague that to be accused is tantamount to being found guilty. Continued...

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About The Author
Rich Lowry is author of Legacy: Paying the Price for the Clinton Years .
 
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Maclean's wins tribunal case
Maclean's wins tribunal case on 'hate speech'
Canwest News Service
Published: Saturday, October 11, 2008

The British Columbia Human Rights Tribunal ruled Friday that a controversial article about Islam in Maclean's magazine did not violate the province's hate speech law.

In acquitting the magazine, the tribunal ruled that the article, an excerpt from Mark Steyn's book America Alone in which he describes the demographic and ideological dangers posed by a growing Muslim population in the West, was not likely to expose Muslims to hatred or contempt.


Case Dismissed
Maclean's wins tribunal case on 'hate speech'
Canwest News Service
Published: Saturday, October 11, 2008

The British Columbia Human Rights Tribunal ruled Friday that a controversial article about Islam in Maclean's magazine did not violate the province's hate speech law.

In acquitting the magazine, the tribunal ruled that the article, an excerpt from Mark Steyn's book America Alone in which he describes the demographic and ideological dangers posed by a growing Muslim population in the West, was not likely to expose Muslims to hatred or contempt.

The Canadian Islamic Congress, which brought the complaint, has previously failed in two other jurisdictions: Ontario, which said it did not have jurisdiction over printed material; and federally, where the complaint was rejected as without merit.

From:
http://www.canada.com/vancouversun/news/story.html?id=d4284 e9d-25a6-45d3-811f-e733f88e2f51
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