Bruce Gordon has written about the attacks on free speech and 11 February Day for Free Expression in the South African Times Live. He ends by saying:
These are direct attacks not only on the freedoms and rights of atheists and skeptics, but on everybody, everywhere. These are attacks on the basic human right to disagree, the right which is fundamental to all the others.
For too long fear has been treated as not simply a valid alternative to argument, but a superior one. For too long authoritarians of every stripe have told us, “Your facts are rendered irrelevant by our fists” and caused chaos, destruction and war through their violence.
As South Africans, of every faith and none, of every alignment and none, we stand against this privately in our everyday lives. We know that our rights begin in the rights of others, because we have seen what happens when that principle is cast aside.
On the 11 of February, One Law for All is arranging a rally to stand up against this. What do you intend to do? Are you prepared to stand up and say “We give this kuffar the right to speak”?
My only objection is to the notion that someone is “giving me” the right to speak. The right is mine. You can take from me the ability to exercise it, you can recognize it, you can refuse to oppose it, but you cannot “give” it to me.
+10!!
You are right, of course. The right to speak is ours inherently. But in a way we do have to “give” the right to others and, no less, to ourselves. Freedom will always be eroded. It is always under attack and we have to fight for it.
On a technical point “kuffar” is the plural of “kafir” so the sentence should be “We give these kuffar…” rather than “We give this kuffar…”
This is what I wrote to my Indonesian colleagues. Somehow I doubt that we will be able to organise much here, but I may be surprised.
I then gave the link to your article, Bruce.
Thankyou.
Kuffar shirts, anyone?
They might be just the thing, especially at places like LSE, in view of the utter stupidity and arrogance of the Students’ Union executive there.
~~~
Maryam,
Bruce is Gorton.
Awesome
Thanks for the mention Maryam.
Sorry, didn’t mean to post that as a reply to evilDoug.
Hello Bruce,
How many of you are there in Soth Africa?
I guess even the most devoutly misguided nation has its dissenters, as evidenced by the existence of Maryam and me.
The non-religious were about 5% of the population last I looked (It was a while ago though.) In South Africa atheists tend towards the quieter side when it comes to our atheism because we tend to have less overt threats made against us, and we have a lot of other social issues to deal with that seem to be of higher urgency.
Corruption, our disgustingly patriarchal cultures, homophobia, racism, various health crisis and a huge big dollop of unemployment tend to strike people as more urgent.
Of course, I tend to think religion plays a big role in perpetuating those problems so I take a more aggressive stance.
For too long authoritarians of every stripe have told us, “Your facts are rendered irrelevant by our fists”
Now that is a great line