For the past
two weeks or more, a fierce debate has raged about the publishing of the
offensive video and French magazine cartoons about Mohammed. Predictably, the
debate has been structured around two positions – a strong call for free
expression (offensive or not) versus calls for protection against offensive
material.
Free
expression is all about a “hecklers veto” where people can shout down forms of
expression they don’t like. This is essentially a slippery slope argument which
worries that restraint on expression in one area of society can lead to
restraint in other areas of society. When it comes to free speech, it appears
to be ‘all or nothing.’
Expert in restraint
tend to focus on the feelings of offense caused by the expression in question,
and to call for laws to stop such offense.
Debates on
free expression and offended parties often miss the key question: What
serious harm has the
expression actually caused or is likely to cause, and is it sufficient to
warrant ethical and legal condemnation?

What does
matter is harm, not offense? The real ethical question is whether publications
or free expression cause unjustifiable harm to individuals, groups, and
vulnerable minorities. For example, publications against religions, lifestyles,
sexual practice, and minorities not only ‘offend.’ They may create a harmful,
poisonous environment in which these groups must live.
For example,
consider a newspaper in a conservative town. It launches a campaign against
gays, publishing photos of gays and accusing them of being a threat to
children. The paper doesn’t just express its views, freely. It doesn’t just
‘cause offense’ to gays. It does much more than that. The publication causes
real harm to the gay population, prompting them to feel under attack, and
perhaps to not socialize as freely as they did before. Such coverage is
ethically wrong because of the harm caused, not because it offends some people.
Why
not also restrict publications that cause harm to the interests of people by
creating, or contributing to, a poisonous social climate. The main issue is not
that citizens have to develop thick skins against insults. That is true, but it
misses the main point: the impact and harm of the targeted, vulnerable group.
Where does this
leave us?
We —
citizens and the news media — need better arguments for what types of speech
should or should not be restrained. If I am right, journalists need to cover
these free speech issues with greater subtly for the principles and
complexities involved.
We need to
rethink our principles of free expression in a global, pluralistic world.
No comments:
Post a Comment