In On Liberty,
John Stuart Mill railed against the tyranny of majorities to
silence contentious voices. Mill praised free speech in part
because our fundamental beliefs crystallize into inert lumps
of “dead dogma” when they are not challenged. A
liberal society needs a large domain of free speech like the
body needs a large supply of oxygen.
The
violence that followed the publication of the cartoons of
Mohammed in the Danish daily, Jyllands-Posten, was shocking.
It prompted journalists to consider what a free and responsible
press means in pluralistic democracies. The dispute showed
that the popular phrase “a free and responsible press”
may have become one of Mill’s dogmas, providing cover
for troubling tensions just below the surface.
The arguments
Arguments for and against publishing and republishing the
images came in two strengths – a “weak”
and a “strong” version. The “weak”
argument said publishers had a constitutional right to publish
the images, if they so wished. The strong version was that
editors “ought” to publish the images to stand
up for free expression and to inform the public.
The argument for not publishing the images
also had a weak and a strong version. The weak version took
a middle way -- publishers had a legal right to publish but
they could use their discretion because it was not “necessary”
to publish the images to properly cover the story. Publication
of the images would be “merely provocative.” Why
unnecessarily offend Muslims, especially at a time of tension?
Some editors added that publishing the images would have violated
their standards against publishing offensive or graphic images.
The stronger version argued that to publish the images was
simply an abuse of press freedom, causing harm and little
good. Publishers had an ethical duty not to publish the images.
Among the journalists who argued strongly
for publication was Erza Levant, publisher of The Western
Standard in Calgary, who told CBC radio that his paper has
the constitutional right to re-publish the cartoons because,
“it’s the central fact in the largest news story
of the month and we are a news magazine, I guess our readers
want to know the news.” In The Globe and Mail, Margaret
Wente said on March 18th that democratic values of free speech
and equality had to be defended against what she called the
“multicultural myth” – the idea that “difference”
makes Canada a better place. However, Ian Jack in London,
editor of the literary magazine Granta, called the re-publication
of cartoons an unacceptable abuse of free expression. A middle
way was represented by major newspapers such as The Globe
and Mail and The Washington Post. “It was a choice similar
to not running images of dead bodies and offensive language,”
said Leonard Downie, Jr., executive editor of The Washington
Post. “We described them (cartoons).” Ed Greenspon,
editor-in-chief of The Globe and Mail, wrote that the Jyllands-Posten
had the right to publish the cartoons and Muslims had the
right to protest, peacefully. But re-publishing would be both
a “gratuitous and unnecessarily provocation, especially
given what we knew about how offended Muslims . . . felt about
the cartoons.” The Globe’s policy is to publish
offensive material only when “absolutely necessary to
the understanding of the story.”
“Offending” responsibly? My own view favours publication, but it falls somewhere
between these arguments. Legally I defend the right of editors
to publish these cartoons, for whatever reasons. A liberal
democratic society needs a relatively wide area reserved for
controversial and, yes, offensive speech so long as it is
not hate speech. Toleration of offensive speech is a difficult
but fundamental feature of an open society.
I also believe that it is ethically permissible
to publish and re-publish the cartoons if published in a contextualized
manner. I think you can “offend,” responsibly.
I do not say that editors have a “duty” to publish
the images. Too much depends on context to make such a sweeping
claim. But I do think that in certain contexts, there are
serious reasons to support responsibly publishing the images.
A publication would be “merely provocative”
if it simply published the cartoons under a headline that
read: “Take that, you Muslims!” or otherwise showed
contempt. But one could publish responsibly in an informed
and non-contemptuous manner. How? By explaining the reasons
why some Muslims oppose the depiction and the history of that
belief; by examining the social and political causes of the
protests; by avoiding simplified images of Islam; by speaking
with moderate Muslims; by exploring how democracies might
deal fairly with such issues.
What reasons would support thoughtful re-publishing?
No doubt the images would still offend. But journalists would
have discharged their duty to provide a diverse forum on a
major issue, without allowing fear of offending or intimidation
to limit the discussion. But is it “necessary”
to see the images? It is difficult to respond to this objection
because what is “necessary” to a story is quite
subjective. To play devil’s advocate, I suggest that
people need to see these cartoons in the press for themselves,
rather than have them described, or by having to turn to Google.
Today, I still talk with non-Muslim people who oppose the
publications or talk about them with conviction, although
they have not seen the cartoons. When they do see the cartoons,
they have a greater understanding about the reasonableness
of various positions.
Another reason to responsibly publish the
images is that a publication might feel that members of the
mainstream media should stand behind the principle of free
expression, against clear threats of intimidation. Flemming
Rose, culture editor of the Jyllands-Posten, said he published
the cartoons not to mock Muslims but to test the limits of
free expression. He said that recent incidents of self-censorship
in Europe have caused “widening fears and feelings of
intimidation in dealing with issues related to Islam.”
Now isn’t this a crucial social issue? Is this being
“merely provocative”? Therefore, it is not enough
to say that something is offensive. The usual rule is that
publications avoid offensive material if it serves no greater
purpose than to shock or titillate. But that is just the issue
in the cartoon debate. One can’t assume that publishing
the cartoons serves only to provoke. Furthermore, not publishing
the cartoons creates the danger of a slippery slope that leads
from the cartoon case to the next story that offends deeply
held beliefs. I do not see how the middle-way editors can
publish other culturally controversial images or stories in
the future, if the only test is whether the story is offensive
to devout persons.
Freedom to offend
Finally, I am concerned that this whole torturous debate indicates
that some people are too ready to think that the potential
of causing “offence” is a knock-down reason not
to publish something. We are in danger of losing a balance
between freedom and responsibility. There are responsibilities
to speak out, as well as to remain silent. A love of building
bridges between cultures does not entail the silencing of
those who may not want to build a bridge, or do not want to
speak in measured tones. Of course we should educate citizens
to tolerate and respect each other. But we should also teach
that in a plural society, expect to be offended.
The right to offend trumps the right not to be offended. In
light of the cartoon case, journalists need to ask not only,
“What are the limits of a free press?” but also
“What are the limits of social responsibility?”
DR. STEPHEN WARD,
Director of Journalism Ethics for the Global Citizen, is a faculty
member in the School of Journalism at the University of British
Columbia. He holds a PhD in Philosophy from the University of
Waterloo and has 15 years of journalism experience, including
10 years with the Canadian Press as a foreign correspondent
and bureau chief.
Before becoming Vancouver bureau chief, Ward spent five years
as CP’s only staff reporter in Europe. Based in London,
he covered major events such as the Gulf War, the Bosnian conflict
and the troubles in Northern Ireland. Before joining the journalism
school, Ward was a research fellow at the Joan Shorenstein Center
on the Press, Politics and Public Policy, part of the Kennedy
School of Government at Harvard University. His research interests
include the philosophy of journalism, media ethics and the impact
of new media on journalism.