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Oliver Kamm

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Oliver Kamm,

Oliver Kamm

Opinion

Offended by freedom of speech? That's life

January 15, 2015 12:52
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2 min read

"Why is freedom of expression deemed more important than Jewish lives?" asked Melanie Phillips in The Times this week. Her argument was that Western commentators were failing to report the virulent antisemitism at the heart of the Islamist terrorists' campaign of violence.

Well, I'm committed to the defence of Jewish lives and of freedom of expression. I can't conceive of security for the Jews without a flourishing of Enlightenment values of liberal political rights, religious liberty and free expression. They are indivisible.

That needs to be stressed against a popular and stubborn misconception. This is the view that free speech, while valuable, needs to be balanced against other social goals, such as the maintenance of social cohesion and the avoidance of offence.

On the very day that a dozen French journalists were murdered, one commentator for the Financial Times observed that "too often editorial foolishness has prevailed at Charlie Hebdo". The insinuation that by exercising free speech irresponsibly, the cartoonists and their colleagues had provoked their own murders, was worse than indecent: it was wrong.