Karnal
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Salman Rushdie weighed into the debate. He was on TV last night saying he always tunes out when people say, "I'm all for free speech, but..."
Rushdie affirmed that all speech should be totally free, no ifs or buts. There are no limits to free speech.
Presumably the people Rushdie is talking about are Western liberals. Rushdie, however, grew up in India. There, and for much of Asia, people have a completely different take on freedom of speech. When people live in small villages or high density areas, you don't want to offend your extended family and your neighbours. In India, there are deeply knitted hierarchies and people you don't want to p!ss off. The caste system is still alive. Your in-laws are often in the same house.
In China, there are state restrictions on free speech, but also cultural codes of politeness and face. These are huge, immutable social structures. Usually, what is said is not what is meant. In China, the idea of free speech is heavily qualified.
The West has evolved a dialectic process that requires confrontation. Our legal and parliamentary systems are based on this - a form of Socratic reasoning that evolved through Kant and Hegel. The media, in particular, is based on this too - two opposing sides are placed in a news story, and out of this, we expect a synthesis to appear. This, in the West, is how we uncover truth. We are expected to make a judgement. We are expected to present an argument. We are expected to argue and rebut.
Free speech comes with responsibilities. If it's just a form of reaction, it's slavery, not freedom. If it's just an ego trip, it serves no social good at all. The interests of the individual are not always in the interest of the community.
Such neoliberal ideology is considered ludicrous in most of the world. At its worst, it can inspire tyranny, not freedom.
Liberalism - the ideas of John Stuart Mill - is exactly what radical Islam stands against. Within Islam, freedom requires discipline, it just uses different terms. Freedom is not one of them. Submission to God is freedom. The family and community are the site of ethics, not the individual.
In this sense, sure, there is a clash of civilizations, but it's only radical Islam that is on the sticky end of it - in large part, due to its strident opposition to Western liberalism.
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