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 US Selective Free Speech Policy and Anti-Islam Media 
	  Campaigns  By Soraya Sepahpour-Ulrich Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, September 24, 2012   The Moslem World’s Rage; Justified or Misplaced?
 Media outlets 
	  are abuzz with news of the Moslem world’s rage over the release of the 
	  provocative film “Innocence of Moslems”.  Pundits are quick to 
	  condemn the protests across 20 nations, and the gullible and callous 
	  citizens of the “West”, mimicking pundits who are paid to mislead and 
	  misinform,  are placing the blame on the aggrieved Moslem community – they 
	  simply don’t understand how “free speech” works in America.  But 
	  those who are not intellectually blind see a different reality – the 
	  fallacy of free speech.
 
 There is a precedent to curbing free 
	  speech when deemed harmful.  In a landmark Supreme Court hearing --
	  
	  Schenck v. United States, 249 U.S. 47 (1919), the actions of Schenck, 
	  an anti-war individual who had printed and distributed leaflets in order 
	  to  discourage enlisting servicemen, was not afforded protection under the 
	  First Amendment.   The issue before the court was whether 
	  Schenck's actions (words, expression) were protected by the free speech 
	  clause of the First Amendment.   The 
	  Court ruled:
 
 "The most stringent protection of free speech 
	  would not protect a man in falsely shouting fire in a theatre and causing 
	  panic.” Holmes argued that “The question in every case is whether the 
	  words used are used in such circumstances and are of such nature as to 
	  create a clear and present danger that they will bring about the 
	  substantive evils that Congress has a right to prevent.”
 
 Since 
	  the events of  9/11, the whole Moslem community has been engulfed in 
	  panic, death, and destruction through such provocative expressions of 
	  “free speech”.    The United States government, in defiance of 
	  this  precedent has decided not to prevent such “substantive evils”.
 
 The desecration of the Koran in
	  
	  2002 by Guantanamo prison guards revealed in 2005, caused riots 
	  globally and took the lives of 15 people.   The lack of inaction 
	  by the authorities may have given Florida pastor Terry Jones reason to be 
	  encouraged and to burn a Koran on March 20, 2011.  Pictures which 
	  were posted on his church’s website.    Shortly thereafter, protests 
	  broke out in Afghanistan where a U.N. building was attacked and
	  
	  12 people killed.   The government inaction continued.  
	  As such, it did not come as a surprise that in February 2012,  US 
	  forces in Afghanistan burnt copies of Korans at U.S. bases.   
	  Angry protests ensued resulting in 30 deaths. 
	  There were no 
	  criminal charges against the troops, only unspecified administrative 
	  punishment.
 
 While the First Amendment enabled insults to be 
	  hurled at Moslems, Moslems living in the United States were deprived of 
	  “free speech”.  Moslem students at California State University in Irvine (UCI) 
	  were suspended for a year for interrupting the speech of the Israeli 
	  Ambassador to the U.S., Michael Oren.  The same state allowed the 
	  censorship of professors who spoke out against the bombing of Gaza and 
	  slaughtering of the Palestinians (see 
	  link).
 
 On October 16, 2004, President
	  George W.  Bush signed the Israel Lobby's 
	  bill, the 
	  
	  Global Anti-Semitism Review Act. This 
	  legislation requires the US Department of State to monitor anti-Semitism 
	  world wide.  (It is noteworthy that 4 years later, Republican 
	  candidates ran on a platform of promoting hatred of Islam - -see
	  
	  HERE).   In line with policies of 
	  selective “free speech”, and in the same month that no criminal 
	  charges were brought  against troops in Afghanistan for burning 
	  Korans and urinating on Afghan corpses, August 2012, California passed a 
	  resolution  (House Resolution 35) against criticism of Israel.  
	    What is perhaps more revealing than the Resolution itself, is the desire 
	  and the power to curb “free speech” (read 
	  Resolution).
 
 In light of the recent examples, is the 
	  Moslem world’s anger at the United States misplaced when clearly the 
	  United States government has the power to curb speech (the most recent 
	  case in point being the State of Georgia’s denial of KKK group's 
	  application to “Adopt a Highway”)?   Perhaps for the protestors, it 
	  is hard to understand that the President’s kill list allows  the 
	  assassination of American individuals ‘based 
	  merely on patterns of behavior”  yet he is not able to exercise 
	  power to curb speech denigrating Islam.
 
 Why has there been no 
	  will to put a stop to these insults and the ensuing violence?  One may 
	  never know the answer.   What is clear is that although the 
	  Moslem countries have been grossly violated, their cities bombed, their 
	  men, women, and children killed, their spirit has not been crushed.  
	  As was brilliantly depicted in a different kind of movie -- Gillo 
	  Pontecorvo’s 1965 production of “The Battle of Algiers”, bombs and guns 
	  can crush a man’s frail body but not his resistant spirit; ideology will 
	  always prevail over bullets.
 
 Soraya Sepahpour-Ulrich 
	  is a Public Diplomacy Scholar, independent researcher and blogger with a 
	  focus on U.S. foreign policy and the role of lobby groups.
 
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