Americans think of Europeans as essentially like themselves.
They believe European societies are like their own-rooted in the rule
of law, freedom of religion, democratic government, market competition,
and an unfettered press. In recent years, however, Europeans have given
up an essential liberty: freedom of speech. It is true that in the United
States prevailing orthodoxies on some questions are ruthlessly enforced
but it is still legal to say just about anything. Not so in much
of Europe. In the last decade or so countries we think of as fellow
democracies-France, Germany, Switzerland and others-have passed laws
that limit free speech for the same crude ideological reasons that drove
the brief, unsuccessful vogue of campus speech codes in the United States.
Today in Europe there are laws as bad
as anything George Orwell could have imagined. In some countries courts
have ruled that the facts are irrelevant, and that certain things must
not be said whether they are true or false. In others, a defendant in
court who tries to explain or defend a forbidden view will be charged
on the spot with a fresh offense. Even his lawyer can be fined or go
to jail for trying to mount a defense. In one case a judge ordered that
a booksellers entire stock-innocent as well as offending titles-be
burned!
Just as Eastern Europe is emerging from
it, Western Europe has entered the thought-crime era, in a return to
the mentality that launched the Inquisition and the wars of religion.
It is a tyranny of the left practiced by the very people who profess
shock at the tactics of Joseph McCarthy, an exercise of raw power in
the service of pure ideology. The desire not merely to debate ones
opponents but to disgrace them, muzzle them, fine them, jail them
is utterly contrary to the spirit of civilized discourse. It is profoundly
disturbing to find this ugly sentiment codified into law in some of
the countries we think of as pillars of Western Civilization. At the
same time, these laws cannot help but draw attention to the very ideas
they forbid. Truth does not generally require the help of censors.
There are two subjects about which Europeans
can no longer speak freely. One is race and the other is Nazi Germany.
Anti-racism laws generally take the form of forbidding the
expression of opinions that might stir up hatred against
any racial or ethnic group. In some countries, it is now risky to say
that genetic differences explain why blacks have, on average, lower
IQs than whites or to say that non-white immigration should be prevented
so as to preserve a white majority. There are probably parts of every
issue of American Renaissance that could be banned in some European
country, and we have an obvious interest in opposing censorship of this
kind.
In one case a judge ordered that a bookseller’s
entire stock - innocent as well as offending titles - be burned!
Far more prosecutions have taken place,
however, in connection with what is called Holocaust revisionism
or Holocaust denial. This appears to cover any skepticism
about the generally-accepted view that the Nazis had a plan to exterminate
Jews and managed to kill some six million, mostly by gassing. There
is considerable variety in the laws that forbid disagreement on this
matter (see sidebar, page 6), but the Jewish Holocaust has become the
one historical event on which people in France, Germany, Switzerland,
Spain, Holland, Poland, Austria, Lithuania (and Israel) can be legally
compelled to agree. It is still legal to dissent from Holocaust orthodoxy
in Italy, Sweden, Denmark, Norway, Britain, Ireland, and Croatia, but
there is powerful pressure in some of these countries to join the censors.
Third Reich Jewish polices are of no special interest to AR, but it
is outrageous that any point of view on any question be forbidden.
In the United States there is widespread
complacency over this blatant thought control practiced by our closest
allies. This complacency proves the utter lack of integrity of those
who make principled free-speech claims for Communists, pornographers,
rap artists, and flag-burners, but who will not lift a finger
to stop the persecution of racists and Nazis.
Liberals get dewy-eyed over the First Amendment only when it suits them,
and are quietly delighted to see their opponents dragged off to jail
because of their opinions. Indeed, several thousand Europeans are arrested
every year who, if they were leftists, would be lionized as prisoners
of conscience. Indifference, even joy, over their fate is the
contemptible sentiment that prevails across the political spectrum even
in America.
France has had perhaps the most colorful
history of modern European censorship, perhaps because it has the longest
history of Holocaust revisionism. The leftist Paul Rassinier cast doubt
on accepted views as early as the 1950s, but it was in 1978 that revisionism
came to the attention of a larger European public. In that and the following
year Prof. Robert Faurisson of the University of Lyon published two
articles in the newspaper Le Monde asserting that there were
no execution gas chambers in the Nazi concentration camps. Mr. Faurisson,
an expert at textual analysis who made his case from original documents,
provoked a storm of opposition.
Nine anti-racist and concentration-camp
survivor organizations brought civil and criminal suits against Prof.
Faurisson for falsification of history in the matter of the gas
chambers, a curious charge brought under the French anti-racial-discrimination
law of 1972. In April 1983, the Paris Court of Appeals found Prof. Faurisson
innocent of falsification of history but found him guilty
of the equally curious crime of reducing his research to malevolent
slogans, and made him pay a small fine. At the same time, the
court upheld the right to express any opinion on the existence of Nazi
gas chambers (presumably so long as it was not expressed malevolently),
concluding that the value of the conclusions defended by Faurisson
rests therefore solely with the appraisal of experts, historians, and
the public.
This was a setback to the suppressers
of free speech, who responded with what is known as the Gayssot law-named
for the Communist deputy who promoted it-signed into law in 1990 by
President François Mitterand. This law made it a crime punishable
by up to 250,000 French francs (at that time approximately $50,000)
or one year in prison or both to dispute the truth of any of the crimes
against humanity for which Nazi leaders were charged at the Nuremberg
trials. Prof. Faurisson, who had continued to publish views on the Holocaust,
was the first to be convicted under this law, and was fined 100,000
francs in April, 1991, a penalty reduced on appeal to 30,000 francs.
He has not given up his work and has been repeatedly found guilty of
the same crime. At last count, he has also been physically assaulted
ten times and on at least one occasion was nearly killed.
Although the Gayssot law was controversial
when it was passed, the French are now happy with it. According to a
1998 Sofres poll, 79 percent think it necessary because one does
not have the right to say anything one likes about the extermination
of the Jews.
The extent of this sentiment explains
why there were other convictions for Holocaust-related comments before
passage of the 1990 Gayssot law. In 1987 the leader of the French National
Front Jean-Marie Le Pen was fined under anti-racism laws, not for denying
the existence of Nazi gas chambers but merely for describing them as
a detail or minor point in the history of the
Second World War. Astonishingly enough, not only must a Frenchman affirm
a certain historical fact, he must attribute to it a certain prescribed
importance.
Brigitte Bardot, hate criminal.
Another French celebrity-turned-thought
criminal is Brigitte Bardot, the former actress. In retirement she has
become an ardent animal-rights activist and has often denounced the
ritual slaughter of sheep by French Muslims during the festival that
marks the end of the Ramadan fast. She has also spoken in more general
terms, lamenting that my country, France, my homeland, my land
is again invaded by an overpopulation of foreigners, especially Muslims.
Like Prof. Faurisson, she is impenitent and has been fined at least
three times-in 1997, 1998 and 2000-under the 1972 anti-racism law. A
judge concluded that Miss Bardot was guilty of inciting discrimination,
hatred or racial violence, and that her condemnation of Muslim
practices went beyond any possible concern for animal rights.
There has been a host of other less-well-known
Frenchmen convicted under the censorship laws. In May, 1999, the editor
of a small-circulation magazine Akribeia was fined 10,000 francs
($2,000) and given a suspended six-month sentence for writing favorably
about Paul Rassinier, the founder of French revisionism. At his arrest,
police strip-searched Jean Plantin and confiscated his two computers
and a dozen computer disks, destroying the results of several years
research. In September 2000, a 53-year-old French high school teacher
in Lemberg in the Moselle region was fined 40,000 Francs ($8,000) and
given a one-year suspended sentence for telling his students that the
Third Reich gas chambers were used for delousing clothes and that the
concentration camps were not extermination centers.
Censorship cases now get little attention
in France unless there are unusual circumstances or the defendant is
a celebrity. In July 2000, a local National Front politician in the
Rhône-Alpes region, Georges Theil, was charged with disputing
the existence of crimes against humanity. In what he thought was
a private e-mail exchange and using a screen name, he had written, Homicidal
gas chambers never existed for the simple reason that they were simply
and profoundly impossible. Mr. Theil had not counted on the diligence
of the French police, who tracked him down through his Internet service
provider, Wanadoo, and hauled him into court where prosecutors asked
for a six-month suspended sentence. Cases of this kind, which show how
deeply the French police are willing to burrow into what people think
are their private lives, have been completely ignored in the United
States.
Two recent censorship trials that did
receive international attention were the Garaudy affair
and the successful attempt to shut down certain activities by the American
Internet portal Yahoo. The Garaudy scandal is particularly instructive
because it shows how willingly the left will sacrifice its own to the
gods of Third Reich orthodoxy. Roger Garaudy was born in 1913, served
in the French army, joined the wartime Resistance, and sat in the French
National Assembly as a Communist, first as a deputy and later as a senator.
For 25 years he was a major theoretician for the Communist Party, but
broke with the comrades over the Soviet invasion of Czechoslovakia in
1968. He continued to teach philosophy and promote anti-racism and socialism.
He converted to Islam, and enjoyed great prestige as one of Frances
most influential public intellectuals.
Over the years he took an increasing
interest in the Palestinian cause, and came to believe Jews were exaggerating
the horrors of the Holocaust in order to squelch criticism of Israel.
This and other views expressed in his 1995 book The Founding Myths
of Modern Israel (published in English in 2000 by the California-based
Institute for Historical Review) unleashed not only a flood of criticism
but likewise brought the octogenarian into court for violation of the
Gayssot law. Prof. Garaudys impeccable credentials as a leftist
and anti-racist were no defense. In February, 1998, he was duly fined
the equivalent of $40,000 after a trial that caused a sensation in France
and throughout the Islamic world. Probably no event has prompted more
interest in Holocaust revisionism among Arabs than the trial of this
French Muslim who defended Palestinians. Religious and political leaders
from Egypt to Iran denounced France for putting him on trial, and the
wife of the president of the United Arab Emirates contributed $50,000
to his defense. Egyptian Nobel laureate in literature Naguib Mahfouz
wondered about the health of Western societies in which it is commonplace
to deny God but a crime to doubt the Holocaust.
Abbé Pierre
The affair took on yet another tragi-comic
dimension when Abbé Pierre, one of the most popular and admired
men in France, made a few offhand remarks in support of Prof. Garaudy.
Abbé Pierre is a Capuchin friar whose real name is Henri Groulès.
He came to be known as the abbé during his work with
the French Resistance smuggling Jews out of occupied France. He has
devoted his life to good works for the poor and for immigrants, and
has a reputation something like that of Mother Theresa. He had become
acquainted with Prof. Garaudy and shared his concern about Israels
treatment of Palestinians. After a few comments in favor of his old
friend, he was horrified to discover that despite much backtracking
and many apologies his reputation had vanished. He acknowledged he had
not read the book, called on Prof. Garaudy to correct any errors, and
disavowed any association with Holocaust denial. Even so, leftists whom
he thought were lifelong friends turned on him, kicking him out of the
International League Against Racism and Anti-Semitism, a French anti-racist
organization of which he had long been a member. Perhaps the cruelest
blow was his expulsion from Emmaus, the charitable organization he himself
had founded. Although not charged with violation of the Gayssot law,
Abbé Pierre fled to Italy and hid in a monastery until the controversy
blew over.
The French case against the American
Internet giant Yahoo, which is a gateway to search engines, auctions,
shopping and much else caused only a brief murmur of disapproval in
the United States, but is an ominous first step in bringing the Internet
under the control of European censorship laws. The same International
League Against Racism and Anti-Semitism of which the abbé used
to be member-known by its French acronym LICRA-joined the French Union
of Jewish Students in suing Yahoo to stop Internet auctions of Nazi
medals, arm bands, photos, autographs and the like. Frances anti-racism
laws forbid commerce in anything racially tinged, and the
California-based Yahoo promptly removed these auctions from its French
web site.
This was not enough for LICRA and the
Jewish students, who insisted that Yahoo find a way to block French
Internet users from reaching Yahoo sites in the U.S., where auctions
continued. Yahoo said it was technologically impossible, and the court
appointed a panel of three computer experts-American, British, and French-to
render a ruling. Two of the experts said it could not be done, but Judge
Jean-Jacques Gomez chose to believe the Frenchman, who said it could.
In May 2000, he gave Yahoo two months to make it impossible for French
Internet users to reach the Nazi auctions. He said he would fine the
American company 100,000 Francs (now $13,000) a day if it did not, since
the sale of Nazi souvenirs offended the collective memory of the
nation. Judge Gomez also ordered Yahoo to pay 10,000 Francs to
the plaintiffs LICRA and the Union of Jewish Students. A LICRA spokesman
hailed the ruling as a great victory for democracy, of all things.
The French case against Yahoo was an ominous
first step in bringing the Internet under European censorship
laws.
The next month Jerry Yang, a co-founder
of Yahoo, said his company would ignore Judge Gomez order.
Asking us to filter access to our sites according to the nationality
of web surfers is very naïve, he said, adding, we are
not going to change the content of our sites in the United States because
someone in France is asking us to do so. Six months later, in
January 2001, Mr. Yang ate crow when Yahoo decided voluntarily
to stop auctioning anything that bears a swastika or any other hate
symbol such as a KKK insignia. Yahoo recognizes that we were right,
exulted LICRA, and Ygal El Harrar, chairman of he Jewish students, welcomed
the return to its senses by the American company. Incredibly,
Yahoo claims daily fines had nothing to do with its decision. Noting
that it already bans auctions of live animals, used underwear, and tobacco,
it is pretending it is was only adjusting its list of forbidden products.
No one is fooled. Lee Dembart wrote
in the International Herald Tribune on Jan. 15, 2001, that the
precedent has now been set for any country to try to control the Internet
all over the world. China could threaten to fine sites that promote
the Falun Gong Buddhist cult, which is illegal in China. Arab countries
could fine Internet sites that sell Jewish memorabilia, since such things
no doubt offend their collective memory. But by and large
the American media have had nothing to say about what amounts to the
imposition of French law on Americans. Needless to say, there would
be a frenzy of denunciation if it were not Nazis who were
being shoved off the net but, say, abortion-rights activists.
Switzerland
In the minds of Americans Switzerland
is an orderly, sensible country of decent, independent-minded people.
It is also perhaps the only country that has ever brought censorship
upon itself through referendum. Over the weekend of Sept. 24 and 25,
1994, the Swiss voted by a majority of 54.7 to 45.3 percent to make
it a crime, punishable by fine and/or up to three years imprisonment,
to publicly incite hatred or discrimination or deny,
grossly minimize, or seek to justify genocide or other crimes against
humanity. Half of all Swiss cantons voted against the new law
but thanks to the overall majority, it went into effect Jan. 1, 1995.
Swiss authorities had not actually needed
this law to censor foreigners. In November 1986, the Geneva police stopped
two French Holocaust revisionists-Pierre Guillaume and Henri Roques-from
giving a press conference and banned them from speaking publicly in
Switzerland for three years.
The first Swiss citizen to fall afoul
of the new law was Arthur Vogt, an 80-year-old retired school teacher.
On June 3, 1997, a court in Meilen fined him 20,000 Swiss Francs ($15,000)
for mailing copies of a revisionist book to seven acquaintances and
for publishing a private newsletter in which he had written revisionist
essays.
In December 1997, a court in Vevey sentenced
Aldo Ferraglia, an Italian citizen, to four months in jail and court
costs of 15,075 francs. He was also made to pay 28,000 francs in atonement
to three Jewish organizations for having distributed a number of Holocaust
revisionist books, including Roger Garaudys The Founding Myths
of Modern Israel. At the Ferraglia trial the judge defended the
new law by explaining it did not forbid opinion, only the public expression
of certain opinions-a distinction that may be a little too fine for
Americans.
By June of last year, there had been
no fewer than 200 trials and 100 sentences based on the 1995 law. As
in France, such trials no longer attract much attention. Probably few
Swiss heard about it when animal rights activist Erwin Kessler went
to jail for two months for writing that Jews who practice ritual slaughter
of cattle are no better than concentration-camp guards.
The press took only slightly more notice
of Gaston-Armand Amaudruz whom a Lausanne court sentenced to a year
in prison for articles he wrote in his monthly newsletter Courrier
du Continent, which he started in 1946 and had only about 500 subscribers,
mostly in France. Mr. Amaudruz holds a doctorate in social and political
sciences and has been a teacher of French and German. These are the
words for which the 79-year-old paid with a year in prison: For
my part, I maintain my position: I dont believe in the gas chambers.
Let the exterminationists provide the proof and I will believe it. But
as Ive been waiting for this proof for decades, I dont believe
I will see it soon. At sentencing, the judge criticized Mr. Amaudruz
lack of remorse and noted that he had continued to violate the law,
writing Long live revisionism in the issue of the newsletter
that appeared just before the trial.
Jürgen Graf
Perhaps the most prominent Swiss to
be found guilty under the censorship law is 49-year-old school teacher
Jürgen Graf. In March, 1993, after the publication of his 112-page
book, The Holocaust on the Test Stand, in which he cited reasons
to doubt the accounts of extermination, he was fired from his job as
a teacher of Latin and French at a private secondary school. The French
banned the book in 1994. Before long Mr. Graf found himself in court,
andin July, 1998, he was sentenced to 15 months in jail for
various revisionist writings. Sentenced along with Mr. Graf was his
70-year-old publisher, Gerhard Förster, who got 12 months. The
court fined both men 8,000 Swiss francs ($5,500) and ordered them to
turn over 55,000 francs ($38,000) in proceeds from book sales. Presiding
Judge Andrea Staubli said the defendants remarkable criminal
energy and lack of remorse justified harsh punishment.
Their defense counsel protested that
he could not even try to explain the reasons for Mr. Grafs statements
without, himself, being prosecuted under the same law. He also argued
in vain that censorship law violated the free-speech provisions of the
European Human Rights Convention which Switzerland has signed. Wolfgang
Frölich, an engineer called to vouch for the authenticity of Mr.
Grafs findings, found himself threatened with prosecution if he
testified. Just as absurdly, the court included The Holocaust on
the Test Stand in its reasons for finding Mr. Graf guilty even though
he wrote it before the 1995 censorship law.
Mr. Graf decided to flee the country
rather than spend 15 months in prison. In November 2000, he ended up
in Iran, where he planned to stay for some time. He has been welcomed
by scholars in Tehran, and was invited to give lectures at Iranian universities.
Mr. Graf does not intend to return to Switzerland until the country
restores the right of free speech. As we will see, he is not the only
European to go into exile rather than face jail as a prisoner of conscience.
Germany
Since the end of the Second World War,
beginning with de-Nazification, Germany has had censorship laws unthinkable
in the United States. Nazi songs, salutes, and symbols are illegal even
in private, and the country has been as aggressive as any in trying
to expand the effects of its own repressive laws beyond its own borders.
By now, thousands of people have fallen afoul of anti-Nazi, and incitement
to racial hatred laws, which violate the German constitutions
own guarantees of freedom of expression. Any number of quite remarkable
cases of state-sponsored thought control have gone almost completely
unreported in the United States.
Fredrick Toben was born in Germany in
1944 but emigrated with his parents to Australia when he was ten, and
is an Australian citizen. He studied at Melbourne University and at
universities in Heidelberg, Tübingen, and Stuttgart, and has a
doctorate in philosophy. In 1994 he established the Adelaide Institute,
in the Australian town of that name, to promote Holocaust revisionism.
He sent some material to Germany, and was arrested in Mannheim in April
1999 during a visit. He was held without bail until his trial seven
months later and was charged with incitement to racial hatred,
insulting the memory of the dead, and public denial
of genocide. The court sentenced Dr. Toben to ten months in prison
but let him off with a fine of 6,000 marks ($3,500) on the strength
of time already spent in prison. As in Switzerland, it is impossible
to mount a defense against these charges. Defendants and even lawyers
who try to explain or justify their statements have been immediately
charged with additional offenses right in the courtroom.
The prosecution tried to charge Mr.
Toben on additional counts because of articles on his Australia-based
Adelaide Institute web page (www.adelaide institute.org), but the court
ruled that his only violation of German law was to have sent printed
matter directly into Germany. Foreign Internet sites were not covered
by the law even if Germans could read them. As Deputy Interior Minister
Brigitte Zypries explained in July 2000, Thats life and
thats the Internet … . You cant build a wall around
Germany. Since the government could not use the most serious evidence
against him, Dr. Toben got off lightly; the shortest previous sentence
for his crimes had been two years, and the prosecution was asking for
two years and four months.
However, in December 2000, in a very
significant ruling that went virtually unnoticed in the United States,
Germanys highest court, the Bundesgerichtshof, reversed
the lower court. It said German law applies to any ideas or images Germans
can reach from within Germany, so someone who posts a swastika on a
web page anywhere in the world is a criminal under German law. Dr. Toben,
whose case provided the high court with the basis of this ruling, could
presumably be the subject of an extradition request. As we will see
below, Dr. Toben faces problems enough back home in Australia.
One of the few Americans to notice and
comment on this extension of German (and French) law to the Internet
was Rabbi Abraham Cooper of the Simon Wiesenthal Center in Los Angeles.
We commend the German authorities for sticking to their commitment,
he said; its their democracy, these are their laws.
He went on to praise the French, too: We have to commend the Germans
and the French for basically saying In our societies, this is
how we deal with the problems of hate, racism and Holocaust denial.
You in America have your own laws, but at least respect our values.
Perhaps Rabbi Cooper would be pleased to see European-style censorship
in the United States.
Germar Rudolf
The case of Germar Rudolf is likewise
remarkable. Born in 1964, Mr. Rudolf graduated summa cum laude in
chemistry from the University of Bonn and is a certified chemist. After
serving in the German air force, he entered a Ph.D. program at the prestigious
Max Planck Institute for Solid State Physics. While still at the institute
he carried out a forensic physical examination of the gas chambers of
Birkenau and concluded that for a variety of technical reasons they
could not have been used for executions. In 1993 he published his findings
in what is called The Rudolf Report, and was promptly dismissed
from the Max Planck Institute. A court in Stuttgart ruled that the report
denies the systematic mass murder of the Jewish population in
gas chambers and was therefore popular incitement,
incitement to racial hatred, and defamation.
The court rejected Mr. Rudolfs request for technical evidence
about the truth or falsehood of his report, ruling that the mass
murder of the Jews is obvious.
Mr. Rudolf has continued to commit thought
crimes, editing a compendium of revisionist articles called Grundlagen
zur Zeitgeschichte [Foundations of Contemporary History]. In 1996
a court fined his publisher 30,000 marks ($18,000) and ordered all copies
seized and burned. Police raided Mr. Rudolfs apartment three times,
and in 1996 he was finally sentenced to 14 months in prison. Rather
than serve time he fled to England, which has anti-racist laws but where
Holocaust denial is not (yet) a crime. He is now director of Castle
Hill Publishers, which issues revisionist works, and publishes a German-language
revisionist quarterly. Jewish groups have brought pressure on the British
government to enact laws to outlaw Holocaust denial so that Mr. Rudolf
can either be prosecuted in England or extradited to Germany. Like Jürgen
Graf of Switzerland, unless free speech is restored in his homeland,
he will go to jail if he ever returns. Recently he moved to the United
States and has applied for amnesty as a political refugee. It will be
interesting to see how the INS, which has stretched political
persecution to include wife-beating and making fun of homosexuals,
will avoid granting him asylum.
One German defendant who did not flee
the country was the elderly historian Udo Walendy, publisher of the
Historical Facts series of booklets. In May, 1996, the district
court of Bielefeld sent him to prison for 15 months, and a year later
a court in Herford added 14 more months to his sentence. He was also
fined 20,000 marks ($12,000) when 12 copies of Adolf Hitlers Mein
Kampf were found in his possession. Judge Helmut Knöner of
the Herford court took the curious position that Mr. Walendy was guilty
not of a sin of commission but of omission:
This [case] is not about what
was written-that is not for this court to determine-but rather about
what was not written. If you had devoted just a fraction of the same
exactitude to highlighting the other side [of the Holocaust question],
you would not have been sentenced.
Here we find the tortured reasoning
to which censorship laws invariably give rise. To have failed to write
about a particular historical event in a balanced manner is a crime
that can send a historian to jail. In the courts view, this one-sided
writing was meant to disturb the public peace, not withstanding
the exactitude of Mr. Walendys work. Moreover, although
Mr. Walendy has been a model prisoner he was denied the usual grant
of release after serving two-thirds of his sentence. Authorities explained
that this was because he was unlikely to change his views.
It is possible to argue that Austrian censorship
laws have already taken a life.
It is possible to argue that Austrian
censorship laws have already claimed a life. In 1995, Werner Pfeifenberger,
a German professor of political science published an essay called Internationalism
and Nationalism: a Never-Ending Mortal Enmity? in a collection
issued by Austrias Freedom Party (see AR, Dec. 1999, and March
2000). A prominent Jewish journalist attacked the essay, accusing Prof.
Pfeifenberger of writing in a neo-Nazi tone, and extolling
the national community. Because the professor had criticized the
1933 Jewish declaration of an international boycott of ermany, the journalist
also accused him of reviving the old Nazi legend of a Jewish world
conspiracy.
The German state of North Rhine-Westphalia
dismissed Prof. Pfeifenberger from his teaching position, and a court
in Vienna prepared a case against him under Austrian anti-Nazi laws.
On May 13, 2000, just a few weeks before the trail, Prof. Pfeifenberger
took his own life. His lawyer explained that Prof. Pfeifenberger faced
ten years in jail under the charges, did not expect a fair trial, and
had already spoken of committing suicide. As in Germany and Switzerland,
Austrian law does not permit a defendant to argue the veracity of his
statements; offensive tone or diction is sufficient
to secure conviction.
United States citizens have fallen afoul
of German censorship laws-without the slightest gesture of support from
their own government. Hans Schmidt of Pensacola, Florida, runs the German-American
National Public Affairs Committee, which publishes a newsletter. Mr.
Schmidt, who fought in the German army, moved to the United States after
the war and became a U.S. citizen. In 1995, on a trip to Germany to
visit family members, German authorities arrested him for having sent
some of his newsletters to Germany. They held him in jail for five months
but released him in conjunction with the first part of his trial. Mr.
Schmidt, who could have been sentenced to five years in prison, slipped
out of the country rather than stay for the rest of his trial.
Another American, Gary Lauck of Lincoln,
Nebraska, was not so lucky. Known as the farm-belt Führer,
Mr. Lauck is an unapologetic supporter of Nazism, and has shipped a
considerable quantity of Nazi material to Germany. In March, 1995, he
was visiting Denmark, a country that does not have anti-Nazi laws, but
in an operation of questionable legality, the Danes extradited him to
Germany. In August, 1996, a Hamburg court convicted him of inciting
racial hatred and distributing illegal materials-which he did legally
in the United States and not in Germany-and sentenced him to four years
in jail. He served his sentence and returned to the United States, where
he continues to promote Nazism.
At almost the same time Mr. Lauck was
on trial in Germany, the American citizen Harry Wu-a fervent critic
of China-slipped into China illegally on a mission of support for dissidents
and was arrested. The U.S. State Department mounted an extraordinary
effort to secure his release, but completely ignored Germanys
prosecution of Mr. Lauck.
No, not kiddie-porn,
but revisionist magazines! Cartoon by Konk in
French weekly.
Another curious case involving the United
States is that of a young German musician Hendrik Möbus. Mr. Möbus
said provocative things about Jews, gave the Nazi salute during a concert,
and later turned up in the United States. In a little-known incident
in the summer of 2000, federal officers arrested Mr. Möbus with
the intention of extraditing him to Germany, even though his offenses
were not crimes in the United States. Apparently thinking better of
this unjustifiable proceeding, the government released Mr. Möbus,
who promptly turned the tables by suing for political asylum. With the
help of William Pierce of the West Virginia-based National Alliance,
Mr. Möbus has hired immigration lawyers to argue his case on the
grounds that he will be persecuted for his political beliefs if he returns
to Germany.
One of the common difficulties for applicants
for asylum is that they must prove they face a realistic threat of persecution.
In Mr. Möbus case, the German authorities have already issued
an extradition request in which they openly state they want to send
him to jail. Once again, it will be interesting to see how the INS responds.
Neo-Nazi music is increasingly popular
in Germany, and bands play a constant cat-and-mouse game with the police.
Most make their recordings in secret studios or across the border in
Poland, and the recordings are then pressed in the United States. The
CDs come back to Europe via Sweden, where the material is not illegal.
Mere possession is a crime in Germany, but the authorities estimate
there are more than 100 neo-Nazi bands operating clandestinely.
Some repressive measures fall short
of imprisonment. In August, 2000, the German postal bank, which is part
of the government-owned post office, systematically shut down all accounts
used by any group it considered far-right. These included
Germanys two main nationalist parties, the German Peoples
Union (DVU) and the National Democratic Party (NPD). Postbank chairman
Wulf von Schimmelmann explained that the measure was a contribution
to political hygiene and cementing of democracy in Germany.
Thought-control can take a comical turn.
In August, 2000, Dresden police ordered a 25-year-old man to get a haircut
because he had shaved the back of his head leaving only the letters
SS, in the distinctive angular script used by the Nazis.
Mein Kampf has been banned in
Germany for years, and German companies have been quietly enforcing
the ban overseas as well. Publishing giant Bertelsmann polices its US-based
website bookstore for titles forbidden in Germany, and is trying to
do the same with Barnesandnoble.com, of which it owns 40 percent. Mein
Kampf is banned in several other countries, including Holland and
the Czech Republic, where distributors were recently fined. There is
considerable irony in suppressing Hitlers turgid autobiography.
For years it was common to say that if only people had read it in the
1930s they would have stopped Hitler in his tracks. Now we must presumably
be kept from reading it for fear we will follow its advice.
Other Countries
Until 1995, Spain was a popular refuge
for dissidents facing prosecution elsewhere in Europe but in that year
it passed new laws putting it firmly in the camp of the censors. The
first conviction came in November, 1998, when bookseller Pedro Varela
was sentenced to five years in jail for incitement to racial hatred
and denying or justifying genocide. His case began in December,
1996, when police raided his Librería Europa bookstore in Barcelona
and confiscated 20,000 volumes. Nearly two years went by before he went
to trial because many of the books were in English, French, or German,
and the court insisted that they be translated into Spanish. In addition
to the five-year prison term, the court fined him 720,000 pesetas ($5,000)
and ordered all 20,000 books burned-even though only 30 of some 200
titles were found to violate the law.
In December 1998, Mr. Varela appealed
the sentence to the provincial court or Audencia of Catalonia,
which ruled unanimously in April 1999 that the censorship law violates
guarantees of free expression in the Spanish constitution. The case
will now go before the Constitutional Tribunal in Madrid. In the meantime,
Mr. Varelas 20,000 volumes have not yet been burned, but he has
not gotten them back either. He restocked his store and continued to
operate, but in January 1999, a mob of anti-fascists smashed
through the protective metal shutters of his shop, ransacked it, and
burned hundreds of books. Police arrived but did nothing. Mr. Varela
rebuilt his store and continues to sell books.
In Britain, despite campaign promises
from Tony Blair that Labour would ban Holocaust denial, in early 2000
Parliament resisted pressure from Jewish groups to do so. Home Office
Minister Mike OBrien explained that the government was unable
to strike a balance between outlawing such offensive statements
while ensuring that freedom of speech is not unduly restricted.
Since 1986 the Public Order Act has made incitement to racial hatred
an offense, but Jewish groups argued this law was inadequate because
prosecutors have been unable to show that Holocaust denial incites hatred.
This is not to say that these laws have never been used. Although enforcement
is sporadic, a few racial nationalists have been convicted.
Originally prosecutors had to prove
a defendant intended to stir up hatred, but that was difficult. Later
the laws were broadened to permit conviction if hatred was stirred up
whatever the intent, but that was also hard to prove. Now, it is sufficient
to show a likelihood that some act will incite racial hatred,
and it was on this basis that Spearhead editor John Tyndall and
British Nationalist editor John Morse were tried together and
convicted by a single jury in 1986. The prosecutions tactic was
to read page after page of offensive material in court and
the cumulative effect seems to have convinced the jury what they wrote
was likely to incite hatred. The judge decided the crime
deserved six months in jail. Mr. Tyndall, who after serving his sentence
returned to editing Spearhead, despises incitement laws but believes
they have the beneficial effect of keeping racial nationalists from
using intemperate-and ultimately unpersuasive language.
How the anti-fascists
left
the Europa bookstore.
Nick Griffin, now head of the British
National Party, received a suspended sentence after a similar conviction
in 1998. He also edited a magazine, which discussed Holocaust revisionism
and opposed non-white immigration to Britain. In his case as well, there
seems to have been no clear line between acceptable and unacceptable
opinions; his magazine apparently created an overall atmosphere that
was likely to incite hatred.
Some British anti-racism measures approach
outright insanity. As reported in the July 2000 issue of AR, a recently-passed
law forbidding racially threatening or abusive words was
recently invoked against a Cambridge man who got into a whispered argument
in a library. A woman overheard Robert Birchall tell Kenyan-born Mugai
Mbaya to go back to your own country, and reported him to
police. Mr. Birchall was fined 100 pounds. In the city of Gloucester
police officers are reported to have been sent to eat in ethnic restaurants
and listen in on the conversations of other patrons so they can charge
them with crimes if they say rude things about other races.
Perhaps even more than to Europeans,
Americans feel kin to Canadians and perhaps Australians-fellow English-speakers
who have established themselves far from the homeland. But here, too,
traditions of free speech have crumbled under the pressure of special-interest
groups. In October 2000, the Australian Human Rights and Equal Opportunity
Commission ordered Frederick Toben-back from prison in Germany-to remove
Holocaust revisionist material from the web page of the Adelaide Institute.
Commissioner Kathleen McEvoy said Mr. Toben violated the 1975 Racial
Discrimination Act by having published materials inciting hatred
against the Jewish people. She also ordered Mr. Toben to post
a lengthy apology. Mr. Toben refused, saying he would not apologize
for material he believed to be factual and that any proceeding against
him was immoral if truth was not permitted as a defense. The government-funded
commission has no enforcement powers, but could initiate proceedings
to have Mr. Toben jailed for contempt.
In Tasmania, the commission has also
accused an associate of the Adelaide Institute, 58-year-old Olga Scully,
of selling anti-Jewish material and putting it in mailboxes. She also
refused to apologize, and the commission announced plans to take her
to court. The Russian-born grandmother says she is not intimidated and
is quite prepared to go to prison.
It will be a surprise to many Americans
to know that our next-door-neighbor Canada now has a nearly 20-year
tradition of censorship. In 1981 a well-liked secondary school teacher
and mayor in Lacombe County, Alberta, named Jim Keegstra was reported
to be telling his social studies students that Jews run the world. The
school board fired him-which it no doubt had the right to do-but Canadian
authorities also charged him with violating section 281 of the criminal
code, which prohibits spreading hate against an identifiable group.
Mr. Keegstra remained unrepentant during a ten-year legal battle that
took him to the Canadian Supreme Court, which upheld his conviction.
The most famous Canadian thought criminal
is undoubtedly Ernst Zundel, a German who immigrated to Canada in 1958
and established himself as a commercial artist. Since the mid-1970s
he has published and publicized Holocaust revisionist materials, and
in 1983 he was charged under section 181 of the criminal code, which
prohibits spreading false news that the purveyor knows to
be false.
His case became something of a cause
célèbre, and the trial dragged on for eight weeks
before reaching a conviction. Mr. Zundel filed numerous appeals and
in 1992 the Supreme Court ruled the law under which he was convicted
unconstitutional because it was an unjustifiable limit on the
right and freedom of expression.
Mr. Zundel was not out of court for
long. At the urging of Jewish groups, he was brought before the Canadian
Human Rights Commission in what must be one of the most Kafkaesque censorship
proceedings of modern times. There is a section of the Canadian criminal
code written to outlaw telephone answering machines with hate
messages. It makes it illegal to communicate telephonically
any matter that is likely to expose a person or persons to hatred
[for reasons of race, ethnicity, etc.]. In a tortured interpretation
of this law, Mr. Zundel was charged on the basis of a web page that
contains Holocaust materials by him and by others. Although the site
is commonly known as the Zundelsite, it is based in the United States
and run by an American.
Ernst Zundel.
Ironically, the Human Rights Commission
has been asked to find Mr. Zundel guilty because he is associated with
a foreign web page that publishes articles that, in print form, have
been found to be legal in Canada. Indeed, the first and lengthiest
of the pamphlets cited in the charge is the very one cited in the previous
case that was thrown out by the Canadian Supreme Court! What is more,
this case has dragged on for an astonishing five years. At the same
time, the chairman of the Human Rights Tribunal has conceded that the
truth is not an issue before us… . The sole issue is whether such
communications are likely to expose a person or persons to hatred or
contempt. Mr. Zundel, who has spent an estimated $140,000 on the
case, recently gave up even trying to defend himself, saying I
would rather save my money and appeal their grotesque ruling when it
comes out. Amazingly, the case continues to drag on without him,
with final arguments expected in late February.
Yet another prominent censorship victim
has been Doug Collins and the newspaper that used to publish him, the
North Shore News. In February 1999, the British Columbia Human
Rights Tribunal found Mr. Collins guilty of acts likely to expose
Jews to hatred or contempt. Found criminal were four columns he
wrote in 1994. Interestingly, the tribunal decided that taken individually
none of the columns was a criminal act, but taken together they were.
The tribunal ordered Mr. Collins and the North Shore News to
desist from further incitement to hatred, and to pay $2,000 to a Jewish
man who had brought the charges, as compensation for injury to his dignity
and self-respect. It also ordered the paper to publish the judgment
in full, which was perhaps the first time the government ever forced
a Canadian newspaper to print something against its will. Mr. Collins
now publishes on the Internet.
Canadian authorities have been very
unpredictable in their enforcement of laws against incitement
of hatred. They have never been bothered by the lyrics of black
rap musicians who openly urge blacks to kill whites, but
it has taken a very close look at academic studies of racial differences.
Canadian customs authorities have seized many shipments of books from
the United States including Race, Evolution and Behavior, by
Philippe Rushton (reviewed in AR, Dec. 1994). Prof. Rushton, who teaches
psychology at the University of Western Ontario, has been himself investigated
for inciting hatred and nearly lost his job because of his carefully-researched
studies of racial differences. Other books Canadian customs have held
at the border include Shockley on Eugenics and Race (reviewed
in AR, Jan. 1993), Race, Intelligence and Bias in Academe by
Roger Pearson, The Dispossessed Majority by Wilmot Robertson,
and The Immigration Invasion by Wayne Lutton and John Tanton.
The United States does not have censorship
laws but we are creeping in that direction. Hate crime laws are an ominous
step, because they add penalties to crimes based on motive. Until the
passage of hate crime laws sentencing did not depend on the motive of
a crime but whether it was premeditated or spontaneous. You could punch
a man because he was fat, black, insulted you, or seduced your wife,
and you were guilty of assault. Now, certain motives-that is to say
certain thoughts-bring heavier penalties. In February of this year,
a Houston, Texas, judge sentenced 21-year-old Matthew Marshall to no
fewer than ten years in jail for burning a cross in front of a black
familys house. People who commit gruesome violent crimes often
get less jail time.
We have also had a few cases of censorship
almost as absurd as those that have begun to crop up in England. In
August, 1998, Janis Barton was leaving a restaurant in Manistee, Michigan,
and walked by another group waiting to be seated. Those in the other
group spoke to each other in Spanish, and Mrs. Barton said, out loud,
I wish damn Spics would learn to speak English. One of the
Spanish-speakers filed a complaint and Mrs. Barton was charged with
the crime of committing insulting conduct in a public place,
on the grounds that what she said were fighting words that
could provoke violence. A jury bought that argument and the judge sentenced
Mrs. Barton to 45 days in jail (she served only a few days). This is
an odd case that may not be repeated, but it clearly shows the direction
in which hypersensitivity to the feelings of non-whites is taking us.
Another worrying step towards censorship
is a law passed just last December 15, which requires all libraries
receiving federal money to use content filters on computers connected
to the Internet. The idea is to protect people from pornography, violence
and hate speech, but the makers of filtering software invariably
give it a leftist slant. The federal government is using the power of
the purse to restrict access to certain views and information.
What These Laws Mean
The full-blown, unabashed censorship
laws in Europe and Canada are a giant step backwards in the history
of Western Civilization. It was perhaps one of the most significant
conceptual breakthroughs in human thought to recognize that the social
cost of suppressing error is far greater than the damage
unchecked error can do when men are free to refute it. It
is cause for great sadness that our European brethren have stepped back
into the mentality of the witch hunt, forcing their citizens into exile
and making them prisoners of conscience.
Indeed, it is in the defense of prisoners
of conscience that Amnesty International (AI) made a name for itself,
and cases like those described here would appear to be tailor-made for
them. According to their own publications, prisoners of conscience are
people who are imprisoned, detained or otherwise physically restricted
anywhere because of their beliefs, color, sex, ethnic origin, language
or religion, provided they have not used or advocated violence.
Every person mentioned in this article and thousands more have been
charged with crimes because of the non-violent expression of beliefs.
AI goes on to say that all people have the right to express their
convictions and the obligation to extend that freedom to others
and that Amnesty International seeks the immediate and unconditional
release of all prisoners of conscience.
A number of people have appealed to
AI to intervene on behalf of imprisoned Holocaust revisionists but AI
refuses. In 1995 it affirmed Amnesty Internationals intention
to exclude from prisoner of conscience status those who advocate the
denial of the Holocaust . . . . They took this step on the grounds
that dissent from accepted views on the Holocaust means one has advocated
national, racial, or religious hatred that constitutes incitement to
discrimination, hostility or violence. What this means is that
AI does not consider someone a prisoner of conscience unless it agrees
with him.
It is probably true that some of the
people charged under incitement laws really do want to stir up hatred-something
that however reprehensible is legal in the United States and should
be legal everywhere-but there is no evidence whatever that this is the
motive of people like Robert Faurisson, Fredrick Toben, Pedro Varela
or Germar Rudolf. It is the people who oppose their work who appear
to be driven by hatred. Furthermore, as British prosecutors have found,
it is unclear just how disputing the existence of gas chambers or the
number of Nazi victims incites hatred against anyone. People are not
suddenly going to start hating Jews just because a pamphlet convinces
them the Nazis killed only one million rather than six million.
It would be more plausible to say that
anyone who harps on slavery, Jim Crow, and segregation is inciting hatred
against whites, or that anyone who describes the way Indians mutilated
the bodies of Custers men at Little Big Horn is stirring up hatred
against Indians. If you scoff at the miracles in the Bible are you inciting
hatred against Christians? If not, why not? After all, neither the truth
of the statements nor the intent of the speaker matters. Laws of this
kind cry out for abuse and invidious application.
Obviously of concern to American
Renaissance is the possibility that any description of race or sex
differences could be considered incitement to hatred. What if the French
and the Germans decide discussions of race and IQ are hate-mongering?
This is actually more logical than saying skepticism about gas chambers
makes people hate Jews. Will AR be banned in Europe? Will people who
write for AR be arrested if they go to Europe?
Laws about inciting hatred are really
very simple: If you hurt the feelings of certain people you can be charged
with a crime. So far, the people about whose feelings one must be most
careful are Jews. Pressure from Jewish organizations has turned what
may have been intended as universal prohibitions into prohibition of
opinions that upset Jews.
Stopped on the
Canadian border
Laws of the French, German, and Austrian
type that specifically prohibit Holocaust denial likewise reflect the
pressure of Jewish organizations. There is only one historical event
in all of human history-an event of particular interest to Jews-about
which the law forbids dissent. Legally requiring acceptance of a historical
event is an absurdity on its face, but why just this one? In January
2000, the French National Assembly voted officially to recognize the
Turkish genocide of Armenians during the First World War.
There are many people who strongly dispute the number and circumstances
of these deaths; Turkey angrily withdrew its ambassador after the vote.
No doubt there will be vigorous genocide denial, whitewashing
of crimes against humanity, and insulting the memory of
the dead. Why will this not be a crime in France? One can only
conclude that it is because Armenians have less influence than Jews.
But the real shame is how few people,
either in Europe or the United States, are willing to oppose this clampdown
on freedom. The left loves to quote lines attributed to Martin Niemoller
(1892-1984), the German Lutheran minister interned by the Nazis:
First they came for the Communists,
and I didnt speak up, because I wasnt a Communist. Then
they came for the Jews, and I didnt speak up, because I wasnt
a Jew. Then they came for the Catholics, and I didnt speak up,
because I was a Protestant. Then they came for me, and by that time
there was no one left to speak up for me.
The message, of course, is that we must
be vigilant against wrongs done even to people with whom we may disagree,
because if we do not resist evil we may some day be its victims. European
censorship laws are precisely the kind of creeping evil Niemoller warned
against, but the left ignores them because it has no principles and
the right ignores them because it has no spine. Censorship is therefore
on the march in Europe and licking at our own borders. We have entered
a new Dark Age
The
Law is an Ass
The laws under which Europeans, Canadians and perhaps now Australians
can be prosecuted for thought crimes are of several kinds. The
first includes the French Gayssot law, which, though amazing,
clearly says what it means: No one is to dispute the genocide
or other crimes against humanity for which the Nazi leaders were
put on trial at Nuremberg after the war. There is no ambiguity
about this. Anyone who says the Nazis did not have an extermination
program is a criminal.
Laws that forbid incitement
of hatred are much more ambiguous. These laws are particularly
frightening because there is no way to know what they mean. Presumably,
if it is against the law to incite hatred there should
be no conviction unless it is proven that something caused hatred.
The prosecution should produce someone who, having read the offending
work or heard the offending speech or seen the offending picture
or symbol, became a hater. None of the censorship laws requires
this. Courts have decided without the slightest evidence that
anyone who takes a position on certain questions-even if all he
does is deliver this view to subscribers who have paid to receive
it-is inciting hate. The other breath-taking aspect
of these laws is that intent does not matter either. It makes
no difference if someone sincerely believes he is uncovering the
truth; if what he says can be construed as likely to incite hate,
he can end up in behind bars.
Finally, there are laws that have
no clear meaning at all. What does it mean to glorify National
Socialism or insult the dead or whitewash
the crimes of the Nazis? Crimes that depend on wording as
vague as this-and there have been plenty of convictions under
them-are close kin to Communist laws that forbade anti-Soviet
behavior or parasitism. These were justly decried
in the West, but there is almost complete silence about anti-Nazi
laws. In the United States vague prohibitions of this kind are
clearly unconstitutional.
Another astonishing aspect of
these laws is that truth is not a defense. Once again, in the
United States, the law is clear: Truth is an absolute protection
for anyone charged with making hurtful, damaging, or embarrassing
statements about anyone or anything. In the American colonies
this tradition dates back to the famous John Peter Zenger trial
of 1735. Zenger, publisher of the New York Weekly Journal, was
charged by British authorities with publishing articles tending
to raise seditions and tumults among the people of this province,
and to fill their minds with contempt for his majestys government.
Zenger was arrested, jailed, and tried. Jurors, however, were
persuaded that truth ought to govern the whole affair of
libels, and in concluding that what Zenger had written was
true, both set Zenger free and, in effect, rewrote the law.
To many people, it seems preposterous
that anyone who disputes gassings at Auschwitz or doubts Germanys
extermination program could appeal to the truth as a defense.
However, in cases of this kind facts are of so little importance
that there have been convictions for statements that appear to
be almost certainly true. British historian David Irving, who
in 2000 lost a celebrated libel case against an anti-revisionist
author, was fined $30,000 by a German court for telling a German
audience that the Auschwitz gas chamber is a post-war reconstruction.
Even the Polish curator at Auschwitz has conceded it is a fake,
but Mr. Irving is a criminal and the curator is not. A different
German court is seeking Mr. Irvings extradition for having
said the same thing to a different German audience.
James Alexander, one of the lawyers
who defended John Peter Zenger, would have been appalled. Freedom
of speech, he wrote after the trial, is a principal
pillar in a free government: when this support is taken away,
the constitution is dissolved and tyranny erected on its ruins.