(First published in The Dominion Post and on Stuff.co.nz., April 4.)
Changes to the gun control
laws are a mere trifle compared with what else might come down the legislative
pipeline following the Christchurch mosque massacres.
There are an estimated
250,000 New Zealanders with a firearms licence. Of those, we can assume only a
small proportion of gun enthusiasts will be directly affected by proposed
changes covering military-style semi-automatic weapons.
Changes to what we can say,
write, read and hear, on the other hand, could threaten the essential nature
and quality of our democracy. Ultimately they would affect everyone. That’s why
we should all be extremely uneasy about the pending review of laws governing
so-called “hate speech”.
A review was due this year
anyway, but Justice Minister Andrew Little says it will be fast-tracked
following the Christchurch atrocities.
I don’t believe that Little
is necessarily an enemy of free speech, but no one should be in any doubt that the
climate is perversely ripe for a crackdown on freedom of expression.
Authoritarian ideologues on
the far Left know that if there’s ever going to be a moment when New Zealanders
can be persuaded to accept restrictions on what we can say, it’s now, when the
country is looking for ways to atone for the appalling atrocities – although
they were not perpetrated by us – on March 15.
Before that happens, we
should insist on answers to some crucial questions. Here are a few:
■ In what way are existing
“hate speech” laws inadequate? Respected legal academics point out that we
already have laws that prohibit statements inciting racial disharmony or hostility
against minorities. There is nothing to indicate these laws have failed. In fact they are rarely used, which suggests the problem is not as pressing as
hate-speech lobbyists claim.
The Human Rights Commission is
concerned that current laws cover race, colour and ethnicity but not religion,
which means they don’t protect Muslims or other religious minorities. But that
should be easily fixed without imposing wider restrictions on speech.
■ How would tougher speech laws
have prevented the killings? That isn’t clear. They might limit the rights of
ordinary New Zealanders while having no effect on fanatics like the
Christchurch shooter (who, we shouldn’t forget, was Australian). And they would
risk driving potentially dangerous opinions underground, where they are harder
to counter.
This latter point was made to
me last year by Professor Paul Spoonley when I interviewed him for an article on
“hate speech” in The Listener.
Spoonley, an authority on extremism, questioned the need for tougher laws and described
himself as an ardent proponent of free speech. He now seems to have had a
change of heart – as he’s entitled to do, although it seems a sharp about-turn.
■ How is hate speech to be
defined, especially when one person’s hate speech is another’s legitimate
expression of opinion? And crucially, who will do the defining?
One person who can be
expected to wield influence over the review is the Chief Human Rights
Commissioner, Paul Hunt.
Never heard of him? No, many
New Zealanders haven’t. He was appointed last October as part of a cleanout
that followed a sexual harassment scandal at the Human Rights Commission.
Hunt was recruited from
Britain. He is an academic, a human rights careerist and an activist whose adulatory
entry in Wikipedia makes much of his work with the United Nations. He is also aligned with the Corbynite socialist Left of the British Labour
Party.
Is he someone we should
entrust with the job of influencing what New Zealanders can be permitted to
read, hear and say? I don’t think so. Not for a moment.
■ Could a review result in
police being given power to launch what would effectively be political
prosecutions against people for saying the wrong things, as happens in Britain?
That would be a radical extension of police powers and one that New Zealanders must oppose.
■ Most important, how is the
notion of hate speech to be reconciled with freedom of expression – a
fundamental tenet of democracy, and a right guaranteed to New Zealanders under
the Bill of Rights Act?
New Zealand is
internationally admired as a liberal, open democracy. We pride ourselves on
respecting freedom of religion, and never more so than in the weeks since the
Christchurch shootings.
Freedom of speech is part of
the same bundle of rights, but paradoxically we are now being told that one
freedom must be restricted to protect another. It doesn’t add up.
The enemies of free speech
want to contain political debate within narrow parameters dictated by them, and
are prepared to exploit a tragedy to achieve that goal. They must not be
allowed to get away with it.
So the next time one of my customers calls me "fucking honky cunt" can I expect them to be prosecuted?
ReplyDeleteSome time ago Karl you wrote a critical article about NZ’ers’ perceptions of American humour as lacking the element of irony. How ironical it is that our current left government and its lackeys in positions of influence and power, eg. Mr Paul Hunt et al, are preparing to impose or support restrictions, or to ban outright, the freedoms to express ourselves freely (though, as you have pointed out, civilly and responsibly). ‘Those who do not learn from history are bound to repeat it’ (my rendition).
ReplyDeleteRepressive regimes throughout history - and I’m no historian - have begun by bombarding their citizens with propaganda generated from ideology, followed by crackdowns on those who either oppose the utterances directly, or refuse to follow the party line. Andrew Little’s belief that he knows best what is good for us is a very worrying development, though no doubt he will assure us that all viewpoints will be considered before the government ignores the ones that do not conform to the proposed restrictions, and vilifies the proponents of free speech.
Perhaps as worrying as the scenario as I predict is the almost total lack of political opposition from, in particular, the National members of Parliament. Still too busy sobbing petulantly into their comfort blankets?
The UKs various statutes covering "hate speech" are pertinent here.
ReplyDeleteThe Racial and Religious Hatred Act 2006 amended the Public Order Act 1986 by adding Part 3A. That Part says, "A person who uses threatening words or behaviour, or displays any written material which is threatening, is guilty of an offence if he intends thereby to stir up religious hatred." The Part protects freedom of expression by stating in Section 29J:
Nothing in this Part shall be read or given effect in a way which prohibits or restricts discussion, criticism or expressions of antipathy, dislike, ridicule, insult or abuse of particular religions or the beliefs or practices of their adherents, or of any other belief system or the beliefs or practices of its adherents, or proselytising or urging adherents of a different religion or belief system to cease practising their religion or belief system.
Something like the above freedom of expression provision would be essential in any new legislation in NZ. However, it has not prevented some absurd situations in the UK. We should not follow the UK's lead but I fear that is where Paul Hunt will attempt to steer things.
Ken H