The German journalist Malte Herwig suggests to reconsider Anti-Holocaust denial laws in the light of the recent discussions on free speech after the fatal attack on the satirical French newspaper Charlie Hebdo on 7 January 2015. Quoting Voltaire's famous (actually put into his mouth by a biographer) "I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it", he makes the point that this should also hold for one of the "most contemptible opinions" like Holocaust denial and the likes of Horst Mahler.
[...] Let's do the Voltaire test in present Germany. We have taboos too, which are not covered by freedom of speech. I reckon antisemitism and Holocaust denial among the most conteptible opinions. I regard them as stupid and wrong, and I think it's important to expose them publicly as lies and to condemn them socially.But I'm not a afraid of such lies. As long asit is notslander, I do not think that one should ban such statementsandso draw even more attention to them. That's why Ithink it's wrong thata conceitedright-wing extremist as Horst Mahler should stay fortwelve yearsin prison becausehehas repeatedlydenied the Holocaust.His fantasms about the Third Reichcan be easilyrefuted and even more easilyignored.Yet,freedom of speech is measuredwith a double standard in his case -according to the motto"I'm Charlie, but you're Horst, andyou needto go in jail for your opinion."
Meanwhile, theBavarian minister of finance WinfriedBausback tries to ban a criticallyannotated editionof Hitler's"Mein Kampf"compiled byrenownedhistorians. Obviously,the minister considers thepoisonHitleras still infectiousanddoubts in theimmunityof the Germans.Dictatorships are afraid of the truth, democracies not. We should not be afraid of lies either, if we are serious about freedom. "If you feel dissatisfied with a book, then refute it", suggested Voltaire once, "if it makes you upset, do not read it."
(Malte Herwig, Ich bin Charlie, du bist Horst, published 4 February 2015, my translation; I learnt about the article from Italy's main Revisionist dump blog Olodogma)
Indeed, it's time for parts of Europe to grow up and deal with Holocaust deniers like one is usually doing it with crank movements: punishing them by not taking notice of or debunking their pile of crap.
As we exercise here at Holocaust Controversies blog, Holocaust denial is ridiculously easy to refute that it seems as if any ban is causing more damage than it intents to avoid.
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Addition of 9 February 2015:
Sam Schulman concluded in The Weekly Standardthat "[l]imiting free speech, for noble or ignoble reasons, is an experiment that has been tried and failed. Jailing antisemites and dissenting journalists has failed to protect even the lives of European Jews, much less reduce antisemitism." (found via the CODOH forum)
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Addition of 9 February 2015:
Sam Schulman concluded in The Weekly Standardthat "[l]imiting free speech, for noble or ignoble reasons, is an experiment that has been tried and failed. Jailing antisemites and dissenting journalists has failed to protect even the lives of European Jews, much less reduce antisemitism." (found via the CODOH forum)