Abdul said:
I didn't say that it is slanderous because it is blasphemy. I said that from an islamic viewpoint it is both, and that from a western viewpoint it is still slander.
You'll have to explain how mockery and/or insults towards belief systems can be slanderous. And you'd have to extend that defense for
every belief system as a consequence of it - which would have the absolute consequence of nulling all forms of criticism and humour
ever.
Comedy is not an excuse for slander, or lack of diplomacy. Especially not in a public newspaper.
Public newspapers, not owned by the government have no compulsion to observe the diplomatic desires of the government. The paper in question is an independent liberal paper based in Arhus.
Why does there have to be a link? The cartoons clearly lacked any sense of crucial diplomacy in a multicultural society; regardless of whether or not it would be considered blasphemy from an Islamic perspective.
They don't have to have any. There is no right not to be offended in free speech in any nation that recognises it. Or at least there ought not to be.
Secular state or not, slander remains slander. The secularity of Denmark has absolutely nothing to do with that. And just because it's common doesn't make it acceptable. Or just because other people accept it, doesn't mean that we should as well.
I'm not saying you have to accept it. I understand that it might be a blasphemy to you - but you and others ought to understand that you don't get to prohibit things based on this. You don't get to censor others based on this.
so slander only counts for living people? So I can invent a whole bunch of false accusations against your parents, just as long as they would be dead?
That really is the case, I'm afraid. I could start making up stupid comments about historical figures that have been dead for centuries and do you honestly think I would end up in court for it? Look at the criticism of even recently deceased people by journalists. They are welcome to it, however incorrect or ridiculous they may be.
Indeed people speculate on Gordon Brown's motives, agendas and ideals all of the time both in the context of humour and in the context of making points. Should he take all of these to court if they perhaps get him wrong?
I don't know of any historian who questions the existence of Muhammed as a historical figure. Perhaps people might question whether or not he was a prophet or not, but that again has no bearing on the issue. Slander is slander. There's no need for the secular state to accept his prophetship in order to recognise slander.
I also accept his existence as Muhammad as a historical figure as well. That was poor sentence structure on my behalf.