Opinion Blasphemy is a catalyst for progress. Let’s celebrate it. - Blasphemy has been a powerful driver of individual rights and freedoms, argues Stephen Evans.

  • 🏰 The Fediverse is up. If you know, you know.
  • Want to keep track of this thread?
    Accounts can bookmark posts, watch threads for updates, and jump back to where you stopped reading.
    Create account
L | A
By Stephen Evans
1400x.jpg

International Blasphemy Day, 30 September, was created "to remind the world that religion should never again be beyond open and honest discussion".

It was established after the publication in 2005 of 12 cartoons depicting Islam's prophet Muhammad by the Danish newspaper Jyllands-Posten led to worldwide riots. The founders wanted to "dismantle the wall which exists between religion and criticism".

The wall, however, remains very much intact.

Earlier this month, police in southern Pakistan shot dead Shah Nawaz, a doctor accused of insulting Muhammad and sharing blasphemous content on social media. The police officers involved were reportedly applauded and showered with rose petals by local residents.

Under Pakistan's blasphemy laws, anyone found guilty of insulting Islam or Islamic religious figures can be sentenced to death. But those accused are often subjected to mob lynching or extra-judicial killing before their cases get to trial.

Shah Nawaz was the second blasphemy suspect in Pakistan to be shot dead by police in the space of a week.

Pakistan is just one of around 70 countries that still have blasphemy laws. Penalties for violating them vary. But as with Pakistan, in Afghanistan, Iran, Nigeria, Saudi Arabia and Somalia, the maximum punishment for blasphemy is death.

The spread of Enlightenment values in Europe significantly diminished the concept of blasphemy, heralding greater freedoms to exercise critical thought, and subject religious dogmas to question and ridicule. Concerns about blasphemy were largely confined to fringe Christian groups.

But growing Muslim populations across the continent has sparked the resurgence of this concept, with debates around cultural sensitivity, social cohesion and the limits of freedom of expression challenging long-held secular liberal values.

Just last year Denmark banned the "inappropriate treatment" of religious texts - with a bill widely known in the country as the 'Quran law', following a series of burnings of Islam's holy book that led to uproar in Islamic countries.

The Rushdie affair reawakened the concept of blasphemy in the UK during the late eighties, and ever since we've struggled to assert the right to free expression around religion.

The common law offences of blasphemy and blasphemous libel (which protected only Christianity) were eventually abolished in England and Wales in 2008, and in Scotland in 2021. In both cases they were replaced by hate crime legislation, which for some, was intended to expand restrictions on speech to protect the feelings and beliefs of Muslims and other minority religions, too.

A coalition of secularists and other free speech defenders had to win a hard-fought campaign to secure a vital freedom of expression clause that ensured expressions of "antipathy, dislike, ridicule or insult towards" religion was explicitly protected.

But like in Pakistan, the wall which exists between religion and criticism is increasingly reinforced by threats, intimidation and violence.

According to a recent report from the UK Commission for Countering Extremism, "anti-blasphemy activism in the UK is gaining momentum and showing signs of becoming increasingly radicalised".

We saw evidence of this in 2016 when shopkeeper Asad Shah, an Ahmadi Muslim, was stabbed to death outside his store by an assailant who claimed he had "disrespected" Islam.

We saw it in Batley in 2021 when a teacher was forced into hiding in fear of his life after using a cartoon of Muhammad to teach about freedom of expression.

We saw it again that same year when Christian evangelist Hatun Tash was stabbed at Hyde Park's Speakers' Corner after preaching while wearing a Charlie Hebdo t-shirt.

We saw it again when nationwide screenings of "The Lady of Heaven" were cancelled amid concern for staff and customer safety after Muslim protestors outside cinemas branded it blasphemous.

And we saw it again in the pandering, panicked response to an incident at a Kettlethorpe School where a Quran was allegedly scuffed.

Blasphemy codes are remnants of medieval thought, designed to enforce conformity to religious dogmas and suppress dissent. They stand in stark contrast to the values of tolerance, pluralism, and critical thinking that modern Britain should be a standard bearer for.

Engaging in acts of blasphemy — whether through speech, art, or written word — serves as a powerful catalyst for questioning authoritarian doctrines, challenging the subjugation of women and securing individual freedoms. It is therefore incumbent on all of us to unapologetically assert these values.

That means resisting the temptation to appease those who use intimidation and threats to enforce their beliefs when blasphemy flashpoints occur, and instead defending and supporting the victims of fundamentalist bullies by being clear that free expression is fundamental to a free society.

It also means legislators in Northern Ireland abolishing the last remaining blasphemy laws on the books in the UK.

And it also means taking a principled stance against the de facto blasphemy code created by the concept of 'Islamophobia'.

Opposing the adoption of a contentious Islamophobia definition isn't to reject the idea that anti-Muslim hate doesn't need to be addressed. It does. But we need clear thinking and clear language that distinguishes between people and beliefs.

Islamophobia and other 'religion-phobia' language clearly fails to do so. It's perfectly possible to tackle discrimination and hatred against people based on their religion, while being very clear that everyone has the right to criticise and express contempt for any religion and the ideas, beliefs, and practices of those professing it.

Some people may find a lack of reverence towards what they hold sacred offensive. That's their right. But being offended from time to time is a price worth paying for living in a free society. Being offensive is not, in and of itself, a criminal offence. Being rude about religion isn't incitement to hatred and shouldn't be regarded as a justification for violence.

Blasphemous acts may seem trivial at times, yet they are profoundly significant, propelling societies forward. Giving succour to theocrats who want them punished again will only drag us backwards.

It's time blasphemy was more widely recognised as the vital driver of progress and personal autonomy that it is. So, this Blasphemy Day, let's celebrate and recognise blasphemy's role in winning the democratic rights and freedoms we enjoy, and support those living under regimes where those freedoms are so brutally repressed.
 
Blasphemy has increased individual rights and at the same time its degraded one of the moral bases for a strong society. Having said that… No ideology should be behind criticism or opposition IMO.

What these laws do is just restrict speech further. We have two problems here; one is the fact that it’s only ever Christianity that gets criticised, while Islam and Judaism are not allowed to be, and the other is criminalising offence. In the uk we almost had literal blasphemy laws put in by Blair - his religious hatred bill. Thankfully shot down after some opposition but it’s coming back piecemeal. We have the malicious bond act plus hate speech laws which go almost the same thing.
We cannot criminalise offense and remain free. Of this does go through, and it probably will, we should at least use the hell out of it by attacking those who are trying to kill off white Christians. Although we all know it’ll be applied selectively.
 
Just last year Denmark banned the "inappropriate treatment" of religious texts - with a bill widely known in the country as the 'Quran law', following a series of burnings of Islam's holy book that led to uproar in Islamic countries.
Denmark L.
The common law offences of blasphemy and blasphemous libel (which protected only Christianity) were eventually abolished in England and Wales in 2008, and in Scotland in 2021. In both cases they were replaced by hate crime legislation, which for some, was intended to expand restrictions on speech to protect the feelings and beliefs of Muslims and other minority religions, too.
This is a good point, laws protecting Muslim feefees are still blasphemy laws disguised as "hate speech" laws.
The journos aren't even trying to beat the satanist allegations anymore.
The article mostly focused on Muslims, which is right because they act like animals when their pedo is criticized or even visually depicted.
We have two problems here; one is the fact that it’s only ever Christianity that gets criticised, while Islam and Judaism are not allowed to be, and the other is criminalising offence.
This article mostly criticizes Muslims, including how they act in Europe but did not mention Jews. I'm glad it mentioned Muslims though because no one acts more irrationally than Muslims at perceived blasphemy.
 
Don't muzzies respect power in a final sense? If only the Queen's oddly absent King's law enforcement would roightly tell them to shut the fuck up and smack them around if they get uppity instead of enabling them again, and again.

Muzzies are in the UK and Europe because they suck at fighting, suck at creating wealth, suck at administrating things, and, generally, suck, and were accordingly dominated because their betters imposed their own will. Europe, the UK, commonwealth nations, and even the USA morally painted themselves in a corner and are throwing aid at and shelter at these shitty muzzies for reasons too retarded for me to sort through, and of course are coddling their poor fee fees on top of sheltering and subsidizing their backwards bullshit ways.

Maybe a little reminder of why questioning things and bottom-up accountability work would be in order?
 
Fuck, kill and eat all sacred cows.

You can choose the order of steps for all I care. But its interesting seeing the sudden about step in this thread for not drawing pictures of Muhammad.

If you're against cancel culture but are also against blasphemy, you're a hypocrite. It IS cancel culture.
You are right, fucking porco dio.
 
Topic title has me saying, "Nice try, Lucifer."

I don't really give a shit about blasphemy, but wording it like that does make me think of Lucifer's rebellion.
 
Fuck, kill and eat all sacred cows.

You can choose the order of steps for all I care. But its interesting seeing the sudden about step in this thread for not drawing pictures of Muhammad.

If you're against cancel culture but are also against blasphemy, you're a hypocrite. It IS cancel culture.

Cancel culture is weaponized gossip/slander/rally bullshit based on the dogma of the culture doing the canceling. It's literally a mob response to perceived blasphemy against wokeness. It's a shitlib REEEEEEEEE, where muzzies go derkaderka and get more violent.
 
The article mostly focused on Muslims,
Just because Muslims have a warped sense of blasphemy and react like children doesn't mean we should normalize the concept in general.

Besides, Islam is a false religion so what they consider blasphemy isn't really blasphemy anyway.
 
I left Islam for the reason that I couldn't critize it or Crack jokes without others getting butt hurt or trying to correct or argue with me. I only did it because I was so tired of how uptight most of the others were about it.

Christianity on the other hand, has been getting assaulted left and right and those defending it would be harassed even worse.

Then there's the nose and their hall of cost and their big ass noses and their perversion and evil, yet we aren't allowed to blaspheme them and their satanic religion.
 
doesn't mean we should normalize the concept in general.
I think we should normalize it for all religions and not have lil "oppressed" sacred cows. Muslims are a glaring issue that the article notes have de facto Muslim specific blasphemy laws because of anti-hate speech and Islamophobia laws in some Western countries.
No religion should get off the hook... Muslims, Christians, Jews, Pagans, indigenous religions, Hindus etc. I know blasphemy against your own religion can be shitty and cringe but we need the free speech of them to be allowed to do that so that we can in turn eviscerate them.
 
Fuck, kill and eat all sacred cows.

You can choose the order of steps for all I care. But its interesting seeing the sudden about step in this thread for not drawing pictures of Muhammad.

If you're against cancel culture but are also against blasphemy, you're a hypocrite. It IS cancel culture.
Right, I'm 100% fine with blasphemy against Christianity, too. There is no reason we need to fear open criticism of religion unless religion has something to hide. If you seriously believe someone deserves perpetual, unimaginable torment for all eternity with no chance of release because any temporal act you are one fucked up asshole further proving the concept is solely for wish fulfillment.

I'll also point out that if your religion is so sensitive to its sacred symbols being attacked you lash out violently, you have no chance of survival in the face of real persecution.
 
I think we should normalize it for all religions
Right, I'm 100% fine with blasphemy against Christianity, too.
Like with most sins I advocate against blasphemy of the true Faith not because it offends me personally but because its bad for the person doing it.

For example, say you know someone with an abusive mother (muslims) who still reacts like a nigger when you say "yo momma a cunt". That doesn't mean you should be okay with disrespecting parents in general, especially your own.
There is no reason we need to fear open criticism of religion unless religion has something to hide.
Criticism or scrutiny of a Religion ≠ Blasphemy. Good Faith holds up to scrutiny.

The Muslim definition of Blasphemy is nonsense, here's a real definition.
1728512709165.png
 
Like with most sins I advocate against blasphemy of the true Faith not because it offends me personally but because its bad for the person doing it.
I advocate against it because it's unnecessary with civilized religions and peoples. Respect and tolerance of different beliefs is beneficial as long as everyone embraces the same fundamental principles that can be discovered through reason. Simple opposition to something because "God says it's bad" deserves nothing but mockery.

For example, say you know someone with an abusive mother (muslims) who still reacts like a nigger when you say "yo momma a cunt". That doesn't mean you should be okay with disrespecting parents in general, especially your own.
Unless the issue is with the fundamental concept itself, but I don't believe that to be the case with religion in general. Believing in a greater purpose for your life is what makes us human and not cogs in a machine. When in a healthy form they're a powerful tool for building community and achieving social and economic reform.

There are many things we do not understand about ourselves, our existence and our purpose. Too many people on the left (and right) don't understand this and focus on atheism and materialism.
 
If you seriously believe someone deserves perpetual, unimaginable torment for all eternity with no chance of release because any temporal act you are one fucked up asshole further proving the concept is solely for wish fulfillment.
I prefer to think of it as me just being correct.

'ate troons, love they're goin' to Hell, simple as.
 
I prefer to think of it as me just being correct.

'ate troons, love they're goin' to Hell, simple as.
I respect the fact you're honest and don't pretend it's got anything to do with justice, just personal vengeance and a desire to see people you don't like suffer.

I think Aquinas felt the same way after throwing his entire life away on bullshit but wasn't bold enough to say it.
 
I respect the fact you're honest and don't pretend it's got anything to do with justice, just personal vengeance and a desire to see people you don't like suffer.

I think Aquinas felt the same way but wasn't bold enough to say it.
Whatever do you mean? The suffering of my enemies is innately justice.
 
If we were a more honest society, I'd consider this proposition. Unfortunately we live in a Only Christianity Deserves Criticism society, where men can be pregnant, women can have penises, and whole host of other problems. So anything else presented as a "Let's make a better society," how about I hold your head underwater instead?
 
Whatever do you mean? The suffering of my enemies is innately justice.
Damn, that's going hard in the paint but I respect it. I feel the same way but don't want it to last forever for them.

Sometimes you've just got to let it go.
 
Damn, that's going hard in the paint but I respect it. I feel the same way but don't want it to last forever for them.
Well neither do I; it would be better for them and probably the entire planet if they simply did what they should, but if it takes lurid infliction of unspeakable torment for them to realize they were wrong, who am I to argue?

It's like Colbert said back when he was funny: sinners are just coal to keep Heaven at the perfect temperature.
 
Back
Top Bottom