No, that is not all that matters. Freedom of expression is a very important thing, but so to is a degree of care in what you are expressing, and how you express it. I don't normally have a problem with artists drawing critical images of what they consider to be stupid or laughable, but that is because artists generally are capable of making a distinction between making a critique of a stupid belief, and how to simply antagonise a belief without providing anything of value beyond "look how mad I can make people".JMac85 said:Parody doesn't have to be poignant or nice. All that matters is you be able to freely express it.maninahat said:I had this same problem with "Draw Muhammad Day", which is framed as an act of defiance against extremists. When you draw a picture of Muhammed, you aren't criticising the murderers, you are criticising all muslims through a casual display of intolerance to their beliefs. I don't think it is bold or commendable to show such callousness, even when it is framed as a defence of free speech. I also don't think having a right to free speech makes it at all reasonable to draw that crap.
You call it casual intolerance of their beliefs? So what? Why is it wrong to make fun of or criticize someone's beliefs? I find people who believe the Earth is flat and only 6,000 years old to be stupid, I find people who believe vaccines cause autism to be stupid, and I find people who believe the image of some asshole that's been dead over a thousand years is worth more than human life to be stupid.
It isn't just about restricting an artist's rights, it is about that artist being reasonable enough to express themselves without aiming to hurt people's feelings in the first place. Modern day satirists and humorists are generally quite capable of knowing where the line is, and why they shouldn't cross it (even if they can). There is a range of subjects they won't depict, or consider taboo. But as we have become more multi-cultural, some artists aren't used to dealing with the taboos of other cultures, or the cultures of minorities, they seem to lack that natural ability to see the line, or at least, to not see why they shouldn't cross it. They haven't been brought up to see Muhammad in the same way as muslims, so can't fully appreciate the negative impact it causes when they draw him.Frankly, I'm disturbed with this attitude that justifies restricting people's ability to express themselves because it might hurt someone's feelings. And it's not just when it comes to criticizing religion, it's being applied to just about every facet of society. Physicists being harassed for their shirt, law professors being told they need to issue trigger warnings for their lectures.
That's what makes it all so hypocritical of the artists. There are loads of things they avoid drawing (often instinctively, without thinking about it), because they are familiar enough with the issue and respectful enough not to do it. And yet depicting Muhammed is the one thing they will rally around, and insist on drawing. And its all because they don't have that same instinct or belief ingrained into them, for them to be familiar enough with the issue and respectful enough not to draw it.
So if I'm offended by what you are doing I'd like you to fucking stop it Stephen, you idiot."Oh, you're offended? So fucking what?"
If I'm doing some thing and then I discover that thing to be upsetting someone, I typically have enough empathy to realise I should probably stop doing that thing. Perhaps that offence is misplaced, or what I am doing is important enough to
justify me disregard that upset, but I am not seeing that level of empathy or temperance among the artists, exclusively in respect to muslims.
Also, it usually isn't always just about offence. Trigger warnings are there to help assist with post traumatic distress disorder. The criticism of the scientist's shirt stems from the fact that it demonstrated how critically under-represented women were in that field (that a guy probably wouldn't feel comfortable dressing like that in a place full of women co-workers). To muslims, it isn't just offensive to depict Muhammad, it is morally wrong to do so. The West has a habit of casually misrepresenting, oppressing, or generally being outright intolerant of ethnic minorities. Depicting Muhammad, irrespective of how muslims feel about it, is representative of that attitude that it is okay to punch down at muslims because they don't matter. Their beliefs are just an obstacle to us, and we refuse to accommodate them at all.