All of these statements juxtapose the speech with the crime, and this isn't coincidental. If Lars Vilks had given the same lecture and no crimes were committed in response, the speech would have drawn much less condemnation. Why? Because then clearly it wouldn't have been the kind of irresponsible, reprehensible speech that provokes crimes.
I will admit that my criticism is based on a few wild assumptions about the character of Lars Vilks. My understanding of the event is that he showed a (can we not just say it without appending moral judgment to aesthetic judgment?) grotesque video to a room full of people he could only know would be deeply offended by it. I think I can safely assume from the responses, that the people present were not fully aware of what specifically was going to be shown to them (conference on homosexuality in Muslim society
does not necessitate showing graphic pornography, however relevant); being so offended, they wouldn't have come otherwise (I'm also making the assumption that the audience wasn't composed of people searching for a reason to be outraged, which is not a rock-solid proposition, but I'm making a point here).
From that understanding of the event, I think I can safely support one of two possibilities. Vilks was shortsighted, and wanted to be more direct than tactful, and showed the strongest example he could find of what he wanted to talk about, without fully appreciating that his purpose in giving a conference is to
engage the audience, which doesn't require making them hate you. The other possibility is that Vilks knowingly wanted to offend his audience, in supporting his point, strengthening the presentation, or any other reason, and so chose material that he believed would make people angry. I, personally, just don't support that ethic in public presentation, and I don't see where anyone else has the right to say that my taste there is wrong, if that be what anyone is doing. There are certainly other possible explanations, but I'm not readily drawing any from what I can understand of what happened, which is why I said what I did.
Then there's the issue of the people who were not at the presentation threatening Lars. If there's one constant to cultural extremists, they will take any opportunity to be outraged from afar, and I don't think we need to debate that. And I don't think anyone here is defending that, just making idle jokes at Lars' expense because we're an Internet peanut gallery, and the nature of his presentation doesn't suggest to me at least that he's a character I would have much sympathy for.
I can't speak for anyone else, but I have been hasty in my choice of words. I don't specifically mean to denounce the film itself, or the sentiment behind it's creation or distribution. I'm criticizing the idea that Lars should somehow be immune to negative response. And now I'm criticizing this tired old insistence that I can't criticize the guy himself or the presentation without automatically agreeing with and supporting every other response. I don't give one flip about the guy or whatever he's trying to do, and I'm not offended at all by the existence of homosexuality or by knowing that this video exists. But I'd be put off by watching it, and I'd be pissed off if it was sprung on me during a conference, even if I knew the subject was homosexuality. Can I not have my chauvinism and idle commentary without being in league with the extremists in question?