Forumsdwarf - just out of interest, what in the hell are you talking about? Piglet is censored over here... what?? And they're trying to stop us buying war bonds?
I am... seriously confused.
Hee hee, I sometimes forget the non-American audience isn't entirely familiar with American culture.
Norman Rockwell was a famous painter during the WWII era. The painting I posted, "Freedom of Speech", is from his "Four Freedoms" collection intended to remind Americans of the values for which we were fighting -- and motivate them to buy war bonds. The importance of "Freedom of Speech" isn't the bonds but the speech.
Piglet is banned in certain British government offices. Link:
http://www.thesun.co.uk/sol/homepage/news/article102182.eceWe're not going to let that happen here. Matt Stone and Trey Parker were censored by Comedy Central, but that is a private company. Our government has so far not capitulated. Furthermore it would be political suicide for any leader who suggested it.
The fact that mainstream Muslims give the provably bogus "biological weapons in Iraq" excuse to attack us is all I need to understand the "cycle of violence". They're attacking us for "crimes" they invented out of whole cloth -- but the "root cause" is obvious: we allow people like Salman Rushdie to live, to speak, and we protect people like him from people like them.
Author Salman Rushdie, who back before any of the so-called "crimes" and "human rights violations" we allegedly committed after the Cold War was threatened with death for criticizing Muhammad in a book he wrote called
The Satanic Verses.
Looking at that provocation from the Muslim perspective, a critical facility for understanding the conflict I do agree, we dared to defy their Fatwah, and for that their God demands we must be punished.
So be it -- both of us have our values we're willing to fight for and they're mutually exclusive. Enough are willing to kill and die for their cause that we must be. Drones, missiles, troops, alliances to nations with compatible values, whatever it takes, freedom of speech is worth it. The lives of millions are not worth the banning of a single book, not worth the life of a single cartoonist, not worth censoring a single frame of South Park.
But there is hope: the Strong Horse Theory predicts that if we fight hard enough long enough Muslim society will reform and adopt our ways. On the other hand, should that theory prove to be in error an aggressive policy eventually solves the problem anyway by eliminating all those who are causing it.
Heads we win, tails they lose. Until then, "Billions for defense, but not a penny for censorship," if I might update a time-honored ideal. They can choose peace now or suffer peace later, but they can't have Salman Rushdie.