ronburgundy
Contributor
A Pew study done about the Charlie Hebdo killings shows disturbing numbers of Americans who favor p.c. censorship and "respect for religion" over support for free speech and free press.
76% of Americans had heard about the incident. Of those people, only 60% agreed that is was even "okay" (not "good" or "great") for those cartoons to have been published, while 28% said is was "not okay".
The "not okay" folks were not primarilyconcerned that the cartoons provoked violence (only 7% gave this as their reason). Instead, almost 76% of them said it is because the newspapers should have to "respect religion" and not be "offensive" or "inappropriate".
So, were these anti-liberty folks the right wing evangelicals who generally support suppressing views critical of religion?
No, those most likely to say it was "not okay" to publish the cartoons were Democrats, females, non-whites, and younger adults. Even just among whites, 25% of Dems said "not okay".
Of course white male conservatives have proven they are more than willing to suppress free thought and speech when it is something they are offended by. Thus, their higher support for these cartoons is mostly rooted in anti Muslim and racist motives.
So, I am not concerned with the relative comparison to republicans.
I more concerned that 1/3 of Dems, and even college grads fail to support free speech when it disrespects or offends religion. Maybe most frightening is that 18-29 year olds showed less support for free speech than any other age group. I suspect the numbers would be better if it was white Christians being offended. IOW, for many liberals, offending religions is one thing, but you cannot be allowed to offend the religion of ethnic minorities.
76% of Americans had heard about the incident. Of those people, only 60% agreed that is was even "okay" (not "good" or "great") for those cartoons to have been published, while 28% said is was "not okay".
The "not okay" folks were not primarilyconcerned that the cartoons provoked violence (only 7% gave this as their reason). Instead, almost 76% of them said it is because the newspapers should have to "respect religion" and not be "offensive" or "inappropriate".
So, were these anti-liberty folks the right wing evangelicals who generally support suppressing views critical of religion?
No, those most likely to say it was "not okay" to publish the cartoons were Democrats, females, non-whites, and younger adults. Even just among whites, 25% of Dems said "not okay".
Of course white male conservatives have proven they are more than willing to suppress free thought and speech when it is something they are offended by. Thus, their higher support for these cartoons is mostly rooted in anti Muslim and racist motives.
So, I am not concerned with the relative comparison to republicans.
I more concerned that 1/3 of Dems, and even college grads fail to support free speech when it disrespects or offends religion. Maybe most frightening is that 18-29 year olds showed less support for free speech than any other age group. I suspect the numbers would be better if it was white Christians being offended. IOW, for many liberals, offending religions is one thing, but you cannot be allowed to offend the religion of ethnic minorities.
Last edited: