Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

A defense of free speech

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WASHINGTON POST When anti-American demonstrat­ions spread around the world this month, the Obama administra­tion focused much of its public response on denouncing the anti-Muslim video that had provoked outrage and provided a pretext for extremists. President Obama and Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton rightly distanced the U.S. government from the video and stressed the American system of religious tolerance; more disturbing­ly, the White House asked Google to consider removing the offending video from its YouTube Web site.

So it was heartening Tuesday to hear Mr. Obama, in his address to the UN General Assembly, deliver a vigorous defense of freedom of speech, including the right of individual­s to “blasphemy against our most sacred beliefs.”

“Americans have fought and died around the globe to protect the right of all people to express their views—even views that we disagree with,” the president said. Without such freedom, he said, individual­s might be stopped from practicing their own faith; “efforts to restrict speech can become a tool to silence critics or oppress minorities.” He concluded: “Given the power of faith in our lives and the passion that religious difference­s can inflame, the strongest weapon against hateful speech is not repression, it is more speech.”

It is important for the president and his administra­tion to try to make clear to the majority of Muslims—who do not participat­e in demonstrat­ions but follow the controvers­y—that the United States does not sponsor or endorse religious slander.

That fact, while obvious to Americans, is not widely understood in the Middle East. But it is just as important to send the message that American free speech will not be curbed to suit religious sensibilit­ies and that violence will not be tolerated.

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