A Forum for Vigorous Debate, Cornerstone of Democracy

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A FORUM FOR FREEDOM OF SPEECH AND VIGOROUS DEBATE, CORNERSTONES OF DEMOCRACY
[For the journal--guidelines, focus, etc.--go to www.theamericandissident.org. If you have questions, please contact me at todslone@hotmail.com. Comments are NOT moderated (i.e., CENSORED)!]
Encouraged censorship and self-censorship seem to have become popular in America today. Those who censor others, not just self, tend to favor the term "moderate," as opposed to "censor" and "moderation" to "censorship." But that doesn't change what they do. They still act as Little Caesars or Big Brother protectors of the thin-skinned. Democracy, however, demands a tough populace, not so easily offended. On this blog, and to buck the trend of censorship, banning, and ostracizing, comments are NEVER "moderated." Rarely (almost NEVER) do the targets of these blog entries respond in an effort to defend themselves with cogent counter-argumentation. This blog is testimony to how little academics, poets, critics, newspaper editors, cartoonists, political hacks, cultural council apparatchiks, librarians et al appreciate VIGOROUS DEBATE, cornerstone of democracy. Clearly, far too many of them could likely prosper just fine in places like communist China and Cuba or Saudi Arabia, Qatar, and Russia, not to mention Sweden, England, and Austria.
ISSUE #47 PUBLISHED MAY 2024. NOW SEEKING SUBMISSIONS FOR ISSUE #48.

More P. Maudit cartoons (and essays) at Global Free Press: http://www.globalfreepress.org
Showing posts with label Newfoundland. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Newfoundland. Show all posts

Wednesday, March 4, 2020

The Telegram

The following letter to the editor was rejected by The Telegram (St. John's, Newfoundland), which seems content to publish only positive remarks on the public libraries in its vicinity.  Certain subjects like libraries and poetry are rarely, if ever, criticized in the Mainstream Media.  Surprisingly, The Telegram did publish a critique I wrote regarding the poetess laureate of St. John's.
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Testing the Waters of Democracy… at the Public Library
Just how free are public libraries really?  Are they free, as in wide-open to criticism and real debate?  That fundamental question was not posed by (axed College of the North Atlantic President & CEO) Bill Radford in his letter to the editor, “The public library – medicine for the soul and the cradle of democracy.”  

If indeed the public library is a “cradle of democracy,” why then, for example, did my neighborhood library permanently ban me without warning or possibility of due process?  After all, is not due process  a fundament of democracy?  If indeed the public library is a “cradle of democracy,” why will not one library in the entire library system, where I live, subscribe to the nonprofit 501c3 journal of literature, democracy, and dissidence I’ve been publishing since 1998?  In fact, my neighborhood library refused a free subscription offer.  Is that democracy in action?  How many other such journals and books are denied access to the shelves of public libraries, including those in St. John’s?  

"I think that we all hold to the vague notion that libraries are repositories of knowledge and thus should be protected but we seem to forget that they are also public spaces that offer places to meet, to interact, to encounter, with significant health benefits,” argues Radford.  But from my personal experience dealing with library directors, I’ve come to a very different conclusion:  libraries are gatekeepers of knowledge, keeping some knowledge, especially that critical of libraries, out of libraries.  How does that constitute a repository of knowledge, as if all knowledge?  Why protect an institution that acts as a gatekeeper and rejects hardcore criticism with its regard?  The American Library Association, for example, absolutely refuses any criticism with its regard!  It’s magazine, American Libraries Magazine, refuses to even respond to such criticism.  

“Many communities have recognized the galvanising and positive effects that a library ‘hub’ can have on the wellbeing of the entire community,” argues Radford.  Entire community?  My very civil rights are being denied in my community because I am not permitted to attend any political or cultural events held at my neighborhood library!  How many others have had their civil rights denied by their neighborhood libraries?  Well, we’ll never know.  My local newspaper will certainly not report on it!  

“This is the time to invest in a space that will bring us together in the context of societal fragmentation, incipient populism and the erosion of our basic freedoms,” argues Radford.  But what happens when libraries themselves are partly responsible for the erosion of our very basic freedoms?   Why should we support them in that case?  “We need a place to meet each other, debate, discuss, construct and learn, the library is that place,” declares Radford, sounding quite like a PR spokesperson for libraries.  What happens when library directors outright reject debate and discussion?  How does that make the library the prime place for such activity?  At another library, I offered to buy a bulletin board to be used for freedom of speech postings by all citizens in the community.  The offer was simply rejected.  

“There is no better investment of our public dollars,” argues Radford.   Well, rather than a library I’d much rather have public dollars invested in a free speech center, one that, unlike libraries, not only brooks hardcore criticism but actually encourages it.  Far too often, blind praise is accorded to some institutions, mostly cultural, including libraries, poetry organizations, and art festivals.  But blind praise only serves to cover up intrinsic faults.  Criticism on the other hand serves to reveal those faults and force the faulty to contemplate them.  If one never personally tests the waters of democracy, including freedom of speech, then one will likely never really know what the de facto reality boundaries are and will end up pushing common tropes, as in the public library, “cradle of democracy.” 

Finally, rather than cite industrialist Andrew Carnegie, as Radford does, why not instead cite a rare librarian who dared speak rude truth in front of librarians?  Charles Willett, Founding Editor of Counterpoise, did that at the Fifth National Conference of the Association of College and Research Libraries:  “In almost all the 45 libraries studied here, and probably hundreds and hundreds more across the country, we have failed our professional duty to seek out diverse political views. [...] These books are not expensive. Their absence from our libraries makes a mockery of ALA [American Library Association]’s vaunted ‘freedom to read.’ But we do not even notice that we are censoring our collections. Complacently, we watch our new automated systems stuff the shelves with Henry Kissinger’s memoirs.”  So, what about the St. John’s libraries?  Might one of them be willing to subscribe to the journal I publish and include it in its repository of knowledge?  Hmm.

Friday, November 22, 2019

Martha Muzychka

Killing the Messenger
Martha Muzychka presented an interesting analysis of the Don Cherry speech incident in “Free speech doesn’t mean you can say anything you want without consequences.”  Her account, however, presents a fundamental flaw.  Muzychka stipulates:  “His comments hurt a lot of people.”  But whatever happened to the old adage, “sticks and stones will…”?  Why encourage people to be hurt by mere words?  Why not instead encourage them to stand up and manifest backbone?  From the Age of Reason, we seem to have headed into the Age of Self-Censorship.  Why not permit Cherry, instead of censoring and shaming him into oblivion, to explain himself and thus create a forum for vigorous debate,  cornerstone of a thriving democracy.  Self-censorship and pc-groupthink are also cornerstones, but of totalitarian systems!  Democracy depends on a citizenry with backbone.  It falls when the citizenry instead whines about being hurt by words and counter opinions, including the one Cherry presented.   
Muzychka argues, “But we need to recognize and accept that when we do wrong, when we behave inappropriately, when we hurt people, there are consequences.”  But “inappropriately” is a  highly subjective term.  Indeed, who determines what is “inappropriate”?  Is my criticism regarding her criticism “inappropriate”?  Perhaps that is precisely what she’d conclude, though hopefully not.  Will the editors of the Telegram deem my comments “inappropriate,” thus deserving to be flushed into the pipes of oblivion?  [Well, apparently, they did.]
In fact, the very problem with the concept of “hate speech” is its subjective nature, which is precisely why the US has continued to deny the concept a legal backing.  Hate for you might not be hate for me and vice versa.  And do we really want faceless bureaucrats to determine what is and what is not hate speech?  It seems that is precisely what is occurring in the provincial human rights courts in Canada.  Muzychka mentions free speech is protected by Section 2 of the Charter Rights and Freedoms, but does not mention the provincial human rights courts and flexibility in the Charter that can make hate speech prosecutable, thus de facto illegal, even if de jura legal.  In most European countries, hate speech is illegal and that designation has been used, for example, to eliminate criticism of government immigration policy.   Cite the example of Tommy Robinson, arrested and incarcerated for such criticism in Britain.  
Minorities don’t need government protection and protected class status.  They need to build backbone.  They need, not to engage in name-calling, as in Nazi, white nationalist, islamophobe, or whatever.  They need instead to present cogent counter arguments based on factual evidence.  Sadly, Western democracies are heading in the wrong direction today with that regard.  
Finally, Muzychka concludes, “When you abuse the privileges you have been given, you should not be surprised when you lose them. The only surprise is how long it’s taken for systems to start recognizing the long term implications of tolerating behaviour — be it racist, sexist, homophobic, or ableist.”  Again, she employs highly subjective terms!   Bellowing “racist” is NOT a cogent counter argument at all.  When I was teaching at an all black college in North Carolina, I, a white professor, had sketched critical cartoons of black professors and black administrators and published them in the student newspaper.  What was the response?  “Racist”!  Yet I had sketched many more cartoons on white professors and white administrators.  Did those who bellowed, “racist,” examine the crux of the message in each cartoon and issue a counter argument based on factual evidence?  No!  Sadly, intellectual laziness has become the best, most effective, response today.  

Now, will I be dismissed as a “sexist” because I dared criticize an article written by a woman?  Perhaps.  And, well, I don’t really give a damn if that happens.  Why not?  Well, because my mother taught me “sticks and stones…”

Saturday, November 5, 2016

The editor carrying a whale bone on an isolated spit on the Port-au-Port peninsula in the hinterlands of Newfoundland last June.  How I love isolated spits!!!

Saturday, October 15, 2016

Petites, NL



Petites is an abandoned outport on the southern coast of Newfoundland.  It is a ghost town with no roads...  In the background is the old church.

Sunday, August 14, 2016

Fogo Island


Ah, the beauty!  I took this photo on Fogo Island, not far from the town of Fogo on a hiking trail at twilight... all alone twas I...  Fogo is on the northeast side of Newfoundland.  One can take a ferry to get there.  This summer it cost $8 round trip with my car!  

Wednesday, August 3, 2016

La Scie


What beauty I find up in Newfoundland!  Here's a photo I took a month ago at twilight in an outport called La Scie (the saw) on the Baie Verte peninsula, one of my favorite areas. Many towns have French names because the French had settled there before the English and Irish.  

Thursday, March 17, 2016

Fogo Island


Well, I am into photography, not just hardcore criticism.  And I'm into Newfoundland and Labrador.  Why?  The answer is in the photo above.  I shall be returning in June once again.

Saturday, July 5, 2014

P. Maudit on Vacation in Newfoundland and Labrador

 
Well, I'm just back from almost a month in Newfoundland and Labrador.  What an interesting road trip!  It's the third time I've been there.  The people are incredibly friendly and pleasant.  It is night and day compared to the people on Cape Cod, where I live.  It was a shock!  One morning I was walking in a small outport when a man came up to me and started talking to me, then invited me to his house to have coffee with him and his wife.  Wow!  On another occasion, an old fellow stopped his car and asked if I needed a ride.  Even the young gals, who'd normally frown at me on Cape Cod, were joyous and eagerly talked with me.  Besides the wondrous population, the scenery of course is otherworldly.  If I were to move again (and I hate moving), it would be to Newfoundland.  In the picture, I am depicted with the moose skull I found in the barrens of St. Anthony.  Now, time to get back into my dissident mode...