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Mark Steyn - Lights Out

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Mark Steyn Lights Out
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    Lights Out
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    2009
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Roaming from America to Europe to Australia, Lights Out is a trenchant examination of the tensions between a resurgent Islam and a fainthearted west and of the implications for liberty in the years ahead. In 2007, the Canadian Islamic Congress brought three suits against Macleans, Canadas biggest-selling newsweekly, for running an excerpt from Steyns bestselling book America Alone, plus other flagrantly Islamophobic columns by the author. A year later the CIC had lost all its cases and Steyn had become a poster boy for a worldwide phenomenon the collision between Islam, on the one hand, and, on the other, western notions of free speech, liberty and pluralism. In this book, Steyn republishes all the essays the western worlds new thought police attempted to criminalize, along with new material responding to his accusers. Covering other crises from the Danish cartoons to the Salman Rushdie fatwa, he also takes a stand against the erosion of free speech, and the advance of a creeping totalitarian multiculturalism; and he considers the broader relationship between Islam and the west in a time of unprecedented demographic transformation. Roaming from America to Europe to Australia, Lights Out is a trenchant examination of the tensions between a resurgent Islam and a fainthearted west and of the implications for liberty in the years ahead.

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Mark Steyn

LIGHTS OUT

Islam, Free Speech and the Twilight of the West

Live free or die

General John StarkJuly 31st 1809

AUTHORS NOTE

I would like to thank Kenneth Whyte, my publisher at Macleans, Canadas biggest selling news weekly, and his colleagues at Rogers Publishing, for standing firm against the attempted appropriation of their property by the Canadian Islamic Congress and various human rights commissions.

I would also like to salute Ezra Levant, Kate McMillan of Small Dead Animals, Kathy Shaidle of Five Feet Of Fury, and Mark and Connie Fournier of Free Dominion. These bloggers, long before the mainstream media, recognized the complaints as a politically-motivated threat to free expression, said Ken Whyte in 2009. They did a great service to Canadian journalism. For their courage in standing up for freedoms too many citizens are willing to trade away, theyve been subject to multiple nuisance lawsuits from the self-proclaimed heroes of Canadas human rights racket. They deserve your support.

I thank the editors of the publications in which these columns originally appeared: Ken Whyte and Dianne de Gayardon de Fenoyl at Macleans; Ezra Levant and Kevin Libin at The Western Standard; Charles Moore and Martin Newland at Britains Daily Telegraph; Peter Murtagh at The Irish Times; and Rich Lowry, Kathryn Lopez and Jay Nordlinger at Americas National Review. As always, I am indebted to my assistants Tiffany Cole and Chantal Benot. As on previous occasions, we have retained the spellings of the originating publication, whether American, Canadian, Irish, or Waziristani. So, if you dont like the case for the defence, the case for the defense should be along a couple of pages later. We do, however, have a preference for Britannic punctuation.

New HampshireMarch 2009

OPENING STATEMENTS

Free speech is the whole thing, the whole ball game. Free speech is life itself.

SALMAN RUSHDIEspeaking at Columbia University, December 11th 1991

INTRODUCTION

Steyn in the dock

DO YOU REMEMBER a cover story run by Macleans, Canadas bestselling news magazine, on October 23rd 2006?

No? Me neither, and I wrote it. Such is life in the weekly mag biz. The hacks bark and the caravan moves on. But it was an excerpt on various geopolitical and demographic trends from my then brand new tome, America Alone: The End Of The World As We Know It. Flash forward just over a year: Its the end of 2007, and my Number One bestseller is suddenly back in the news. America Alone: coming soon to a Canadian courtroom near you! Youve read the book, now read the legal briefs!

The Canadian Islamic Congress and a handful of Osgoode Hall law students had got, somewhat belatedly, worked up about the Macleans excerpt and decided it was flagrantly Islamophobic. So they filed complaints with three of Canadas many human rights commissions, two of which agreed to hear the case. It would be nice to report that the third sent the plaintiffs away with a flea in their ears saying that in a free society its no business of the state to regulate the content of privately owned magazines. Alas, it was only bureaucratic torpor that (temporarily) delayed the Province of Ontarios enthusiastic leap upon the bandwagon. Neither the Canadian Islamic Congress nor the aggrieved students were cited in the offending article. Canadian Muslims were not the subject of the piece. Indeed, Canada was barely mentioned at all, except en passant. Yet Canadas human rights commissions accepted the premise of the plaintiffs that the article potentially breached these students human rights.

When the CIC launched its complaint, I was asked by a zillion correspondents what my defense is. My defense is I shouldnt have to have a defense. The plaintiffs have never asserted that the article is false, or libelous, or seditious, for all of which there would be appropriate legal remedy. Their complaint is essentially emotional: it offended them. And as offensiveness is in the eye of the offended, theres not a lot I can do about that.

But, given that the most fundamental human right in the western world is apparently the right not to be offended, perhaps I could be permitted to say what offends me. Im offended by the federal and British Columbia human rights regimes presumption that the editing decisions of privately owned magazines fall within their jurisdiction. Or to put it another way, I dont accept that free-born Canadian citizens require the permission of the Canadian state to read my columns. The eminent Queens Counsel who heads the Canadian Human Rights Commission may well be a shrewd and insightful person but I dont believe her view of Macleans cover stories should carry any more weight than that of Mrs Mabel Scroggins of 47 Strathcona Gardens. And it is slightly unnerving that large numbers of Canadians apparently think theres nothing wrong in subjecting the contents of political magazines to the approval of agents of the state.

Lets take it as read that I am, as claimed, offensive. Thats the point. Its offensive speech that requires legal protection. As a general rule, Barney the Dinosaur singing Sharing Is Caring can rub along just fine. So, if you dont believe in free speech for people you loathe, you dont believe in free speech at all.

By the way, granted that Im loathsome and repellent, so evidently are significant numbers of other Canadians. America Alone was a Number One book in Canada; excerpts appeared not only in the countrys oldest and most respectable news magazine, a mainstay of dentists waiting rooms for the best part of a century, but also in the countrys national newspaper, The National Post. The justification the inattentive citizen makes when the censors get to work is that theyre obviously only targeting extremists at the very fringes of society. Yet in this case Canadas kangaroo courts were proposing to criminalize a Number One book and the Number One news weekly. And the statutory remedy for the crime would have been in effect to render a Number One bestselling author unpublishable in Canada.

As for Islamophobia, that word appears nowhere in the Canadian criminal code, and indeed barely anywhere in the English language until the 1990s. It was introduced formally into the grievance culture in 1998 in a report by Britains Runnymede Trust, which, with genuine racial prejudice on the decline in the UK, was in need of some new horrors to justify its sinecure. Islamophobia means an irrational fear of Islam ie, a mental illness, like agoraphobia or arachnophobia. As a friend of mine likes to say, Islamophobia is one of those illnesses of which the only symptom is to be accused of having it. There is nothing irrational about wanting to examine the fastest growing religion and population demographic in the world and its relationship with western ideas of liberty and pluralism.

During the early skirmishes, a colleague whos also been called up before one of these human rights star chambers mused in an e-mail about the difference between his lawyers advice that he should be reasonable in order to get off the hook and his own feeling that the hook itself needs to be done away with. The Economist reprinted my response to him:

I dont want to get off the hook. I want to take the hook and stick it up the collective butt of these thought police.

Hence, this book. It reprints the essays of mine that the Canadian Islamic Congress and their stooges in the human rights racket attempted to criminalize: When an Islamist bully or a dimwitted PC apparatchik says you cant say something, thats all the more reason to say it again. So heres the offending material, plus some additional essays exploring the relationship between Islam and the west; my thoughts on the civilizational self-loathing of which the Muslim lobby groups are merely opportunist beneficiaries; and, finally, some snapshots of a year under the Canadian human rights microscope. We made headway in the campaign to repeal Section 13 and restore freedom of speech to Canada, but theres still a long way to go. And in the broader global battle to end one-way multiculturalism we are still losing turf. Indeed, the Organization of the Islamic Conference (a kind of Muslim Commonwealth, representing just under 60 nations) may well succeed in its drive to impose a de facto global law against Islamic blasphemy. Increasingly, in the public square, in the marketplace of ideas, in ancient nations that have been the crucible of freedom, the Muslim worlds prohibitions on intellectual inquiry now apply to all.

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