Bosch Fawstins Winning Cartoon |
A column by the Washington Post syndicated columnists Kathleen Parker changed my mind. Parker called it "abuse of freedom of speech" perpetrated by Pamela Geller to draw attention to herself (paraphrase, mine).
A couple sentences changed my mind when she wrote:
- A good cartoon isn't just a drawing but also offers layers of meaning that illuminate in subtly humorous ways. The best ones are often wordless and artfully combine more than one thought or event.
I think the idea of a "Draw Muhammad" conjures up pictures of people sitting in a room drawing silly pictures, similar to what you might see in a first grade class drawing nonsense pictures of whatever you could decipher out of them. But that really isn't so.
Parker understood that the First Amendment does protect Geller's and any future "Draw Muhammad" contests of the future. Many other pundits from the right and left had imagined that there was some "hate speech" exception to the Constitution. Clearly there is not.
The Constitution does not protect us from being offended. In fact I think it probably promises that we will because the extent of the freedom it encompasses.
Defending speech that we like as protected "Free Speech" is easy. The mature person who understands what the First Amendment is all about and what it means will protect speech that they totally disagree with or even find offensive. That is the test.