PdotMichael
Banned
If only Charlie Hebdo would have a Stan character who tells the audience exactly what they are supposed to think.
No, I'm sure the point of the joke is "Ha, who cares if children die, they'll probably grow up to be child molesters anyway."
Wikipedia said:Charlie Hebdo (French pronunciation: ​[ʃaʁli ɛbdo]; French for Charlie Weekly) is a French satirical weekly magazine,[2] featuring cartoons,[3] reports, polemics, and jokes. Irreverent and stridently non-conformist in tone, the publication describes itself as above all secular and atheist,[4] far-left-wing,[5][6] and anti-racist[7] publishing articles about the extreme right (especially the French nationalist National Front party),[8] religion (Catholicism, Islam, Judaism), politics and culture. According to its former editor Stéphane Charbonnier ("Charb"), the magazine's editorial viewpoint reflects "all components of the plural left, and even abstainers".[9]
Since everything Charlie Hebdo does must be taken at face value, I guess they must sincerely think immigrants should be used as foot stools.
In before people who don't understand satire accuse a bunch of pro-immigration liberals of being racist fascists.
Whoops, too late.
Why take their statements about their mission at face value but not take their "message" at face value?
Oh, well that settles it. While we're quoting from Wikipedia...
Sure sounds like the kind of people who don't give a fuck about refugee children.
Since everything Charlie Hebdo does must be taken at face value, I guess they must sincerely think immigrants should be used as foot stools.
It is obviously a satire of migrant hate. You have to be obtuse to not see that.
I must confess, I can only tell the difference because of my latent psychic abilities.
to be fair, GAF already struggles enough with PBF comics
If only Charlie Hebdo would have a Stan character who tells the audience exactly what they are supposed to think.
Honest question to the people who think Charlie Hebdo is racist; do you believe Stephen Colbert is a racist, homophobe, misogynist Republican?
You're giving Charlie Hebdo too much credit if you believe it's either an attack against migrants or a satire of the migrant hate... It's just humor based on shock value, like it or not. It's been their shtick since the beginning, and it's no better or worse than a dead baby joke (well technically, it IS a dead baby joke).
"What's red and taps on the window ? A baby in a microwave...". It's neither promoting putting babies in microwaves, nor mocking hypothetical people who do it, it's just using a horrible, unexpected twist to trigger a laugh.
I would actually love to see alternate universe versions of these threads where it was just a random unknown cartoonist. I feel like for every person that comes in with an opinion of "those racists cartoonists" there's at least one that only arrived at the conclusion that the picture is satire by working backwards from it coming from a known satirical publication.I can easily see how some are struggling with the interpretation if you knew them as 'those racist cartoonists'.
LOL you couldn't be more off
My fav part of these Charlie hebdo threads is watching people passionately out themselves as idiots lol
I love having my own culture explained to me by foreigners.
Tell me, what do you think of the interpretation of the word "tripoteur" to "molester" ?
Not sure what you mean. I'm french btw
I get t joke, didn't laugh though
I get it, but it isn't really effective or good as satire, even though knowing what Charlie Hebdo's position is.
Yeah, because its in comic form we know that the dead baby is supposed to make us laugh.
Basically this. It's untoward to go overboard attacking their organization after what happened, but I would never defend the content of what they publish.These guys were always shitty, but the Hebdo attacks suddenly gave their "art" much more importance than it deserved.
It would be best to just ignore them and move on, as those attackers that day should have done.
It's not like this is much different than a throwaway south park joke. It's not exactly subtle either. People are just dumbExactly. The dumbass 'satire' of South Park has made a lot of people unable to pick up any subtlety. Maybe satirists should start doing G.I. Joe style vignettes where the characters summarize the day's lesson in the simplest terms.
I'm confused on the aim of this cartoon;
That's sort of how I see most Charlie Hebdo cartoons. They definitely like to prod at religious fundamentalism in general though.Yeah, it's pretty gross, but I kind of read it as satire of people who think things like this. "He'd probably just have have grown up to be a killer/terrorist/etc anyway" is totally something xenophobic assholes would say.
Although there could be some nuance to the French not conveyed
I find it so depressing that THIS is the publication that sparked so much controversy and has garnered so much support for the (rightful) case of free speech, rather than an actual intelligent publication. If they are trying to be a "right-wing South Park" then they are doing a really shitty job at it as a lot of their cartoons are just tasteless and dumb.
Oh, another one of those...
This piece didn't make me laugh but when I saw it I immediately thought of what a racist's thought process might be like and that it is exposed. Even if the poor boy who died were litteraly destined to be a molester (a causal link that is ridiculed by the cartoon), would it be reason enough to have let him die (which we - Europe - did)?
I really have to shift my perspective to understand how this would be construed as anything but a charge against racist thought. Then again, I realize that if the exact same piece was published in a far-right newspaper my reaction would be different. Of course. This is what satire is about (but a racist outlet would not have written 'Tripoteur de fesses' ('Butt-groper?'), it'd just say 'molester'...)
Also, please note what is written on the top of the page ('France isn't what people say'):
http://i.imgur.com/sI7Kx29.png[IMG]
Without context or seeing the satarical hints, I understand how this piece would be seen as truly horrifying. Things get complicated when a niche 50k print run satirical newspaper heavily into dark and provocative humor gets worldwide exposure.[/QUOTE]
Wish I could read French.
Anyway yes, without context, knowledge of satire and understanding the language, it is very clear that Charlie Hebdo is not intended for a worldwide market. I have serious doubt that they mean to say anything racist and if their humour doesn't entertain, it isn't for you.
"I hope people respect our family's pain. It's a big loss to us. We're not the same anymore after this tragedy. We're trying to forget a little bit and move on with our life. But to hurt us again, it's not fair," said Tima Kurdi from her home in Port Coquitlam, B.C.
Tima Kurdi said she hadn't yet spoken with Abdullah Kurdi, Alan Kurdi's father, in Kurdistan, but she's concerned about how he'll react when he sees it.
"I'm sure it will hurt him a lot. I was in tears when I was reading about it, so I'm worried about Abdullah," she said.
Kurdi said her advice is to simply ignore the cartoon.
"It's disgusting, but everyone has their opinion," she said. "They like to express their feelings, and they've done it before. I hope they won't do it again."
1) On the surface, the cartoon appears to argue that had Kurdi survived his journey to Europe, he would grow up to sexually assault women in Germany. However, it seems highly likely to me that Charlie Hebdo is not championing this anti-refugee sentiment but rather satirizing it. Their "point" here is that European anti-refugee sentiment, when laid bare, ultimately leads to the ridiculous and indeed hateful idea that even Kurdi is a threat to European women.
As I have written previously, this sort of two-step satire portraying a ridiculous idea not to endorse it but rather to mock the people who hold it is both a long-held theme of Charlie Hebdo's work and a common trope within French satire broadly. And Charlie Hebdo has deployed this tactic particularly when it comes to refugee issues on which the magazine is quite liberal.
2) Still, even if the ultimate message of this cartoon is to argue against anti-refugee hysteria and to champion the rights of refugees in Europe, it is nonetheless tasteless. Portraying [Alan] Kurdi as a young man with a pig nose who is sexually assaulting German women, even ironically, is tasteless. Using Kurdi's death and the Cologne sexual assault crisis to hit at your political opponents, even if it's those opponents who have the hateful views, is tasteless. Even if you ultimately agree that the magazine's desired political point is correct, it does not make the means of getting there acceptable.
To again reference my past writing on Charlie Hebdo, this was one of the central problems in the magazine's supposedly progressive satire. Even if the ultimate political aims were about defending the disenfranchised, it still exploited them along the way, and treated them with a callousness that few members of those targeted communities would appreciate.
3) The cartoon does allow for misinterpretation, and would be easy to misread as endorsing rather than satirizing the idea that [Alan] Kurdi would have grown up to sexually assault European women. As was to be expected, this has sparked yet another round of Twitter debates as to whether these misreadings are the fault of Charlie Hebdo or of oversensitive readers who are unable to grasp satire.
I will concede that my sympathies in this particular case lean toward those who put this burden on Charlie Hebdo rather than on readers, given how foreseeable those misinterpretations should have been, as well as the hurt it would inevitably cause the millions of people who've seen family members, like Kurdi, die trying to cross the Mediterranean. Even if that's pain rooted in misunderstanding, it's pain that is nonetheless real and seems to have gone unconsidered here.
I find it so depressing that THIS is the publication that sparked so much controversy and has garnered so much support for the (rightful) case of free speech, rather than an actual intelligent publication. If they are trying to be a "right-wing South Park" then they are doing a really shitty job at it as a lot of their cartoons are just tasteless and dumb.