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Special edition of Charlie Hebdo will feauture caricatures of Mohammed

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Joni

Member
No, I do, and I understand that nothing should be off limits, but again, it if it truly is so offensive to others, the ultimate taboo, maybe cultural sensitivity should win out.
Censorship through religion is offensive to the spirit of France. This is a country that had an 'atheist' revolution over 200 years ago. Cultural sensivity to religion is offensive to their core.
 
By the way, my local (i. e., German) train station bookshop who usually gets three copies of Charlie Hebdo now has had over 1,000 calls about when the next issue arrives. Quite funny.

Wonder how much they'll end up going for on eBay... Scalpers, rev your engines.
 
In reading through some of this thread, I'm trying to figure out what is OK by the thought police, let me get this straight:

- Charlie Hebdo shouldn't incite anymore violence by publishing more cartoons. (Think about that one for a minute...)
- They are cashing in on the deaths of their employees by doing so. (Really?)
- Mohammad (may he rest in peace) cannot nor should not be pictured in any way, shape or form due to that being a blasphemy to the religion of Islam. However, what about those who do not adhere to Islam? (serious question by the way)

Inciting violence via free speech to tell people with delicate sensibilities to get over themselves? Do people expect them to NOT deal with the death of their employies in their next issue? What do people except them to do, act like nothing happened and give in the will of people who write death threats and express agreement that what took place was right?

If one doesn't adhere to Islam then what ever practices people who follow the religion don't apply. Telling people to be "sensitive to Muslims" with depicting Mohammad should be equally sensitive and start boycotting markets that sell pork, for the sensibility of all the Jewish people who don't eat pork.
 

rambis

Banned
What are they going to solve? The thing is to continue to show the whole world that political critique of any form, even provocative satire won't be stopped by violence. It's a point for free speech against oppression.
We can of course talk about certain hypocrisy and how good Charlie Hebdo's satire actually is. But that's not the core point. What's important is that there was an attack on free speech and that the victim of said attack (Charlie Hebdo as a whole and in some way the entire democratic west due all the support) will not kneel before this attack.
I would guess militant Jihadism is the problem that the world is trying to solve here. Free speech is of up most importance sure but I'm quite sure that by now most terrorists understand quite surely that a lot of the western world doesnt respect their ideals and probably never will. Hell its the "platform" that most of these guys campaign on. So knowing this, I find it hard to argue how effective this gesture is as a message against terrorism. Sure it does send the message that the people are not scared to continue offending others but does it really deter terrorists from making moves like this or does it incite them? Are there better ways to send the same message? I'd say yea.
 

Kezen

Banned
Censorship through religion is offensive to the spirit of France. This is a country that had an 'atheist' revolution over 200 years ago. Cultural sensivity to religion is offensive to their core.

It should be noted and reminded that while religion has been separated from the state atheism is not enfoced onto anyone. The public sphere is religion agnostic (unless you consider atheism as a constitutional religion) while the private sphere is where religion can be fully entertained.
 

Jb

Member
Glad I could oblige. I still don't like those cartoons though.

That's perfectly fine, this is a free country, you're allowed to voice your opinion, however uninformed and lazy. Much like I'm allowed to call you out for how little you're bringing to the discussion by refusing to go beyond the "Me see drawings. Me not like them" school of criticism.
 

Chariot

Member
I would guess militant Jihadism is the problem that the world is trying to solve here. Free speech is of up most importance sure but I'm quite sure that by now most terrorists understand quite surely that a lot of the western world doesnt respect their ideals and probably never will. Hell its the "platform" that most of these guys campaign on. So knowing this, I find it hard to argue how effective this gesture is as a message against terrorism. Sure it does send the message that the people are not scared to continue offending others but does it really deter terrorists from making moves like this or does it incite them? Are there better ways to send the same message? I'd say yea.
I think packing it up would be far worse. That would show the terrorists that they can do as they please. Which they should never ever feel. Charlie Hebdo continuing and people of the whole world endorsing free speech, including the catholic paper reprinting catholic satire, is important. I mean, nobody liked IS before and some were opposing it, but now there is a whole world burning with passion for free speech, satire and against IS.
"If you haven't got shot by the time you're 80, you've failed in life"

This is a reference to a controversial statement by French publicist Jacques Séguéla, who said: "Everyone has a Rolex. If you don't have a Rolex by the time you reach 50, then you have clearly failed in your life."

Roughly translated: If you've not taken a bullet in 50 years, you've failed in life.
Ah, thank you!
 

Raist

Banned
People talk about freedom of speech, but to me it just seems like its a common courtesy not to depict Muhammad. Islamic art doesn't do representations of people, that person especially. Google Islamic art, and all youll see are those patterns. That's art to them.

Are non-muslims obliged to stick to islamic art standards?
 

Chittagong

Gold Member
I generally don't like insulting people's religious beliefs. When I go to a buddhist temple I don't wear shorts. When I am taken to a Kim-Il statue I photograph it as the locals hope. My wife wears a scarf when we are in muslim countries. I think it's polite.

In this case, however, Charlie Hebdo did the only right thing they could by publishing another caricature of Mohammed. It demonstrates that the terrorists achieved absolutely nothing, or worse. It actually increased the number of people seeing their caricatures by several orders of magnitude, all the while vilifying muslim extremists for their heinous crimes. The responsibility of there being three million Mohammed caricatures printed this week is the direct achievement of the Kouachi brothers - if it wasn't for them the blasphemous caricature would not have got such incredible global reach.
 
I'm referring more to some of the posters in this thread, who I think would be quite happy if they were dropping it from planes all over the Middle East. I just don't agree with this kind of sentiment, of wanting to stick it to muslims everywhere.

A sentiment of wanting to "stick it to someone" is the very basis of satire. Their comic sensibilities takes aim at all of Islam (and other religions). You don't have to think it's funny, but there's no underlying message to 'agree' with here, as that's not the point.

Think of all the American race-related comedy done, a touchy subject to say the least. If you don't find it funny to generalize black people, then that's fine, however the majority that do laugh at comedy stereotyping black people aren't looking to have anyone literally "agree" with taking minorities down a peg. They just want a laugh. They are jokes, and even if papered from the air are still just funny words and pictures.
 

KingSnake

The Birthday Skeleton
The responsibility of there being three million Mohammed caricatures printed this week is the direct achievement of the Kouachi brothers - if it wasn't for them the blasphemous caricature would not have got such incredible global reach.

That's actually the conclusion to be taken from this. Without the terrorists there would have been around 65000 people seeing these. Plus whoever saw them last time there was a scandal on this theme, but it was anyhow way past this now. Now, following their stupid action, there will be 3 million editions printed and probably bought in the world. Well done!

(it seems the some people need to learn the Streisand effect on their own)
 
Are non-muslims obliged to stick to islamic art standards?

No, I was just highlighting that to show that there is a very clear historical and artistic precedent for the feelings muslims have towards representations of people.

It's a shame this has turned into such a negative thing, because if you look at the art this particular quirk has created, it's quite fascinating and beautiful.

In a sense, it's something that has made humanity and the history of art richer.
 
A digital version of the magazine will be released on Thursday in French, English, Arabic and Spanish according to Canal+

This is good, makes it seem like less of a Eurocentric thing.

A sentiment of wanting to "stick it to someone" is the very basis of satire. Their comic sensibilities takes aim at all of Islam (and other religions). You don't have to think it's funny, but there's no underlying message to 'agree' with here, as that's not the point.

Think of all the American race-related comedy done, a touchy subject to say the least. If you don't find it funny to generalize black people, then that's fine, however the majority that do laugh at comedy stereotyping black people aren't looking to have anyone literally "agree" with taking minorities down a peg. They just want a laugh. They are jokes, and even if papered from the air are still just funny words and pictures.

There are definitely people who are getting a kick out of the fact it's Muslims that are getting pissed off, not out of some noble anti-religious pro-freedom of speech angle, but bigots who enjoy a good superiority complex over a minority. Of course the existence of band wagoners like this is beyond the point of the cartoons but it can't dismissed. Not everyone is in this debate for noble reasons unfortunately.
 

Raist

Banned
No, I was just highlighting that to show that there is a very clear historical and artistic precedent for the feelings muslims have towards representations of people.

It's a shame this has turned into such a negative thing, because if you look at the art this particular quirk has created, it's quite fascinating and beautiful.

In a sense, it's something that has made humanity and the history of art richer.

This is totally irrelevant to the issue, though.
Whether or not there's a historical precedent does not validate it either.
 

Khaz

Member
No, I do, and I understand that nothing should be off limits, but again, it if it truly is so offensive to others, the ultimate taboo, maybe cultural sensitivity should win out.

As strongly as I value both freedom of speech and satire, and even though their view on art and representation is not something I fully understand, I'm happy to respect it.

So, nothing should be off limits except the things that should be?
 

rambis

Banned
I think packing it up would be far worse. That would show the terrorists that they can do as they please. Which they should never ever feel. Charlie Hebdo continuing and people of the whole world endorsing free speech, including the catholic paper reprinting catholic satire, is important. I mean, nobody liked IS before and some were opposing it, but now there is a whole world burning with passion for free speech, satire and against IS.

Ah, thank you!
I don't think not publishing the cartoons is "packing it up" in any way shape or form. I think its logical fallacy to think this way.

As I said there are better ways to show strength and reluctance to terrorism. Ways that don't unnecessarily offend innocent bystanders. The "million" man march in Paris is a great example of one.
 

Funky Papa

FUNK-Y-PPA-4
I don't think not publishing the cartoons is "packing it up" in any way shape or form. I think its logical fallacy to think this way.

As I said there are better ways to show strength and reluctance to terrorism. Ways that don't unnecessarily offend innocent bystanders. The "million" man march in Paris is a great example of one.
Just as it happens with gay marriage, nobody is being forced to buy Charlie Hebdo.

Religious people need to stop pushing their beliefs into people who don't want them.
 

Doc Holliday

SPOILER: Columbus finds America
Don't Muslims get upset when they asked to dump their long held beliefs in order to intergrate to French society. Yet people want the French to not be french. Charlie is a really French institution wether you like it or not.
 

Addi

Member
I don't think not publishing the cartoons is "packing it up" in any way shape or form. I think its logical fallacy to think this way.

As I said there are better ways to show strength and reluctance to terrorism. Ways that don't unnecessarily offend innocent bystanders. The "million" man march in Paris is a great example of one.

Won't somebody please think of the innocent bystanders! Something that almost pisses me off more than people getting offended over nothing, is people (not offended themselves) defending hypothetical offended people. Surely this must offend somebody so it isn't right....
 

KingSnake

The Birthday Skeleton
I don't think not publishing the cartoons is "packing it up" in any way shape or form. I think its logical fallacy to think this way.

As I said there are better ways to show strength and reluctance to terrorism. Ways that don't unnecessarily offend innocent bystanders. The "million" man march in Paris is a great example of one.

Showing strength is to continue the day to day life and not let that be affected by the actions of lunatics. Charlie Hebdo is doing just that.
 

chadskin

Member
Couple of pages from the new issue:

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B7PCEUfCAAA-lHR.jpg:large

B7PCEUxCQAAaZro.jpg:large

B7PCEU9CYAEHfFW.jpg:large

https://twitter.com/ronzheimer/status/555000598412935168
 

Mimosa97

Member
The killed muslim policeman has been buried in Bobigny's muslim cemetery near Paris. He was posthumously rewarded with La Legion d'honneur.

A french flag is wrapped around his coffin. A big crowd has gathered to pay tribut to our dead hero. Some people are standing with a " JesuisAhmed " (I am Ahmed) signs.

B7OxM-3IgAAnGAG.jpg:large


B7O7NQICAAAKKxw.jpg


B7OzpF7IEAISREa.jpg


R.I.P
 

kmax

Member
Christians, Jews, Muslims, Atheists, Agnostics or what have you, we've all been affected by this tragedy, and united we stand.

Je suis Charlie
 
So, nothing should be off limits except the things that should be?

Maybe if I was a muslim I would feel differently, but I guess as an outsider I choose to respect this aspect of their culture. Maybe once upon a time I would have thought fuck that, but now I just think, it's important to them, it's not important to me.

Also in terms of France, muslims there have in the last few generations turned into a disenfranchised, ghettoized underclass, who already experience a wealth of social problems in urban centres. This doesn't seem to me like a great target for satire. As someone else pointed, satire should really be about punching up, not punching down. If you're going to punch down, I think it's OK if it's lighthearted and friendly.

Extremists are already only too happy to give these lost young people a purpose and something to believe in. I'm not sure how this will help the situation.

But I see both sides to this story. People have raised good points in their rebuttals to me as well.
 
There are definitely people who are getting a kick out of the fact it's Muslims that are getting pissed off, not out of some noble anti-religious pro-freedom of speech angle, but bigots who enjoy a good superiority complex over a minority. Of course the existence of band wagoners like this is beyond the point of the cartoons but it can't dismissed. Not everyone is in this debate for noble reasons unfortunately.

I think comedy is primarily for the people who think it's funny. However, look at suburban moms getting upset at South Park's depiction of Jesus on steroids. It's normally fun to watch someone get outraged over a 22 minute cartoon nobody forced them to watch. She's adding to the humor, and ultimately she's the one with the problem - not South Park or those that enjoy watching her rant on FOXNews.

This Charlie Hebdo issue is the same scenario just with higher stakes. They are aiming to offend while delighting their readership. Anyone indignant about it - whether Muslim, Jew, or Christian are the ones with the problem as nobody required them to read it.
 

Khaz

Member
I think comedy is primarily for the people who think it's funny. However, look at suburban moms getting upset at South Park's depiction of Jesus on steroids. It's normally fun to watch someone get outraged over a 22 minute cartoon nobody forced them to watch. She's adding to the humor, and ultimately she's the one with the problem - not South Park or those that enjoy it.

South Park had problems with depicting the Muslim prophet, hopefully they will be able to reap the benefits of the whole turmoil.
 

Mimosa97

Member
Very moving press conference by the Charlie Hebdo staff at the moment.

Luz the cartoonist who drew the cover and the one holding the mic' just said

I am Charlie
I am Jewish
I am a cop

But i'm also a muslim.
 
South Park had problems with depicting the Muslim prophet, hopefully they will be able to reap the benefits of the whole turmoil.

Exactly my point. Many find humor in infuriating unreasonable people - whether by creating or enjoying offensive material. That's South Park and Charlie Hebdo's brand of comedy.
 

rambis

Banned
Just as it happens with gay marriage, nobody is being forced to buy Charlie Hebdo.

Religious people need to stop pushing their beliefs into people who don't want them.

How is it them pushing their beliefs on anybody? I'd imagine that someone who was Muslim had no hand in making the cartoons. So what are you talking about?

Won't somebody please think of the innocent bystanders! Something that almost pisses me off more than people getting offended over nothing, is people (not offended themselves) defending hypothetical offended people. Surely this must offend somebody so it isn't right....

Uh what? When is unnecessarily(hint I use this modifier for a reason, please don't remove context from my arguments) offending someone ever productive?

Do you not realize that this works to needlessly incite people and helps drive terrorist recruitment?

Showing strength is to continue the day to day life and not let that be affected by the actions of lunatics. Charlie Hebdo is doing just that.
Again, you could totally show strength against terrorism without the cartoons.

People conflating the Muhammad cartoons as if they represent some just political or social movement is rampant. They exist only to mock people who follow Islam, its intellectually dishonest to suggest otherwise. Whether or not you care if other people are mocked is your prerogative but let's not disingenuously pretend that they dont have easily quantifiable consquences and detract towards a peaceful world.
 

KingSnake

The Birthday Skeleton
Again, you could totally show strength against terrorism without the cartoons.

People conflating the Muhammad cartoons as if they represent some just political or social movement is rampant. They exist only to mock people who follow Islam, its intellectually dishonest to suggest otherwise. Whether or not you care if other people are mocked is your prerogative but let's not disingenuously pretend that they dont have easily quantifiable consquences and detract towards a peaceful world.

The point is that the cartoons are not a response to the terrorists. They existed before. Stop doing the cartoons now would be a response: "we got your message, be free to kill us next time you want to impose something".
 

pgtl_10

Member
Didn't France grant a court injunction to having the last supper on T-shirts because it offended deeply held beliefs?
 

cwmartin

Member
Whether or not you care if other people are mocked is your prerogative but let's not disingenuously pretend that they dont have easily quantifiable consquences and detract towards a peaceful world.

Are you insinuating that the quantifiable consequences of these cartoons are the victims of the murderers?

I can't help but think you are trying to shift fault away from the attackers and onto Charlie Hebod, which is ludicrous.
 

Keasar

Member
South Park had problems with depicting the Muslim prophet, hopefully they will be able to reap the benefits of the whole turmoil.

Apart from the threats made against them for their 200 Episode special, did they ever get in trouble for their Super Best Friends episode? I can't remember there being much talk about it back then.
 

rambis

Banned
The point is that the cartoons are not a response to the terrorists. They existed before. Stop doing the cartoons now would be a response: "we got your message, be free to kill us next time you want to impose something".
No, this is fallacy. Literally hundreds of thousands of people took the streets where these shootings occurred to make the response abundantly clear.
Are you insinuating that the quantifiable consequences of these cartoons are the victims of the murderers?

I can't help but think you are trying to shift fault away from the attackers and onto Charlie Hebod, which is ludicrous.
I'm pretty sure you'd love to think this, lesbihonest. But no, it has nothing to do with blaming anybody other the people who do the actions. Nice try though.
 
The idea that an ideology cannot be questioned or analysed is frightening. We cannot bow to that idea, if anything we should push even harder against it than we are now. I applaud the magazine for doing this so soon, it's very much the right course of action.

Doesn't the Islamic world have it's own satirical publications and organisations that question and poke the establishment? If not, maybe it's about time it did.

I do worry that politicians are using this and similar events as a way of pushing draconian surveillance laws, there's news reports here in the UK already of tighter internet snooping laws - keeping tabs on people's every move has never stopped terrorism. It doesn't stop the root cause of the problem, it just drives it to use a different method of communication.
 

G.ZZZ

Member
People talk about freedom of speech, but to me it just seems like its a common courtesy not to depict Muhammad. Islamic art doesn't do representations of people, that person especially. Google Islamic art, and all youll see are those patterns. That's art to them.

I remember learning this when I was quite young, and found it interesting. How different cultures view art and representation, how representations can be considered sacrosanct. It's like they see a kind of power in representation that we just don't see in the West. In the West we've gotten to the point that almost nothing has power or meaning.

I just think it's kind of classless not to respect that, and for people wanting these images to by published everywhere and pushed in muslims' faces, that's just really dumb.

Nothing can justify the violence in response to it by a couple of crazies, but yeah, that's my opinion.

What ? You have to go out and buy this publication. This isn't pushed in your face any more than a porn mag is. If you don't like it, don't buy it, end.
 

KingSnake

The Birthday Skeleton
No, this is fallacy. Literally hundreds of thousands of people took the streets where these shootings occurred to make the response abundantly clear..

How would millions of people on street change the fact that they achieved the target? Where is the fallacy in this argument:

Try something => Be successful => More will be encouraged to try it

?
 

Funky Papa

FUNK-Y-PPA-4
How is it them pushing their beliefs on anybody? I'd imagine that someone who was Muslim had no hand in making the cartoons. So what are you talking about?

Religious people (muslims in this case) want non-religious people to conform to their religious standards (read: not publishing pictures of Mohammed). That is a whole load of bollocks.

I'm all for not offending sensibilities it it can be avoided, but if a magazine wants to depict Mohammed, it damn well should.
 

PopeReal

Member
How is it them pushing their beliefs on anybody? I'd imagine that someone who was Muslim had no hand in making the cartoons. So what are you talking about?



Uh what? When is unnecessarily(hint I use this modifier for a reason, please don't remove context from my arguments) offending someone ever productive?

Do you not realize that this works to needlessly incite people and helps drive terrorist recruitment?


Again, you could totally show strength against terrorism without the cartoons.

People conflating the Muhammad cartoons as if they represent some just political or social movement is rampant. They exist only to mock people who follow Islam, its intellectually dishonest to suggest otherwise. Whether or not you care if other people are mocked is your prerogative but let's not disingenuously pretend that they dont have easily quantifiable consquences and detract towards a peaceful world.

Yes. Lets blame cartoons for world violence. This is dumb shit people are spewing.

Oh no! People are being mocked! Get the fuck over it.
 
People talk about freedom of speech, but to me it just seems like its a common courtesy not to depict Muhammad. Islamic art doesn't do representations of people, that person especially. Google Islamic art, and all youll see are those patterns. That's art to them.

I remember learning this when I was quite young, and found it interesting. How different cultures view art and representation, how representations can be considered sacrosanct. It's like they see a kind of power in representation that we just don't see in the West. In the West we've gotten to the point that almost nothing has power or meaning.

I just think it's kind of classless not to respect that, and for people wanting these images to by published everywhere and pushed in muslims' faces, that's just really dumb.

Nothing can justify the violence in response to it by a couple of crazies, but yeah, that's my opinion.
There are Islamic paintings of Mohammed, they've been posted in this thread. Do you not even question in your head why they can't depict Mohammed? He was a guy, he didn't have six eyes or rainbow coloured hair - what's wrong with drawing him? Not to even mention the fact that any sketch of some guy from the 700s CE is entirely made up.

Mohammed is a lot like Jesus - there's a huge Arthurian-type legend built around some dude that may or may not have existed at all, and even if he did he certainly wasn't the unquestioned, perfect Übermensch some people want them to be. We should not be building modern society around the channelled scribblings of quasi-legendary mythical characters, and to bend to people who are driven to mass murder in the maniacal quest to have the world do so is wrong, very wrong.
 
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