Hitchens (British accent, medium difficulty) full transcript
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Actually say anything in Austria.
He wasn't even accused of saying and he was accused
of, perhaps, planning to say something that violated an Austrian law that says,
"Only one version of the history of the Second World War may be taught in
our brave little Tyrolean Republic." The republic that gave us Kurt
Waldheim as secretary-general of the United Nations, a man wanted in several
countries for war crimes.
The country that gave... That has Jörg
Haider, the leader of its own fascist party, in the cabinet, that sent David Irving
to jail. You know the two things that have made Austria famous, given its
reputation, by any chance, just while I've got you? I hope there are some Austrians
here to be upset by it.
[laughter]
Well, a pity if not. But the two great
achievements of Austria are to have convinced the world that Hitler was German
and Beethoven was
Viennese. [laughter] Now, to this proud
record they can add, they have the courage finally to face their past and lock-up
a British historian who's committed no crime except that of thought in writing.
And that's a scandal. And I can't find a seconder usually when I propose this,
but I don't care. I don't need a seconder. My own opinion is enough for me, and
I claim the right to have it defended against any consensus, any majority,
anywhere, any place, any time, and anyone who disagrees with this, can pick a
number, get in line and kiss my ass.
[laughter]
Now, I don't know how many of you don't feel
you're grown-up enough to decide this for yourselves and think that you need to
be protected from David Irving's edition of the Goebbels’s Diaries, for
example, out of which I learned more about the Third Reich than I had from
studying Hugh Trevor-Roper and A. J. P. Taylor combined when I was at Oxford.
But for those of you who do, I'd recommend another short course of revision. Go
again and see, not just the film and the play, but read the text of Robert
Bolt's wonderful play "Man for all Seasons". Some of you must have
seen it; where Sir Thomas More decides that he would rather die, than lie or
betray his faith.
And at one moment, More is arguing with the
particularly vicious witch-hunting prosecutor, a servant of the king and a
hungry and ambitious man. And More says to this man, "You'd break the law
to punish the devil, wouldn't you?" And the prosecutor, the witch hunter
says "Break it?" He said "I'd cut down... I'd cut down every law
in England, if I could do that, if I could capture him." And More says
"Yes. You would, wouldn't you?
And then, when you've cornered the devil and
the devil turned around to meet you, where would you run for protection? All
the laws of England having been cut down and flattened, who would protect you then?"
Bear in mind, ladies and gentlemen, that
every time you violate or propose to violate the free speech of someone else,
you in potentia, you're making a rod for your own back because the other
question raised by Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes is simply this, "Who's
going to decide, to whom do you award the right to decide which speech is harmful,
or who is the harmful speaker. Or to determine in advance, what are the harmful
consequences going to be, that we know enough about in advance to prevent? To
whom would you give this job? To whom you're going to award the task of being
the censor?"
Isn't it a famous old story that the man who
has to read all the pornography, in order to decide what's fit to be passed and
what is not to be, is the man most likely to become debauched. Did you hear any
speaker in the opposition to this notion, eloquent as one of them was, to whom
you would delegate the task of deciding for you what you could read? Who to me
would give the job of deciding for you, relieve you of the responsibility of
hearing what you might have to hear? Do you know anyone? Hands up.
Do you know anyone to whom you'd give this
job? Does anyone have a nominee? You mean, there is no one in Canada good
enough to decide what I can read or hear? I had no idea. But there's a law that
says there must be such a person, or there's sub-section of some piddling law
that says it.
Well, the hell with that law then. It's
inviting you to be liars and hypocrites and to deny what you evidently know
already.
About the censorious instinct, we basically
know all what we need to know. We've known it for a long time. It comes from an
old story about another great Englishman, sorry to sound so particular about
that this evening, Dr. Samuel Johnson. The great lexicographer, author of the
first, compiler I should say of the first great dictionary of the English
language. When it was complete, Dr. Johnson was waited upon by various
delegations of people to congratulate him. Of the nobility, of the quality of commons
and the lords, and also by delegation of respectable ladies of London, who
tended on him in his Fleet Street lodgings and congratulated him.
"Dr. Johnson" they said, "We
are delighted to find that you’ve not included any indecent or obscene words in
your dictionary". "Ladies", said Dr. Johnson, "I
congratulate you on being able to look them up".
[laughter]
Anyone who can understand that joke, and I'm
pleased to see that about 10% of you can, [laughter]
gets the point about censorship, especially
prior restraint, as it's known in the United States where it's banned by the
First Amendment to the Constitution. It may not be determined in advance what
words are apt or inapt. No one has the knowledge that would be required to make
that call, and more to the point, one has to suspect the motives of those who
do so.
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