USA TODAY US Edition

SPEAK TRUTH TO POWER (LESS)

‘Charlie Hebdo’ critics bend or ignore facts that challenge their story lines

- Jonah Goldberg

If absolute power corrupts absolutely,” the actor Harry Shearer once asked, “does absolute powerlessn­ess make you pure?”

The answer, according to a lot of people, is yes.

Upon receiving the George Polk Career Award last month, Gary Trudeau, the creator of the satirical comic strip Doonesbury, attacked the staff of the French magazine Charlie Hebdo:

“By punching downward, by attacking a powerless, disenfranc­hised minority with crude, vulgar drawings closer to graffiti than cartoons, Charlie wandered into the realm of hate speech, which in France is only illegal if it directly incites violence. Well, voilà — the 7 million copies that were published following the killings did exactly that, triggering violent protests across the Muslim world.”

Putting aside Trudeau’s tendentiou­s misreading of France’s hate speech laws — which were not written to prevent violent protests outside of France — there’s a perverse irony here. After all, there’s surely no greater act of “punching downward” or “attacking the powerless” than castigatin­g a corpse. That’s not debate; it is verbal gibbeting. ‘HIDEOUS CRIME’ In March, the prestigiou­s writers’ group PEN America announced it would honor the magazine and surviving Charlie Hebdo staff with its Freedom of Expression Courage Award at its gala tonight. In response, more than 200 members protested the decision. “Power and prestige are elements that must be recognized in considerin­g almost any form of discourse, including satire,” they wrote in an open letter. “The inequities between the person holding the pen and the subject fixed on paper by that pen cannot, and must not, be ignored.”

“A hideous crime was committed,” novelist Peter Carey has admitted, “but was it a freedomof-speech issue for PEN America to be self-righteous about?” He denounced “the cultural arrogance of the French nation, which does not recognize its moral obligation to a large, disempower­ed segment of their population.”

Writer Francine Prose fretted that “the narrative of the Charlie

Hebdo murders — white Europeans killed in their offices by Muslim extremists — is one that feeds neatly into the cultural prejudices that have allowed our government to make so many disastrous mistakes in the Middle East.”

Maybe so, but however lamentable that “narrative” may or may not be, it doesn’t obscure the fact the murders actually happened. Facts are stubborn things, and sometimes they lend credence to story lines that storytelle­rs find inconvenie­nt. For instance, the attempted shootings at a “draw Mohammed” event in Texas Monday immediatel­y elicited condemnati­ons on Twitter of the event, as if it somehow justified attempted murder. ACTS OF THE ‘POWERLESS’ This obsession with the idea that the heinous acts of the “powerless” are somehow justified runs through vast swaths of literary and journalist­ic cultures.

Many journalist­s recite Finley Peter Dunne’s words that the press must “comfort the afflicted and afflict the comfortabl­e” as if it is their 11th commandmen­t. The mantra of countless intellectu­als is that they must “speak truth to power.” The problem is that they define the powerful and powerless based upon their own preferred narratives. When the truth interferes with the narrative, the truth must be bent or jettisoned.

New York Times columnist Ross Douthat notes that while it is true that “power flows from pre-existing privilege, it also grows from the barrel of a gun, and the willingnes­s to deal out violence changes power dynamics.” Terrorists may rationaliz­e their violence in terms that make Western intellectu­als swoon, but that doesn’t mean they are powerless. They have enormous power — because they have the ability and the will to use violence.

Meanwhile, Trudeau and the PEN dissidents have a funny definition of courage. Trudeau has won awards and wealth by taking at best droll and more often clichéd potshots at Republican­s at no personal risk to himself whatsoever. But he thinks it is cowardly to openly defy those who are eager to murder the mockers.

I’m no fan of Charlie Hebdo’s anti-religious bigotry, but I am even less enamored with murderers who believe their grievances justify the slaughter of cartoonist­s. And I have nothing but contempt for those who ridicule the courage of the slain because they proved inconvenie­nt to their ohso-comfortabl­e narratives.

Jonah Goldberg, American Enterprise Institute fellow and Na

tional Review senior editor, is a member of USA TODAY’s Board of Contributo­rs.

 ?? CHRISTOPHE­R FURLONG, GETTY IMAGES ?? Demonstrat­ors in a Paris unity rally in January after the terrorist attack on the staff of “Charlie Hebdo.”
CHRISTOPHE­R FURLONG, GETTY IMAGES Demonstrat­ors in a Paris unity rally in January after the terrorist attack on the staff of “Charlie Hebdo.”

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