No
topic is more frequently debated with less resolution than hate speech.
This is made abundantly clear in a new collection of essays written by
some of the leading contributors to the debate. The volume is called "The Content and Context of Hate Speech: Rethinking Regulation and Responses," and it is edited by Michael Herz and Peter Molnar.
What
you learn in the course of reading this book is that there is no
generally accepted account of (1) what hate speech is, (2) what it does
(what its effects are) and (3) what, if anything, should be done
about it. To be sure, everyone agrees that it is hate speech when words
are used to directly incite violence against a specific person or group
of persons. But as Arthur Jacobson and Bernhard Schlink point out in
their contribution to the volume, on such occasions the words are
instrumental "to an incipient assault," and it is the assault, not the
words, that the state criminalizes. (It is, say the courts, "speech
brigaded with action.") There need be no debate about what to do in the
face of that kind of speech because it is already being done by extant
laws.
The rest are all hard cases. Is it hate speech when, in a
paper with scholarly trappings, someone says that the Holocaust never
happened and was invented by Jews in an effort to induce guilt and gain
money? Is it hate speech when a pamphlet explains how Muslim
Americans plan to impose Shariah law and subvert the traditions of this
country? Some who consume such statements will certainly feel hatred for
Jews and Muslims, and no doubt those who make such statements intended
that result. But no call to violence is issued and one might say -- in
the United States it will always be said -- that while it is hate
speech disguised, the disguise is good enough to remove it as a
candidate for regulation.
Then there is what we might call
genteel hate speech -- casually produced anti-Semitic and racial slurs
in conversation and in countless British novels. It is certainly hateful
speech, but it reflects less the intention of the speaker or writer
than the cultural background of the society he lives in. If it is hate
speech, it is so distant from any specific design to wound that a legal
remedy against it seems quixotic and unenforceable. And yet, demeaning
speech that flies under the legal radar because it is an extension of
what people regularly say and even more regularly think may in the end
be more harmful than the direct, frontal insult.
And what about
hate speech that is never uttered, but is implied by the structure of
institutions? When the law in many states reduced black Americans to the
status of property, wasn't it being said, in the most forceful way
imaginable, that blacks were more like animals than humans? When women
were denied the vote for so many decades, wasn't it being said that
they were perpetual children and unworthy of an independent existence?
And, to reference an example invoked by Peter Molnar in his essay,
isn't the statue of Teddy Roosevelt in front of the American Museum of
National History that shows him on a horse flanked by the figures of a
Native American and an African-American a form of hate speech
declaring the natural subservience of the "red" man and the black man?
Let's
suppose that we could sort through these versions of hate speech (and
there are many more) and come up with a baseline definition of what it
is; we would still have the problem of specifying its effects. You can't
cogently debate whether to regulate something unless you have first
identified the harms it produces. Bhikhu Parekh, political philosopher
and a member of the British House of Lords, is quite confident in his
account of those harms. Hate speech, he says, "lowers the tone of public
debate, coarsens the community's moral sensibility, and weakens the
culture of mutual respect that lies at the heart of a good society." In
addition, hate speech "violates the dignity of the members of the target
group" who lead "ghettoized and isolated lives with a knock-down
effect on their children's education and career choices."
Not
necessarily, says Nadine Strossen, a professor of law and a past
president of the A.C.L.U. We are not, she insists, "automatically
diminished just because some bigot says something negative about us."
Indeed, we are better off knowing about the hateful things being said,
first because it provides "valuable information," second because it
gives the targeted individuals "an opportunity to respond" and third
because it "highlights issues that can be addressed in other ways,
for example through education."
Behind Strossen's and Parekh's
assertions are two very different views of human beings. For Strossen,
the hate speech recipient is (or can and should be) a resolute
individual standing up for herself in the face of verbal assault and
emerging stronger from the encounter. For Parekh, the hate speech
recipient is the vulnerable victim of forces that rob her of dignity and
deprive her of the resources necessary for human flourishing,
resources that therefore must be supplied by the state in the form of
hate speech laws. Strossen's view follows from a strongly libertarian
reading of the First Amendment and is pretty much official doctrine in
the United States. Parekh's view reflects the more communitarian
concerns of other Western democracies that balance free expression
rights against the right of the society to order itself in decent and
humane ways.
Michel Rosenfeld draws the relevant contrast with
respect to the United States and Canada: "Under the American view, there
seems to be a greater likelihood of harm from suppression of hate
speech than from its toleration." But from a Canadian perspective,
"dissemination of hate propaganda seems more dangerous than its
suppression as it is seen as likely to produce enduring injuries to
self-worth and to undermine social cohesion in the long run."
Rosenfeld
observes that the two countries "differ in their practical assessments
of the consequences of tolerating hate speech." Not quite; what the two
countries differ in is their respective assumptions concerning what
must be protected: on the one hand, a rights-based individualism that
can take care of itself and would be diminished by nanny-state
intervention, on the other, a psychological and societal fragility that
must be shored up by law. In one vision, hate speech is an opportunity;
in the other it is a virus. Given such two different accounts of the
effects of hate speech, it is not surprising that there would be two
different accounts of what to do about it, or what not to do about it,
and no hope of reconciling them.
Taking note of differences like
these, some contributors to the volume propose a contextual analysis
sensitive to cultural and political circumstances. They say that in a
country like ours where there are strongly established democratic
institutions, hate speech (short of incitement to violence) can be
pretty much tolerated in the confidence that no drastic, long-term
consequences will ensue. But in countries where democratic institutions
are fragile or just emerging, and where tribal, sectarian conflict has
been the order of the day for a long time, the state may have to move
against forms of speech that threaten to rend the fabric of society. (A
bit paternalistic, don't you think?)
One must also, it is said,
take into account the recent history of the nation. In Germany, Parekh
observes, banning Holocaust denial is "part of reparative justice, a
public statement of the country's acknowledgment of and apology for its
past, a way of fighting neo-Nazi trends in German society." In France,
Julie Suk asserts, criminalizing Holocaust denial is not negatively
directed at hate-speakers, but positively directed at publicly
establishing the moral legitimacy of the state. Whereas in America it is
thought "that the state would be undermining its democratic legitimacy
were it to discriminate against certain viewpoints" -- an argument made
by Ronald Dworkin in his essay -- in France the state wants to make it
clear that "racism has no place in collective self-determination." Thus
"the fight against racism ... becomes a collective national project" in
which the state plays a major role.
The contextual approach -
regulation for this society, but not for that - will be resisted by
those who insist that it's a matter of principle: it's just wrong to
suppress and/or punish viewpoints with which the state disagrees, and
it is wrong, indeed immoral, in every place and at every time. In
response, pragmatic-minded commentators will say that the problem is
not a moral but a managerial one. You've got to look at what you have,
where you've been and where you want to go, and figure out the best
means to get there. Regulating hate speech may be one of those means,
and it may not be, depending on the facts of your particular situation.
Why commit yourself to either course in advance? Why not allow yourself
the flexibility to devise strategies that will work on the ground?
These
questions will always circle back to the original -- and unanswerable
-- question of what is hate speech and what does it do anyway. It is
unanswerable because hate speech is a category without a stable content.
As Strossen says, "One person's hate speech is another person's deeply
held religious belief." The response of Enlightenment liberalism to
this difference -- to the depth and intractability of substantive
disagreement -- is to seek a common, usually procedural, ground on the
basis of which lines can be drawn without putting the state on the side
of anyone's viewpoint. If we can all just agree on a minimalist
definition of hate speech and its harms, we might get somewhere and
bring everyone along. But every effort in this direction founders on the
fact that you can't be minimal enough. No matter how low the bar is
set, some will feel, and feel with reason, that it has been set to
exclude them.
Alon Harel, for example, proposes in his essay to
draw the line demarcating protected from unprotected hate speech by
according protection to arguably hurtful speech if it is part and parcel
of "a comprehensive and valuable form of life"; if, that is, it is
"deeply rooted" in "long term customs, ways of life, and ideological
commitments." There is, however, a caveat, already more than implied in
the word "valuable": the tradition to which the speech is attached must
include "prominent humanistic components," a requirement that would
exclude "Nazism and the Ku Klux Klan," for they are "hatred based
traditions." But who is to say that Nazism and the Ku Klux Klan are all
hatred and have no humanistic components or ideological commitments?
Surely members of those groups would not say so, and on what basis are
they peremptorily eliminated from the roster of viewpoints accorded
protection?
On the basis, obviously, of the substantive
preferences (which in this case I certainly share) of the one doing the
line-drawing. But from the perspective of the liberalism within which
Harel writes, neither the state nor the political theorist can make
in-advance substantive judgments on what does and does not have a place
in the marketplace of ideas. Excluding Nazis and Ku Klux Klanners and
gay bashers from the zone of speech-toleration may feel good, but it
rests on no principled ground, and attempts, like Harel's, to specify
such a ground are merely attempts to occlude the entirely arbitrary
nature of the classification.
In the end, none of the alternative
ways of dealing with hate speech is entirely satisfying. Allowing it all
leaves unanswered the question of what to do about the harms it causes.
Banning it all reopens the question of just what it is and what it
isn't. Selectively banning this but not that only reanimates the
divisiveness that hate speech regulation promises to diminish. We'll be
at this for a long time, going in exactly the same circles.