The 'Thought Police' Come to Norway
by Bruce Bawer • November 23, 2019 at 5:00 am
[A]s commentator Nina Hjerpset-Østlie put it, it is now illegal "to burn your own books". Which, she added, means that although Norway's longstanding blasphemy law was taken off the books four years ago, Bjørnland has, in effect, reinstated it.
Jon Wessel-Aas, a prominent lawyer... called Bjørnland's one-woman revision of the racism clause "at best prior restraint of an illegal utterance," and at worst "prior restraint of a legal utterance." Both forms of restraint, he noted, are unconstitutional.
In defense of Bjørnland's novel interpretation of criminal law, Martin Bernsen, a senior official of the PST, the agency in charge of Norway's national security, argued that burning copies of the Koran can trigger acts of violence. Under this kind of logic, of course – the so-called heckler's veto – any statement or action whatsoever that just might antagonize violence-prone Muslims should presumably be treated as illegal, whereas burning, say, any number of copies of the Talmud or Bible is no problem, since Jews and Christians aren't in the habit of responding to such actions with mass acts of savage bloodshed.
Americans whose memory of public events goes back more than a news cycle or two may recall Terry Jones, a previously obscure Gainesville, Florida, preacher whose announcement in 2010 of a plan to burn copies of the Koran drew public condemnations from then President Barack Obama, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, and the top US military commander in Afghanistan, Gen. David Petraeus. Secretary of State Robert Gates phoned Jones personally and asked him not to go ahead with the burning.
In the end, Jones put off his planned 2010 action, burning one Koran in 2011, another in 2012, and hundreds on September 11, 2014.