Muhammad: The "Banned" Images Blog Free Speech at Risk

29Nov/091

Newsmax.com

Muslim Groups Shut Down Free Speech at Columbia, Princeton by Pamela Geller, November 25th 2009.

Nonie Darwish, the executive director of Former Muslims United and author of "Cruel And Usual Punishment: The Terrifying Global Implications of Islamic Law," was scheduled to speak at Columbia and Princeton Universities last week, but both events were canceled under pressure from Muslim groups on campus.

Columbia, where Ahmadinejad was welcomed like a returning king.

Filed under: Media Citings 1 Comment
29Nov/090

Sudanese Conviction

More from the “religion of peace:” A 16-year-old Sudanese girl was convicted by Islamic authorities of “offending public morality.” Her “crime?” Wearing an “indecent” skirt. Her punishment? 50 lashes. (NYT, 11/28/09)

Significant article to appear in Monday’s edition (I think) of the Yale Daily News (Yale’s student newspaper).

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29Nov/090

Neil Boortz

A brief but complimentary mention of the book Nov. 25th on the Neil Boortz radio show. His program is carried on some 230 stations, and has about 5 million listeners.

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23Nov/090

Foundation for Individual Rights in Education (FIRE)

Duke Professor Finishes Yale's Job, Prints Mohammed Images in New Book; FIRE Co-signs Statement of Principle - By Adam Kissel

Duke University Professor Gary Hull has just published Muhammad: The "Banned" Images, which dares to publish images that Yale University and Yale University Press censored from Jytte Klausen's The Cartoons that Shook the World earlier this year. Hull calls the book "a statement of defiance against censors, terror-mongers, and their Western appeasers." FIRE joined with the National Coalition Against Censorship, the American Association of University Professors, and nine other signatories on a Statement of Principle stating that "The failure to stand up for free expression emboldens those who would attack and undermine it."

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22Nov/090

Instapundit.com

Nice mention today of the book on Instapundit.com. The blog receives about 350,000 visits PER DAY.

November 21, 2009 IN THE MAIL: From Gary Hull, Muhammad: The “Banned” Images. Containing the pictures that Yale was afraid to print, plus a ringing statement in favor of free speech. Posted at by Glenn Reynolds at 11:00 am

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16Nov/090

The Art History Newsletter – Muhammad: The ‘Banned’ Images

The Art History Newsletter - posted November 16th 2009

Duke University professor Gary Hull (editor of The Abolition of Anti-Trust and co-editor of The Ayn Rand Reader) has founded Voltaire Press (which is not affiliated with Duke) and has published Muhammad: The “Banned” Images, which includes the following statement signed by Nadine Strossen, Cary Nelson, Eugene Volokh, and others:

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15Nov/090

Open Position with Voltaire Press: Blogger/Writer

Voltaire Press is now hiring junior- and senior-level bloggers/writers. (Neophytes with extraordinary ability will be considered.) The primary responsibility is to write posts for this blog, to monitor comments, and occasionally to respond to them. The primary subject of this blog is free speech/reasoned discourse versus its enemies, which includes but is not limited to Muslim terrorists and Islamofascists. Related issues, such as the broader one of the individual versus the state, will also be considered as appropriate blog topics.

If interested, send a vitae of no longer than one page, and three writing samples including a few posts (brief ones, please) to voltairepress@live.com.

This is freelance work. We will respond if we are interested, and will discuss at that time the terms of employment.

13Nov/090

Islamists Versus Women

For those of you who believe that “Islam is a religion of peace,” I suggest you read the following about the AHA Foundation:

In response to ongoing abuses of women's rights in the name of fundamentalist Islam, Ayaan Hirsi Ali and her supporters established the AHA Foundation in 2007 as a charitable organization to help protect and defend the rights of women in the West against militant Islam.

Through research, the dissemination of knowledge and outreach, the Foundation aims to combat several types of crimes against women, including the abridgement of the education of girls, female genital mutilation, forced marriages, honor violence, and honor killings.

The Foundation originally focused its efforts on supporting Muslim dissidents who had been victims of violence, abuse or neglect, or who had been threatened with violence, because of their political or religious beliefs.

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13Nov/090

Braving The Inferno

Jeff Gamso at his Gamso - For the Defense blog writes:

I wrote the other day about the thought police. I wrote earlier about the craven and dishonest (literally, intellectually, and morally) decision by Yale University Press to publish Jytte Klausen’s The Cartoons That Shook the World about the depictions of the Prophet Muhammad published by a Danish newspaper in 2005 and the responses to them - but to leave out the cartoons. That last continues to rankle. If we cannot look to the academy and its press to be forthright in defense of the open discussion of ideas, where can we look?

The answer, it seems (and thanks to Eugene Volokh for pointing it out), is to another university. What Yale will not do, Duke will. The aptly named Voltaire Press has now published Muhammad: The "Banned" Images. It's a picture book containing those 12 cartoons and apparently (I haven't got my copy yet) another 19 images of Muhammad, with commentary, and a Statement of Principle advocating not the content of the book but it's idea and signed by a dozen individuals and organizations. (I'm bitter that they didn't ask me to sign.)

To add your virtual signature to the Statement of Principle, go to MuhammadImages.com and send us an email.

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13Nov/090

Muhammad: The “Banned” Images Now on Wikipedia

View the Wikipedia entry for Muhammad: The "Banned" Images.

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