POPULARITY
Caleb O. Brown hosted the Cato Daily Podcast for nearly 18 years, producing well over 4000 episodes. He has gone on to head Kentucky's Bluegrass Institute. This is one among the best episodes produced in his tenure, selected by the host and listeners.In presenting the Milton Friedman Prize for Advancing Liberty to Danish newspaper editor Flemming Rose, former ACLU president Nadine Strossen discusses the importance of unfettered freedom of speech. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Freedom of expression stands as democracy's most essential and most vulnerable foundation. In this conversation, Danish journalist and author Flemming Rose shares profound insights from his experience at the center of the 2005 Muhammad cartoons controversy that sparked global protests and death threats.Rose offers a surprising revelation: free speech is fundamentally unnatural. "Free speech is a consequence not of culture, not of nature," he explains. "The natural inclination among human beings is not to accept free speech." This counterintuitive truth helps explain why even those who claim to champion free expression often only support it for views they find agreeable—a contradiction that becomes increasingly problematic in multicultural societies.We discuss how the publication of twelve cartoons depicting the Prophet Muhammad wasn't simply an isolated incident but emerged from an ongoing national debate about immigration, integration, and self-censorship. Most alarmingly, Rose identifies a global "freedom recession" affecting even established Western democracies. As societies become more diverse and face increasing instability, governments frequently respond by imposing greater restrictions on expression—a trend accelerated by terrorist threats, wars, and the chaotic information landscape of social media. Despite this bleak assessment, however, Rose maintains some hope, noting that throughout history, free speech has served as the primary tool for marginalized groups fighting for equality.For anyone concerned about the future of democracy, especially under this second Trump presidency, this episode offers essential context for understanding the delicate balance between free expression and social cohesion. As authoritarian impulses gain strength worldwide, including in the United States, Rose reminds us why we must actively cultivate tolerance—that rare capacity to live peacefully alongside ideas we find objectionable without resorting to suppression or violence.Recommended:The Tyranny of Silence - Flemming RoseAfter America Podcast Series-------------------------Follow Deep Dive:BlueskyYouTube Email: deepdivewithshawn@gmail.com Music: Majestic Earth - Joystock
Det er tre år siden jeg spurgte, hvorfor Putin? Hvorfor skulle du starte en krig i Ukraine? I dag er verdens øjne vendt mod Trump, men jeg mener, der er grund til at se mod Moskva igen. Derfor har jeg inviteret Flemming Rose med i studiet til en samtale, hvor vi forsøger at komme tættere på at gennemskue Putins ønsker for fremtiden. Vært: Svend Brinkmann. Gæst: Flemming Rose, Chefredaktør Frihedsbrevet. Glæd dig til dagens episode, som du nu kan høre i DR Lyd.
"Det er på tide at gøre op med mentaliteten fra kolonitiden. Jeg vil sige, "tør øjnene". Denne æra er for længst forbi og vil aldrig vende tilbage. Aldrig!". Sådan sagde Ruslands præsident, Vladimir Putin, i en tale i 2023 til en forsamling af blandt andre russiske, kinesiske, iranske og indiske politikere, forretningsfolk og generaler. Den æra, som er forbi, er Vestens globale dominans. På et tidspunkt hvor den tætte forbindelse mellem USA og Europa er kraftigt udfordret, er spørgsmålet, hvordan man i Rusland og Kina forstår Vesten? Hvordan ser de på den vestlige dominans op igennem historien? Og hvad forbinder de med vestlige værdier? Det er nogle af spørgsmålene i denne uges udgave af Kampen om historien, hvor Adam Holm taler med Flemming Rose, chefredaktør på Frihedsbrevet og tidligere ruslandskorrespondent og Peter Harmsen, ph.d. i kinastudier og forfatter. Redaktør: Thomas Vinter Larsen. Redaktion: Clara Faust Spies. Musik: Adi Zukanovic.
Did overheated political rhetoric lead to the assassination attempt on former President Donald Trump? On today's show we explore political violence: its history, its causes, and its relationship with free speech. Flemming Rose is a senior fellow at the Cato Institute. He previously served as foreign affairs editor and culture editor at the Danish newspaper Jyllands-Posten. In 2005, he was principally responsible for publishing the cartoons that initiated the Muhammad cartoons controversy. Nadine Strossen is a professor emerita at New York Law School, former president of the ACLU, and a senior fellow at FIRE. Jacob Mchangama is the founder and executive director of The Future of Free Speech. He is a research professor at Vanderbilt University and a senior fellow at FIRE. Timestamps 0:00 Intro 2:45 Initial reactions to Trump assassination attempt 7:39 Can we blame political violence on rhetoric? 15:56 Weimar and Nazi Germany 26:05 Is the Constitution a “suicide pact”? 39:21 Is violence ever justified? 49:24 Censorship in the wake of tragedy and true threats 59:06 Closing thoughts 1:04:54 Outro Show notes: “Freedom of expression and social conflict” by Christian Bjørnskov and Jacob Mchangama FIRE's 2024 College Free Speech Rankings (featuring data on college student support for violence) Recent court ruling in DeRay McKesson protest case “The Tyranny of Silence” by Flemming Rose “Free Speech: A History from Socrates to Social Media” by Jacob Mchangama
"Vores sandhed er, at dette er vores nation, vores land, vores børn. Vi vil fortsætte med at forsvare os. Det er alt, hvad jeg har at sige. Slava Ukraini. Jeg er ikke flygtet, det er her, jeg hører til". Det var ordene fra Volodymyr Zelenskyj, da han den 24. februar 2022 gik på gaden og filmede sig selv efter den russiske invasion. Men hvori består den ukrainske identitet for den oprindeligt russisktalende Zelenskyj? Hvad er det for en historie, han læner sig op ad, når han erklærer: "Her hører jeg til"? Og hvordan forholder han og ukrainerne sig til, at udtrykket Slava Ukraini trækker tråde tilbage til ukrainske ultranationalister i 1930'erne? Det er nogle af spørgsmålene i årets første udgave af Kampen om Historien, hvor Adam Holm taler med forfattere og Ukraine-kendere Flemming Splidsboel og Flemming Rose. Musik: Adi Zukanovic.
"Jeg vil gerne slå fast at Ukraine ikke bare er et naboland for os. Det er en del af vores historie, kultur og åndelige fælles rum". Sådan sagde Rusland præsident Putin i en tale tre dage før invasionen af Ukraine. Putin er kendt for sin brug af historien som rettesnor for den politik han fører. Det har vi flere gange fået demonstreret i relation til krigen i Ukraine og hans forståelse af Vestens rolle. Sovjetunionens kamp mod Hitlertyskland under Anden Verdenskrig - også kendt som Den Store Fædrelandskrig - spiller en særlig rolle for ham, men hvordan er hans syn på historien i grunden blevet formet? Og hvilke andre kapitler af den russiske historie lægger han vægt på? Det er et par af spørgsmålene i denne uges Kampen om historien, hvor Adam Holm taler med forfattere samt Ruslands-kendere Flemming Splidsboel og Flemming Rose. Musik: Adi Zukanovic.
Alt ændrede sig for Flemming Rose, da han for snart 20 år siden blev ansigtet på offentliggørelse af Muhammedtegningerne. I dag sporer han en tiltagende tilbøjelighed til at lægge under for islamistiske kræfter. Det fortæller han om i samtale med Henrik Qvortrup.
Flemming Rose is a senior fellow at the Cato Institute. He previously served as foreign affairs editor and culture editor at the Danish newspaper Jyllands‐Posten. During his tenure as culture editor, Rose was principally responsible for the September 2005 publication of the cartoons that initiated the Muhammad cartoons controversy in early 2006.Since then, Rose has been an international advocate for freedom of speech and is the author of several books, including The Tyranny of Silence, published by the Cato Institute in 2014.From 1980 to 1996, Rose was the Moscow correspondent for the newspaper Berlingske Tidende. Between 1996 and 1999, he was that newspaper's correspondent in Washington, DC. In 2015, Rose was awarded the prestigious Publicist Prize from Denmark's national press club and received the Norwegian Fritt Ord Foundation's Honor Award for defending free speech. In 2016, he received the Milton Friedman Prize for Advancing Liberty from the Cato Institute. He lives in Denmark and speaks widely in Europe and elsewhere. Show is Sponsored by https://www.expressvpn.com/yaron & https://www.fountainheadcasts.comJoin this channel to get access to perks: https://www.youtube.com/@YaronBrook/joinLike what you hear? Like, share, and subscribe to stay updated on new videos and help promote the Yaron Brook Show: https://bit.ly/3ztPxTxSupport the Show and become a sponsor: https://www.patreon.com/YaronBrookShow or https://yaronbrookshow.com/membershipOr make a one-time donation: https://bit.ly/2RZOyJJContinue the discussion by following Yaron on Twitter (https://bit.ly/3iMGl6z) and Facebook (https://bit.ly/3vvWDDC )Want to learn more about Ayn Rand and Objectivism? Visit the Ayn Rand Institute: https://bit.ly/35qoEC3#freespeech #philosophy #Morality #Objectivism #AynRand #politicsThis show is part of the Spreaker Prime Network, if you are interested in advertising on this podcast, contact us at https://www.spreaker.com/show/3276901/advertisement
I Putins univers bliver forrædere dræbt. Lørdag morgen var Prigozhin, der sendte sine Wagner-enheder mod Moskva, en forræder. Men Putin blinkede. Han bad Belarus-diktatoren Lukasjenko om at forhandle med Prigozhin. Det lykkedes. Prigozhoin trak sig tilbage. Lørdag aften lod Putin ham gå i eksil - og reddede sit regime. Men mandag aften rasede Putin igen over Prigozhin, der med sit opgør mod Putins militære chefer, kastede Putin ud i hans største krise nogensinde. Men hvordan kunne Prigozhin begå mytteri? Hvorfor vidste Putin intet - når CIA vidste, hvad der kom? Hvem kan Putin stole på nu? Gæster: Flemming Splidsboel, Søren Liborius og Flemming Rose. Vært: Steffen Gram.
Kreml er overvældende i al sin storhed. Og Putin har taget Kreml til sig. Det er her, han som enevældig fører sin krig i Ukraine - og manøvrerer konflikterne mellem magtens centre i Rusland. Hæren, forsvarsministeriet, sikkerhedstjenester, de private militser - som Yevgeny Prigozhins Wagner-hær. Det er herfra, han har tvunget kritikere til tavshed og russerne til at acceptere hans krig. Men hvem er hans håndlangere? Hvis Putin forsvinder, hvordan vil hans arvtager så regere Rusland? Som Putin har gjort det, eller....? Gæster: Andrey Kazankov, Claus Mathiesen og Flemming Rose. Vært: Steffen Gram.
“Vi er på et tidspunkt nødt til at sætte os ind i, hvad den russiske fortælling om krigen er.” Sådan lyder opfordringen her til morgen fra Frihedsbrevets chefredaktør, Flemming Rose. Vi gør forsøget i selskab med Marie Krarup, Naser Khader, Thorkild Kjærgaard, Tom Gillesberg og Peter Viggo Jakobsen. Din vært her til morgen er Kristian Henriksen [04:00] Marie Krarup, Tidligere MF for Dansk Folkeparti // Om Putin var tvunget til at gå ind i Ukraine. [15:00] Flemming Rose, Chefredaktør Frihedsbrevet // Om hvorfor vi skal udfordre Vestens narrativ. [19:00] Thorkild Kjærgaard, historiker // Om Ukraine selv er skyld i invasionen. [29:00] Naser Khader, tidligere formand for Forsvarsudvalget for Konservative // Om ramaskriget over Putins udmeldelse af atomaftalen overdrevet. [38:00] Tom Gillesberg, Schiller Instituttet // Om NATO er skyld i krigen. [47:00] Peter Viggo Jakobsen, Forsvarsakademiet // Om Putin vinder krigen. [53:00] Slavko Labovic, Formand for Serbisk Forening i Danmark og skuespiller // Om man kan stole på Putins ord.Support the show: https://www.frihedsbrevet.dkSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Integrations- og udlændingeordfører Mads Fuglede sagde under valgkampen, at der skal laves et nyt udrejsecenter, hvor de mest kriminelle skal sendes hen. I det nye regeringsgrundlag står der dog intet om et nyt center. Vi taler også med Lars Kaaber om profilflugten fra Nye Borgerlige. Dagens vært er Maya Tekeli. Tidskoder: [00:00] : Mads Fuglede, Integrations- og Udlændingeordfører i Venstre // Om Venstre løber fra valgløfter om nyt udrejsecenter. [08:00] : Kristian Henriksen, Journalist på Frihedsbrevet // Om hvor Radikales Mia Nyegaard gemmer sig. [12:00] : Lars Kaaber, Tidl. pressechef i Nye Borgerlige // Om hvor Nye Borgerlige står efter Mikkel Bjørns afgang. [28:00] : Jesper Zølck, Nordisk korrespondent, TV 2 // Om det svenske Politi fejler, når banderne får teenagedrenge til at gøre det beskidte arbejde. [35:00] : Tobias Bruun Kristiansen, Journalist på Frihedsbrevet // Om det nye Centrum-Demokraternes drømmekandidater har interesse i projektet. [40:00] : Martin Henriksen, Tidl. profil i Dansk Folkeparti // Om Danmark skal standse hjælpen til Ukraine. [55:00] Flemming Rose og Sofie Frøkjær, Værter på podcasten “Fri Ukraine” // Om det nyeste afsnit af “Fri Ukraine”.Support the show: https://www.frihedsbrevet.dkSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Spænd sikkerhedsselen, for vi har topspændende emner på programmet fra første til sidste sekund i denne udgave af Frontlinjen. Det skal først handle om Forsvarsministeriets bidrag (eller manglende bidrag) til den offentlige debat og tolkning af Grundloven. For hvorfor må værnschefer ikke stille op til konferencer og oplæg, bare fordi der ikke er en konstitueret regering? Det undersøger vi, inden vi går videre til hærens luftværn, der er til debat, den russiske flåde og slutteligt en stor debat om dækningen af krigen i Ukraine og det lettere provokerende spørgsmål: Må man gå kritisk til alle parter? Oversigt: - Intro - Forsvarsministeriet sætter en stopper for, at værnschefer kan deltage i konferencer og oplæg - Er Forsvarsministeriets tolkning af Grundloven rigtig? Interview med juraprofessor Sten Schaumburg-Müller - Hvad er op og ned i sagen om hærens nye luftværn? - Den russiske flådes strategi - Debat om den journalistiske og analytiske dækning af krigen i Ukraine med Flemming Rose, Anders Puck Nielsen og Henrik Qvortrup Vært: Peter Ernstved Rasmussen. Tilrettelægger: Nicklas Erbillor Degn. Medvirkende: Torben Ørting Jørgensen (formand, Folk & Sikkerhed), Sten Schaumburg-Müller (professor i jura, Syddansk Universitet), Kenneth Pedersen (viceforsvarschef og generalløjtnant), Johannes Riber (orlogskaptajn og ph.d.-studerende ved Københavns Universitet), Anders Puck Nielsen (militæranalytiker ved Forsvarsakademiets Center for Maritime Operationer), Flemming Rose (redaktør, Frihedsbrevet), Henrik Qvortrup (journalist, podcastvært og kommentator, Ekstra Bladet).See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
"Get used to the name: Mikhail Gorbachev. He should have plenty of time to put his mark on Soviet affairs". Sådan lød det på den amerikanske tv-station ABC News, da Mikhail Gorbatjov 11. marts 1985 var blevet udnævnt til Generalsekretær for Sovjetunionens Kommunistiske Parti. Ganske vist fik Gorbatjov ikke "plenty of time" på det, som dengang var verdens mægtigste politiske post. Det blev blot til seks år. Til gengæld fik han i dén grad sat sit aftryk på Sovjetunionens udvikling - og afvikling. Hvorfor mislykkedes Gorbatjov med det han allermest ønskede, nemlig at reformere kommunismen? Og hvorfor lykkedes han med optø det bundfrosne forhold til kapitalismens bannerfører, USA? Hvad står tilbage som arven - og læren - efter Gorbatjov, der døde for nylig, 91 år gammel? Det er spørgsmålene i denne uges Kampen om historien, hvor Adam Holm får besøg af chefredaktør og forhenværende Moskva-korrespondent Flemming Rose, der har mødt Gorbatjov flere gange. Musik: Adi Zukanovic.
Under en fredelig forelæsning bliver den verdensberømte forfatter, Salman Rushdie, pludselig angrebet af en maskeret mand. 33 år efter det iranske præstestyre udstedte en fatwa mod ham på grund af hans roman 'De sataniske vers', bliver han stukket mere end 10 gange med en kniv og hastet afsted til hospitalet. Angrebet vækker vrede og foragt verden over - også hos Flemming Rose, der har været Rushdies allierede i kampen for ytringsfrihed siden Muhammed-tegningernes offentliggørelse. Hvad betyder angrebet på Rushdie for retten til at sige, skrive og tegne det, man vil? Flemming Rose, chefredaktør på Frihedsbrevet, fortæller om Salman Rushdie og den sikkerhedstrussel, de begge to lever med. Vært: Anna Ingrisch.
Failed assassination attempt (1989) On 3 August 1989, while Mustafa Mahmoud Mazeh was priming a book bomb loaded with RDX explosive in a hotel in Paddington, Central London, the bomb exploded prematurely, destroying two floors of the hotel and killing Mazeh. A previously unknown Lebanese group, the Organization of the Mujahidin of Islam, said he died preparing an attack "on the apostate Rushdie". There is a shrine in Tehran's Behesht-e Zahra cemetery for Mustafa Mahmoud Mazeh that says he was "Martyred in London, 3 August 1989. The first martyr to die on a mission to kill Salman Rushdie." Mazeh's mother was invited to relocate to Iran, and the Islamic World Movement of Martyrs' Commemoration built his shrine in the cemetery that holds thousands of Iranian soldiers slain in the Iran–Iraq War. Hezbollah's comments (2006) During the 2006 Jyllands-Posten Muhammad cartoons controversy, Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah declared that "If there had been a Muslim to carry out Imam Khomeini's fatwā against the renegade Salman Rushdie, this rabble who insult our Prophet Mohammed in Denmark, Norway and France would not have dared to do so. I am sure there are millions of Muslims who are ready to give their lives to defend our prophet's honour and we have to be ready to do anything for that." International Guerillas (1990) In 1990, soon after the publication of The Satanic Verses, a Pakistani film entitled International Gorillay (International Guerillas) was released that depicted Rushdie as a "James Bond-style villain" plotting to cause the downfall of Pakistan by opening a chain of casinos and discos in the country; he is ultimately killed at the end of the movie. The film was popular with Pakistani audiences, and it "presents Rushdie as a Rambo-like figure pursued by four Pakistani guerrillas". The British Board of Film Classification refused to allow it a certificate, as "it was felt that the portrayal of Rushdie might qualify as criminal libel, causing a breach of the peace as opposed to merely tarnishing his reputation." This effectively prevented the release of the film in the UK. Two months later, however, Rushdie himself wrote to the board, saying that while he thought the film "a distorted, incompetent piece of trash", he would not sue if it were released. He later said, "If that film had been banned, it would have become the hottest video in town: everyone would have seen it". While the film was a great hit in Pakistan, it went virtually unnoticed elsewhere. Al-Qaeda hit list (2010) In 2010, Anwar al-Awlaki published an Al-Qaeda hit list in Inspire magazine, including Rushdie along with other figures claimed to have insulted Islam, including Ayaan Hirsi Ali, cartoonist Lars Vilks, and three Jyllands-Posten staff members: Kurt Westergaard, Carsten Juste, and Flemming Rose. The list was later expanded to include Stéphane "Charb" Charbonnier, who was murdered in a terror attack on Charlie Hebdo in Paris, along with 11 other people. After the attack, Al-Qaeda called for more killings. Rushdie expressed his support for Charlie Hebdo. He said, "I stand with Charlie Hebdo, as we all must, to defend the art of satire, which has always been a force for liberty and against tyranny, dishonesty and stupidity ... religious totalitarianism has caused a deadly mutation in the heart of Islam and we see the tragic consequences in Paris today." In response to the attack, Rushdie commented on what he perceived as victim-blaming in the media, stating "You can dislike Charlie Hebdo.... But the fact that you dislike them has nothing to do with their right to speak. The fact you dislike them certainly doesn't in any way excuse their murder." https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Salman_Rushdie
I Vesten diskuterer vi, hvordan der ser ud inde i Vladimir Putins hoved, og om Ruslands leder er skør, i stedet for at sætte os ind i den historiske baggrund for Ruslands adfærd.Vestens forståelse af Ruslands voldsomme angreb på Ukraine hviler på lommepsykologiske analyser af Putins psykologi, mener Flemming Rose, som er gæst i denne uges Bogfolk. Han mener, at Svetlana Aleksijevitjs store Ruslands-værk 'Secondhand-tid' er den bedste bog, der er skrevet om Sovjetunionens opløsning. Bogen var en øjenåbner, og ifølge Rose den bedste forklaring på, hvad der foregår hos Putin. Flemming Rose er chefredaktør på Frihedsbrevet.dk og vært på podcasten 'Fri Ukraine'. Han er tidligere Ruslandskorrespondent for Berlingske Tidende og blev som kulturredaktøren bag Jyllands Postens Muhammedtegninger hvirvlet ind i international politik på voldsomste vis. Lyt med.
Vi gætter og gætter på, hvad Putins næste træk er. Indtil videre, synes jeg, eksperterne har været ret dårlige til at forudse den russiske præsidents adfærd i Ukraine. Hvorfor gætter eksperterne hele tiden på, hvad Putin kan finde på? Giver det mening at forstå manden bag rædslerne eller skal vi i stedet se på mere end en mands værk? Vært: Svend Brinkmann. Gæster: Karin Hilmer Pedersen, lektor i statskundskab ved Aarhus Universitet, og Flemming Rose, chefredaktør for Frihedsbrevet. Tilrettelægger: Christoffer Heide Høyer.
Freedom of speech is a bedrock principle throughout the Western world, but increasingly it is being challenged — on college campuses, among intellectuals and in politics — in the name of preventing offense and "hate." Why is this happening and what does it mean for the future of free speech.Panelists are Steve Simpson, director of Legal Studies at the Ayn Rand Institute and editor of "Defending Free Speech"; Flemming Rose, author of "Tyranny of Silence: How One Cartoon Ignited a Global Debate on the Future of Free Speech," and Dave Rubin, creator and host of the Rubin Report. The event, "Free Speech Under Attack," took place at Objectivist Summer Conference 2017 in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, on Tuesday, June 13, 2017.
Hvad er et åbent samfund, hvilke trusler udgør staten mod vores frihed, hvordan har wokebølgen og cancel culture påvirket ytringsfriheden, og er EU blevet for over-bureaukratiseret? I denne uges afsnit af Samfundstanker gæster forfatter, journalist og chefredaktør på Frihedsbrevet Flemming Rose studiet. Her skal han med udgangspunkt i sit interview med Johan Norberg diskutere det åbne samfunds trusler, muligheder og paradokser. Kontakt til podcastvært Martin Ågerup: martin@cepos.dk Links: https://frihedsbrevet.dk/koebmanden-og-stammekrigeren-2/ (https://frihedsbrevet.dk/koebmanden-og-stammekrigeren-2/) http://www.johannorberg.net/ (http://www.johannorberg.net/) https://www.cato.org/ (https://www.cato.org/) Optaget d. 31. januar 2022.
12 tegninger blev til det, vi kender som Muhammedkrisen. I denne fjerde del følger vi Ahmed Akkari igennem krisens voldeligste periode, rejser med ham til en lukket konference for islams elite, og ser ham miste troen på den verden, han har viet en stor del af sit liv til. Midt i den overdådige, men desillusionerende oplevelse bliver han konfronteret med en ubehagelig scene fra fortiden, en optagelse fra et skjult kamera og en politianmeldelse for trusler om vold mod en dansk politiker. Tilrettelæggelse, titelmusik og lyddesign: Martin Grønne Redaktør: Mikkel Clausen. Faktatjek og arkiv: Ditte Jelsbak. Medvirkende: Ahmed Akkari, Flemming Rose.
Det 20. århundredes sidste store dramatiske mærkedag er d. 25. december 1991. Præcis kl. 19.35 blev Sovjetunionens røde fane taget ned fra Kreml. I stedet gik den russiske trikolore til tops. 70 års kommunistisk dominans var forbi. I andet afsnit om Sovjetunionen ser Adam Holm nærmere på det store imperiums sammenbrud og på Mikhail Gorbatjovs rolle i afslutningen af kommunismen. Gæster er Matilde Kimer, DRs korrespondent i Rusland, og Flemming Rose, forhenværende korrespondent i Moskva under Sovjetunionens fald. Musik: Adi Zukanovic.
Tak for kaffe! Sådan siger vi, når vi smækker med døren efter et samvær, vi helst havde været foruden. Men det er også titlen på Özlem Cekic' nye bog om den svære kunst at tale sammen. Hun ved mere om det end de fleste, for hun opfandt dialogkaffen for at komme sine mest hadefulde internet-krigere i møde. Hun synes, at vi taler grimt til hinanden mange steder - ved familiemiddagen, i kontorlandskabet, på Facebook, i forsamlingshuset og i skolen. Hvilke pronomener bruger vi, når vi går i henholdsvis dialog og debat? Kan en dialog foregå offentligt? Hvor går grænsen for, hvad man kan sige i det offentlige rum? Gæster: Özlem Cekic, tidl. Politiker, forfatter og stifter af Brobyggerne. Flemming Rose, chefredaktør for Frihedsbrevet og tidl. kultur- og udlandsredaktør for Jyllands Posten. Lars Trap Jensen, seniorredaktør ved Det Danske Sprog- og Litteraturselskab. Med på telefon er lektor i retorik ved Københavns Universitet Kristine Berg. Vært: Adrian Hughes. Husk at du altid kan skrive dine sprogspørgsmål til os på klogpaasprog@dr.dk.
Lars Vilks rondellhund blev startskottet för en lång debatt om gränsdragningen mellan religionsfrihet och yttrandefrihet och om avvägningarna mellan nationell säkerhet och individuell frihet. ”Rädslan för att kombinera satir och Muhammed är fortfarande stark”, säger Flemming Rose, tidigare redaktör på Jyllands-Posten. Hur har vi i Norden drygt 15 år senare påverkats av händelserna? I denna inlästa essä reflekterar Karin Svanborg-Sjövall utifrån möten med fyra personer som på olika sätt spelat viktiga roller i debatten – med helt olika utgångspunkter.
Vi anmelder OL-åbningsceremonien: Den olympiske åbningsceremoni løber af stablen i dag, og derfor har vi allieret os med performancekunstner Esben Weile Kjær, som kaster en kritikers blik på den store happening. Regnbueflaget er hejst i Budapest: Det er tid til den store Pride-parade i den ungarske hovedstad. I år har priden i Budapest vakt særlig stor opmærksomhed, fordi den falder sammen med præsident Orbans nye og omstridte LGBT-lov i kraft. Loven forbyder formidling af indhold, der kan 'fremme homoseksualitet', til børn under 18 år. Vi ser nærmere på, hvad det betyder for afviklingen af den farverige parade. Rose og ytringsfriheden: Han var kulturredaktør på Jyllands-Posten, da Muhammed-tegningerne blev trykt i 2005, og siden har han stået i adskillige debatter om ytringsfrihed. Flemming Rose er i dag chefredaktør på Frihedsbrevet.dk, og i dag sætter han punktum i vores tema om ytringsfrihed. Vært: Karen Secher.
Ayaan talks with Flemming Rose about publishing the cartoons of the prophet Muhammad in the Danish publication, Jyllands-Posten, in 2005. Flemming and Ayaan cover the series of events, including a debate over self-censorship and freedom of speech in Denmark that later exploded into international protests, demonstrations, and hysteria abroad. Flemming Rose is a Danish journalist... Source
Ayaan talks with Flemming Rose about publishing the cartoons of the prophet Muhammad in the Danish publication, Jyllands-Posten, in 2005. Flemming and Ayaan cover the series of events, including a debate over self-censorship and freedom of speech in Denmark that later exploded into international protests, demonstrations, and hysteria abroad. Flemming Rose is a Danish journalist, author […]
Ayaan talks with Flemming Rose about publishing the cartoons of the prophet Muhammad in the Danish publication, Jyllands-Posten, in 2005. Flemming and Ayaan cover the series of events, including a debate over self-censorship and freedom of speech in Denmark that later exploded into international protests, demonstrations, and hysteria abroad. Flemming Rose is a Danish journalist, author and editor-in-chief of the The Freedom Letter, a new Danish media. As culture editor of the newspaper Jyllands-Posten, Mr. Rose back in 2005 commissioned and published cartoons of the prophet Muhammad as part of a debate about self-censorship and fear imposing limitations on coverage of Islam in cultural life in Western Europa. Mr. Rose is an international advocate for free speech. He is the author of three books on freedom of expression, among them The Tyranny of Silence: How One Cartoon Ignited a Global Debate on the Future of Free Speech, which in 2014 was listed among the 10 best non-fiction books by The Economist. Follow him on Twitter @frihedsbrevet or check out his website here.
Verden er under hastig forandring. Nye stormagter vokser frem, mens den amerikanske supermagt langsomt trækker sig tilbage. Europa-Kommissionens nye formand, Ursula von der Leyen, vil derfor styrke den fælles sikkerheds- og udenrigspolitik i EU. Målet[...]
This episode of DECONSTRUCTIVE CRITICISM features Danish editor and journalist Flemming Rose about his book The Tyranny of Silence. It covers the so called cartoon crisis and is an interesting case study, apart from the fatwa against Salman Rushdie probably one of the most interesting case study, on the attack, and what looks like the subsequent victory, against freedom of Speech in Europe and the West. For more info: www.aronflam.com STÖTTA DEKONSTRUKTIV KRITIK på: paypal.me/ARONFLAM DKs Patreon: bit.ly/ARONFLAMDK SWISH 0046768943737 Bitcoin: 3EPQMEMVh6MtG3bTbGc71Yz8NrMAMF4kSH Edited by Marcus Blomgren Intro by: Intractable by Kevin MacLeod is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution license (creativecommons.org/licenses/...) Source: incompetech.com/music/royalty-... Artist: incompetech.com
I ugens afsnit siger vi farvel til Ivanka, Melania og @realDonaldTrump. Til Angela Merkel. Og nok også Inger Støjberg. Var det internettets svar på en dødsstraf, da Twitter i sidste uge lukkede Donald Trump? Og hvad betyder det for ytringsfriheden? Flemming Rose og Frederik Stjernfelt debatterer, hvor ansvaret for reguleringen af de sociale medier bør ligge. Sarah von Essen fortæller om sin fascination af Trumps kvinder. Hvilket lys kaster Melania og Ivanka over de fire år med præsidenten? Angela Merkel har siddet fire gange så lang tid som Trump. Hvilket aftryk har hun sat på Tyskland og Europa? Jesper Vind fortæller.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Lars Vilks lever sedan 2010 med ständigt livvaktsskydd. Sedan en tid pågår en konflikt med Polisen om gränserna för Vilks rörelsefrihet. Vem har rätt? Och är garantierna för yttrandefriheten starkare i Danmark? Sedan sommaren 2020 har Lars Vilks oenighet med sina livvakter varit föremål för offentlig debatt. Flera debattartiklar och ett par upprop - ett av dem undertecknat av sju före detta ordföranden för Publicistklubben - har uttryckt stöd för Lars Vilks och hans rätt att leva ett normalt liv, trots hotet emot honom. Polisen har hittills varit förtegen, men nu säger skånepolisens Petra Stenkula till P1 Kultur att de strängare restriktionerna är motiverade av en ökad hotbild. Vår reporter Mårten Arndtzén har också talat med Lars Vilks själv och två personer i Danmark som lever med livvakt: journalisten Flemming Rose och politikern Naser Khader. Ingen av dem känner igen de svårigheter Vilks vittnar om. TRUMP EFTER TWITTER ELLER TWITTER EFTER TRUMP? Vilka nya sociala forum står till buds när världens techföretag gör allt för att försvåra tillgången till alternativa plattformar. Apple har plockat bort Parler från App Store och Amazon har förbjudit den i sin molntjänst. Parler är den tjänst dit många av Trumps följare vänt sig sedan han stängts av från Twitter. Var går yttrandefrihetens gränser på Internet och kommer regelverken att förändras när sociala medier har blivit den fjärde statsmakten? Hör Linus Larsson, techreporter på Dagens Nyheter och Ulrika Knutson, författare och tidigare ordförande i Publicistklubben. TECKNADE JÄTTEBJÖRNLOKOR, OLJESKADADE FÅGLAR, FLADDERMÖSS OCH SOLDATER En av Sveriges bästa tecknare har hon kallats, Ann Margret Dahlquist-Ljungberg som levde mellan1915-2002. Ödmjukt och ursinnigt tecknade allt hon såg, jättebjörnlokor, oljeskadade fåglar, fladdermöss och soldater. Och hon var också författare och aktivist, engagerade sig mot atombomben och kärnkraften. I nästan hela sitt vuxna liv bodde hon tillsammans med sin man konstnären Sven Ljungberg i Ljungby i Småland där man kan se hennes verk på Ljungbergmuseet. OBS-ESSÄN OM MORAL OCH ANSVAR I VÅR TID I en värld med allt fler robotar och automatiserade redskap och fordon, så uppstår situationer där etiska avgöranden lämnas till programmering. Algoritmerna fattar besluten enligt en mall som bestämdes för länge sedan. Skribenten och ingenjören Christina Gratorp reflekterar över vad som händer med etiken när framtiden är låst. Programledare: Cecilia Blomberg Producent: Nina Asarnoj
“We are living under siege, in Paris, in 2020,” said Fabrice Nicolino, a journalist who survived the massacre at the magazine Charlie Hebdo. Speaking at the trial of the alleged conspirators in that massacre, Nicolino decried the fact that the magazine now operates under heavy security: “What we are enduring, you aren’t interested in it.” In 2015, Islamists burst into the offices of Charlie Hebdo and, with seeming military precision, executed eleven people, including the editor and many of the publication’s leading cartoonists. The magazine had published a cartoon of Muhammad. The gunmen had come to “avenge the prophet.” To mark the opening of the trial in September, Charlie Hebdo republished the notorious cartoons of Muhammad. In an editorial, it stated: “We would have found it unacceptable to start this trial without presenting them to our readers and to the public. . . . These cartoons are part of history.” Several weeks later, a man wielding a meat cleaver went to the former offices of the magazine (unaware it had relocated) and stabbed two people he thought worked there. Denouncing Charlie Hebdo’s republication of the Muhammad cartoons, he admitted to police that he planned to set fire to the building. While the trial was ongoing, in north Paris on October 16, a young Islamist attacked a middle-school teacher, Samuel Paty, and beheaded him. Paty had shown some students one of the cartoons that appeared in Charlie Hebdo — “during a moral and civic education class discussion about freedom of speech.” A young Islamist attacked a middle-school teacher, Samuel Paty, and beheaded him. Paty had shown some students one of the cartoons that appeared in Charlie Hebdo — “during a moral and civic education class discussion about freedom of speech.”What’s the climate today for freedom of speech, specifically on the topic of Islam, in Europe? What can we make of the response of European governments? To understand the situation, I talked to Flemming Rose, a journalist and author of The Tyranny of Silence. In 2005, he was an editor at the Danish newspaper Jyllands-Posten when it commissioned and later published cartoons on the subject of Islam to assess the seeming climate of self-censorship. That decision led to boycotts, deadly protests, and a global crisis. Al Qaeda put Mr. Rose on a hit list, and today when he leaves home, he must be accompanied by bodyguards. We talked about the “cartoons crisis,” which has become shrouded in misconceptions, the worldwide protests and boycotts that ensued, and the massacre at Charlie Hebdo (it had republished the Danish cartoons in support of freedom of speech). Following that attack, millions flocked to the streets of Paris to show their solidarity with the murdered journalists, declaring on banners, “Je Suis Charlie” (“I am Charlie”). What became of that visceral outpouring of support in the years since? The Charlie Hebdo massacre and subsequent attacks have stoked fears about some Muslims in France rejecting the country’s principles of secular government and free speech. The French president, Emanuel Macron, has expressed concern about “Islamist separatism”: Is this a significant phenomenon, I asked Mr. Rose, and what’s his view of the French government’s approach to it? Flemming Rose is a thoughtful observer. I found the conversation illuminating, but also chilling. This episode was recorded on November 11, 2020. Listen and subscribe from your mobile device on Apple Podcasts, Google Podcasts, Spotify or Stitcher. Podcast audio:
Has France reacted appropriately to attacks that included the beheading of a schoolteacher over a kind of blasphemy? What are the implications for free expression there? Flemming Rose comments. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Flemming Rose er journalist, tidligere redaktør og i dag forfatter, foredragsholder samt seniorforsker ved Cato Institute i Washington DC. Han startede sin karriere som korrespondent i Moskva og senere Washington for Berlingske Tidende, men blev nok for alvor kendt i Danmark og udlandet, da han som kultur- og udlandsredaktør på Jyllands-Posten stod på mål for de famøse Muhammed-tegninger. I dag er Flemming Rose en anerkendt fortaler for den universelle ytringsfrihed; et arbejde, der blandt andet har udløst en række priser og endda et fransk ridderslag, men også livvagter døgnet rundt. Musik: SilentCrafter – Fallen Kingdom” - https://soundcloud.com/silentcrafterofficial/fallen-kingdom
Hilde Sandvik intervjuer Flemming Rose, daværende kulturredaktør i Jyllands-Posten som trykket Muhammed-karikaturene 30.september 2005.
Consumer Choice Radio, hosted by Yaël Ossowski (@YaelOss) & David Clement (@ClementLiberty). INTERVIEW: Flemming Rose – Danish journalist and author, Senior Fellow at the Cato Institute, author of the book The Tyranny of Silence. He joins Consumer Choice Radio to discuss freedom of expression, tolerance, the latest scandals in journalism, and all things liberty. Get his book here: https://amzn.to/312b46S Broadcast on The Big Talker 106.7 WFBT FM on June 20, 2020. Website: consumerchoiceradio.com Apple: podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/consumer-choice-radio/id1494241613 Spotify: open.spotify.com/show/0jcFISTwalBmpOgMKHrweC Support the show: http://consumerchoicecenter.org/donate
"Når optøjer bryder ud, begynder skyderiet", skrev Donald Trump på Twitter, og præsidentens opslag blev skjult af Twitter med en advarsel om, at det "glorificerer vold". Facebook og grundlægger Mark Zuckerberg vil ikke fjerne Trumps opdatering, det fik medarbejdere hos Facebook til at nedlægge arbejdet i protest. Skal Facebook, Twitter, Snapchat og andre sociale medier regulere ytringer og udøve censur? Hvad med ytringsfriheden? Hvor går grænsen? Hvis Trump nu, hvem så næste gang? P1Debattører: Flemming Rose forfatter/journalist "Tavshedens tyranni", David Miller Democrats Abroad, Astrid Haug SoMe-ekspert, Kenneth Kristensen Berth (DF), Christian Heegaard (RV), Rune Selsing borgerlig debattør, Pernille Tranberg rådgiver data-etik. Vært: Gitte Hansen. Lytterne er velkomne til at komme med indspark til debatten på telefon 7021 1919. www.dr.dk/p1debat
Today, Thor Holt Presents, Flemming Rose, Flemming is a Danish journalist, author and Senior Fellow at the Cato Institute. He was previously foreign affairs editor at the Danish newspaper Jyllands-Posten. As culture editor of Jyllands-Posten, he was principally responsible for the September 2005 publication of the now-infamous cartoons that initiated the Jyllands-Posten Muhammad cartoons controversy early the next year, and since the crisis - riots and embassy burnings worldwide for example... he has been an international advocate of the freedom of speech. A big part of my coaching and counselling is helping people get ready for career success, and I believe their ability and willingness to iterate on ideas is fundamental to expressing who they really are in a way that will sell them successfully. No ideas are off the table so I'm fundamentally in favour of free expression… expressing bad ideas IS literally how we start getting to better ones in my profession! I thought it would be interesting to get him on to ask him how Dominic Cummings should be handling his current career crisis and to see what Flemmings take is on the value of the free expression to business and professionals… enjoy!
Post by Skyler J. Collins (Editor). This episode features a discussion with Danish journalist Flemming Rose from 2017. Twenty-five years ago, the pioneers of the Internet believed that they had created a tool to do away with censorship once and for all. Today, anyone with a smartphone is able to publish and communicate whatever they want, and yet, censorship still exists online. Just as the printing press, radio, and TV that came before it, while the Internet promised to be a breakthrough for freedom of speech, the government has found ways to control and limit our ability to freely disseminate information online. What does censorship in the 21st century look like? How does digital technology affect the way we communicate today? Is outright censorship easier to deal with than soft censorship and self-censorship? In this lecture, Flemming Rose explores these questions and more.
Forholdet mellem EU og Rusland har længe været domineret af splid og fjendskab. I 2014 udviklede det sig til en dyb og nærmest permanent krise, da Rusland invaderede Krim-halvøen. Hvad er baggrunden for Ruslands-krisen? Hvilke[...]
En rendyrket fornærmelse af det kinesiske folk. Sådan siger den kinesiske ambassade om en satiretegning bragt i Jyllands-Posten tirsdag. Tegningen forestiller det kinesiske flag, hvor de fem gule stjerner er udskiftet med Corona-virussen. Et samlet dansk Folketing, med statsministeren i spidsen, siger, at ytringsfriheden er til for at blive. Men kineserne raser - både fra statsniveau og på Twitter. Spørgsmålet er, om Jyllands-Posten skal sige undskyld? P1 Debattører: Flemming Rose, forfatter, Xinxin Ren Gudbjörnsson, forfatter, Mikkel Andersson, satiriker, og Flemming Ytzen, Asien-analytiker. Vært: Mads Aagaard. Lytterne er velkomne til at komme med indspark til debatten på telefon 7021 1919. www.dr.dk/p1debat
Krogerup Højskole har været under heftig beskydning fra hele den danske højrefløj i denne uge. Siden det blev offentligt kendt, at skolen har haft to burkaklædte kvinder på besøg som oplægsholdere, har Stram Kurs-politikere skrevet vrede facebookopdateringer og blogindlæg og selveste Morten Messerschmidt har kritiseret sagen fra Folketingets talerstol. I denne udgave af Shitstorm på P1 kan du møde højskoleforstander Rasmus Meyer, der svarer på kritikken. Vi spørger også danmarksmester i shitstorm og ytringsfrihedsekspert Flemming Rose, om han mener, at Krogerup Højskole har fortjent deres shitstorm. Desuden besøg af Rasmus Jarlov, der har fået heftige svinere i indbakken, efter han postede en række vittigheder på Instagram, imens han besøgte asylcentret Sjælsmark. Endelig skal vi fortælle en fantastisk historie om æslet Alex, der først blev misrøgtet og var helt alene, men som nu er omgivet af kærlighed og er i fuld vigør. Alt sammen grundet en stærk digital indsats fra Bornholms Politi, der dog kom til at bryde loven i deres æseliver. Værter: Mads Aagaard og Sanne Cigale Benmouyal.
Skæbnedag for museer: Danske museer skylder Arbejdsmarkedets Feriefond millioner af kroner, som de troede var en gave. I dag er de indkaldt til et vigtigt møde om en politisk løsning. Kulturen på P1 rapporterer umiddelbart efter skæbnemødet, der for nogle museer kan betyde forskellen mellem fortsat drift og konkurs. Kulturminister i civil: Joy Mogensen er kulturminister og tidligere borgmester i Roskilde - men hun er også et menneske, der kender sorgen indefra, elsker musik og som deler litterære interesser med både Flemming Rose og Kim Larsen. Mød mennesket Joy Mogensen i Kulturen på P1 i dag. En succes der endte med drab: Nedim Yasar var dybt involveret i bandemiljøet men rystede sig fri - for at blive brutalt myrdet samme aften, som han havde festet for den nyudgivne bog, der fortalte hans historie. På dagen, hvor retssagen om drabet begynder, taler Kulturen på P1 med kvinden, der skrev bogen - og bringer optagelser, hvor Nadim selv fortæller om sit bande-exit. En uge i lænker: Hvad sker der, hvis en kulturperson og en imam lænker sig til hinanden, ikke bare så længe, det tager at tage et pressefoto, men en hel uge? Om en uge har vi svaret - for sammenlænkningen foregår i dag. Kulturen på P1 lænker en journalist fast til det umage par og sender direkte fra den selvvalgte ufrihed. Værter: Tore Leifer og Jesper Dein.
This next podcast is with the Danish journalist Flemming Rose, foreign news editor at Jyllands-Posten, on the controversy he ignited in 2005 when he published cartoons satirizing the prophet Mohammed. His new book, The Tyranny of Silence, offers his reflections on the conflagration that ensued, including a jihadist’s attempt to murder one of the cartoonists […]
Jeg har skrevet en bog om Vestens opgør med sig selv, Vesten mod Vesten, som udkom tidligere på året. Den bygger på fortællinger, film, litteratur, idehistorie, politik og samfundsforskning. Det er en analyse af nogle grundkonflikter og fortællinger om de kampe, der definerer vores samfund. Men jeg må erkende, at jeg ikke selv har personlige erfaringer med de kampe, jeg er en biperson og en tilskuer. Men jeg har i denne uges udgave af vores sommerpodcastserie, ’Samtaler om Vesten’, inviteret én, som har været en historisk hovedperson og selv har oplevet de voldsomme kampe i Vesten og det dramatiske had til Vesten. Det er min ven og kollega Flemming Rose, som kommer i studiet og fortæller, hvordan han har oplevet konflikterne, og hvordan han ser dem i dag. I studiet havde jeg muligheden for at spørge Flemming til alt det, som jeg ikke selv havde erfaringer med, da jeg skrev bogen, og de spørgsmål, jeg siden er blevet opmærksom på. Og Flemming svarer generøst og tankevækkende på det hele. Det er den sidste i denne sæson af sommersamtaler, og jeg er glad for, at vi kan slutte med en verdensberømt dansk intellektuel, og at modstandsavisen Information har en rigtig aktivist i studiet.
Hvordan skal man egentlig forstå Kinas nye form for magt i verden? Hvad betyder de fejlslagne krige i Afghanistan og Irak for det, vi kalder den liberale verdensorden? Kan Vesten opretholde sine idealer, hvis vi ikke længere vil gå i krig for dem? Det er nogle af de spørgsmål, som Rune Lykkeberg selv mener, han burde have forholdt sig til i sin bog Vesten mod Vesten, der udkom tidligere på året, men som han ikke kunne overskue at besvare ordentligt. Og den slags spørgsmål er der mange af. Men det gode ved at være journalist er så, at man altid kan tage sine egne spørgsmål videre til nogle, som ved mere end en selv, og som kan afklare dem for én. Og det har han gjort i de næste tre uges sommersamtaler, der erstatter den normale Radio Information, mens vores vært, Anna von Sperling, tager på sin velfortjente sommerferie. Rune Lykkeberg har bedt sin egen vejleder Bo Lidegaard, USA-eksperten Helle Porsdam samt journalisten og forfatteren Flemming Rose om at hjælpe os med at blive klogere på Vestens position i verden, det amerikanske politiske og kulturelle samtidsdrama og Vestens fjender. Den første samtale er med Bo Lidegaard, og han formår faktisk at besvare de tre ovenstående spørgsmål oplysende og overrumplende klart. Og det er slet ikke det eneste store spørgsmål, som vi vender og drejer i den første af samtalerne om Vesten.
In this episode of Digital Discourse ZA, Greg Andrews and Jacques Rousseau talk about no-platforming and the Flemming Rose case at UCT; Penny Sparrow; Velaphi Khumalo; legal responses to hateful speech; and how free speech controversies might be used to foster restorative justice. --- Jacques Rousseau is the co-author of "Critical Thinking, Science and Pseudoscience – Why We Can’t Trust Our Brains", and a lecturer in critical thinking and business ethics at the University of Cape Town. You can find his writing at Synapses, his podcast at Square Brackets, and you can follow him on Twitter at @JacquesR. Book: https://amzn.to/2Cs9nT4 Blog: https://synapses.co.za/ Podcast: https://squarebrackets.co.za/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/JacquesR --- Greg Andrews is a qualified Mountain Guide, an experienced counsellor and facilitator, and a skills development trainer. He has spent the last fifteen years working in various roles in NGO’s and the Methodist Church of Southern Africa helping people in crisis, in dealing with the realities of their lives, or in finding new ways to grow and flourish. You can follow him on Twitter at @barefoot_dassie. Twitter: https://twitter.com/barefoot_dassie --- This is the final instalment of a 4-part series on free speech that Greg and Jacques did on their podcast, Square Brackets. You can listen to those conversations by clicking on the relevant link below: Free Speech #1: https://squarebrackets.co.za/free-speech-1-why-do-we-value-it/ Free Speech #2: https://squarebrackets.co.za/free-speech-2-absolute-principles-and-civil-disobedience/ Free Speech #3: https://squarebrackets.co.za/free-speech-3-censorship-steve-hofmeyr-and-the-elections/ Free Speech #4: https://squarebrackets.co.za/free-speech-4-no-platforming-hateful-bigots-and-restorative-justice/ --- Follow us on Social Media: YouTube: https://bit.ly/2u46Mdy Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/digitaldiscourseza/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/discourseza Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/digitaldiscourseza/ Subscribe to the Digital Discourse ZA Podcast: iTunes: https://apple.co/2V5ckEM Stitcher: https://bit.ly/2UILooX Spotify: https://spoti.fi/2vlBwaG RSS feed: https://bit.ly/2VwsTsy Email us at digitaldiscourseza@gmail.com
Steve Bannon! Burde den mannen fått slippe til under Nordiske Mediedager i Bergen - eller er den tidligere Trump-strategen persona non grata på en slik scene? Debatten raste før han entret scenen - og etterpå. Flere av de tydeligste kritikerne takket nei til årets Aarebrotsamtale fordi Bannon hadde sluppet til. Paneldeltakere er Anki Gerhardsen, Anine Kierulf, Lars Gule, Kamzy Gunaratnam og Flemming Rose. Samtaleleder er NRKs Fredrik Solvang.
Tidligere redaktør på Jyllands-Posten Flemming Rose har sine PET-vagter bag sig, da han besøger Ida Auken på Christiansborg. Her skal de diskutere, hvordan vi sikrer den ukrænkelige ret til ytringsfrihed i en tid, hvor sombrerohatte og højskolesange er i fare for at mudre alt det gode fra #MeToo-bevægelsen til.
I denne uge blev Mueller-rapporten offentliggjort. David Rehling kommer i studiet og fortæller om Robert Muellers rapport om russisk indblanding i det amerikanske præsidentvalg i 2016, hvor Donald Trump kom til magten. For hvad er egentlig op og ned i den undersøgelse, som flere efterhånden ser som en drejebog til at undersøge Trump yderligere? Knap så ventet, men voldsomt godt timet var den politiske kommentator Thomas Larsens bog om Socialdemokratiets leder Mette Frederiksen. Vores debatredaktør Gry Inger Reiter har læst den,og hun kalder bogen et blankpoleret portræt af Danmarks potentielt kommende statsminister. Bo Elkjær stikker også hovedet ind og giver en update på, hvordan det går med Informations store serie om pensionsselskabernes kontroversielle investeringer. Gad viiiiiide hvilken pensionskasse, der denne gang har fået kolde fødder over våben, tobak og besatte områder? Og husk nu, at du selv kan gå din egen pensionskasse efter i sømmene og tjekke, om dine penge er forsvarligt investeret. Og så har Niels Ivar Larsen og jeg haft en spøjs oplevelse på vores delekontor. Altså ham Niels Ivar, der gennem tiden har været en markant stemme som forsvarer for ytringsfriheden i forhold til f.eks. Flemming Rose og Lars Vilks, og som jeg i den forbindelse har haft ikke så få diskussioner med. Han mener nemlig ikke, at Rasmus Paludans ytringsfrihed krænkes, hvis han ikke får lov til at brænde koraner af, hvor end han vil. Hvordan hænger det nu sammen? Niels Ivar forklarer.
Can causing offence be a good thing? Philip Dodd explores this question with the Slovenian philosopher, the American author and the Danish journalist. On the 15th February 1989 the Ayatollah Komeni issued a fatwah following the publication of Salman Rushdie’s novel The Satanic Verses. Flemming Rose is the man who published the Danish cartoons of the prophet Mohammed and ignited international controversy. Slavoj Zizek has been called the most dangerous philosopher in the West; and Camille Paglia, the cultural critic and intellectual provocateur considers the topics she can and can’t teach now in the lecture theatres of America’s universities. Like A Thief In Broad Daylight: Power in the Era of Post-Human Capitalism by Slavoj Zizek is out now. Provocations: Collected Essays by Camille Paglia is out now. Flemming Rose is the author of The Tyranny of Silence, and a senior fellow at the Cato Institute, Washington DC. Our Free Thinking arts & ideas playlist looking at Culture Wars and Discussions about Identity can be found here https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/p06jngzt Producer: Zahid Warley
Vejret er blevet gudsjammerligt dansk og kedeligt. Heldigvis har vi fundet sammen igen i denne uge, og der er guf på menuen: vi er forbi et veloverstået midtvejsvalg i USA, der er kommet nye fraværsregler, Politikens chefredaktør ryger måske i brummen over en PET-bog og den nye sæson af House of Cards er ikke det samme uden Frank. Desuden vender vi lige de to dejlige kvindfolk Britta Nielsen og Fie Laursen, der har lavet rav i andedammen. Plus lidt nyt om Flemming Rose, den moderne Messias. Og det løse. Som altid er værterne Claes Kirkeby Theilgaard og Jakob Skyggebjerg Kjær. Leveret af Debatt.dk.Support the show (https://ungdommennutildags.10er.dk/)
Can causing offence be a good thing? Philip Dodd explores this question with the Slovenian philosopher, Slavoj Zizek, the American author, Camille Paglia and the Danish journalist, Flemming Rose. Camille Paglia is a Professor at the University of the Arts in Philadelphia whose Sexual Personae: Art and Decadence from Nefertiti to Emily Dickinson was rejected by seven publishers before it became a best-seller. Flemming Rose was Culture Editor at the Danish newspaper Jyllands-Posten when in September 2005 it published a series of cartoons of Muhammad which caused controversy. Like A Thief In Broad Daylight: Power in the Era of Post-Human Capitalism by Slavoj Zizek is out now. Provocations: Collected Essays by Camille Paglia will be available from October 9th. Flemming Rose is the author of The Tyranny of Silence, and a senior fellow at the Cato Institute, Washington DC. Our playlist looking at Culture Wars and Discussions about Identity can be found here https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/p06jngzt
On this episode of So to Speak, we chat with lawyer and free speech activist Jacob Mchangama. He is the founder and CEO of the Danish think tank Justitia, a visiting fellow at FIRE, and host of Clear and Present Danger: A History of Free Speech. Mchangama is also the author of the lead essay for the Cato Institute’s June Cato Unbound online debate on the topic of “how censorship crosses borders.” Our conversation focuses on the origins of Mchangama’s interest in free speech issues, the 2005 Jyllands-Posten Muhammad cartoons controversy, the history of free speech, and the critiques of his Cato Unbound essay. Show notes: Mchangama’s podcast, Clear and Present Danger: A History of Free Speech June Cato Unbound debate, “Free speech in international perspective” Mchangama’s essays for Cato So to Speak episode with Flemming Rose, who commissioned the Jyllands-Posten Muhammad cartoons www.sotospeakpodcast.com Follow us on Twitter: twitter.com/freespeechtalk Like us on Facebook: facebook.com/sotospeakpodcast Email us: sotospeak@thefire.orgCall in a question: 215-315-0100
Verden går ikke på sommerferie, så det gør Radio Information selvfølgelig heller ikke. Det er nu, der er tid til at lytte og lære noget. Så vi inviterer hver uge én gæst i studiet til en samtale, hvor vi spørger til alt det, vi selv er optaget af uden at kunne finde svar. Chefredaktør Rune Lykkeberg har i denne uge talt med forfatteren og journalisten Flemming Rose om det, han selv beskriver som sit livs største intellektuelle udfordring, nemlig Rusland. Lykkeberg har selv for første gang været i Rusland og blevet overvældet og imponeret – han har forstået, at der er så meget om Rusland, han ikke forstår. Flemming Rose hjælper os med at blive klogere på et land, han har været optaget af i årtier. Intellektuelt, eksistentielt og politisk. Lyt også til Det skønne Rusland med Lasse Jensen, hvis du er mere nysgerrig på russisk kultur.
What's the best way to handle the continuing attempts by foreign governments to destabilize American institutions with social media and mere advertising? Flemming Rose discusses the importance of not taking the wrong lessons. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Drawing a legal line around what might constitute "extremist" speech for the purpose of regulation or prohibition is virtually impossible. The same goes for "fake news." Flemming Rose comments. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Defending free speech amid cries of "fake news" from the highest levels of government is a unique challenge. Flemming Rose comments. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Flemming Rose didn’t set out to put himself at the center of one of the biggest free speech controversies in recent memory, but 12 years ago he found himself in just that position. In 2005, Rose commissioned and published what are now widely known as “the Muhammad cartoons.” Protests against the cartoons resulted in an estimated 200 reported deaths; there were attacks on the offices of Rose’s employer, the Danish newspaper ‘Jyllands-Posten’; and Rose was placed on Al-Qaeda’s hit list. To this day, he must be accompanied by a security detail when he appears in public. Flemming Rose is our guest on today’s episode of “So to Speak.” During the show, we discuss the cartoon controversy and how his thoughts on free speech are informed by his background as a western journalist in the Soviet Union. www.sotospeakpodcast.com Follow us on Twitter: twitter.com/freespeechtalk Like us on Facebook: facebook.com/sotospeakpodcast Email us: sotospeak@thefire.org Call in a question: 215-315-0100
Banning speech doesn't stop terrorism, and for some people such bans can make radical, disfavored ideologies more attractive. Flemming Rose comments. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
The freedom of speech and the freedom of the press are at the core of a free society, yet we’re increasingly discovering that, while in theory, almost everyone believes in freedom of speech, in practice, few are committed to the policies that truly safeguard it.On the campaign trail, both Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump called for “closing down” parts of the Internet as an anti-ISIS measure. Trump further claimed that freedom of the press was detrimental to the fight against terrorism, and demanded that libel laws be expanded to allow individuals to sue media organizations that publish unflattering stories about them. Following the 2016 election results, pundits blamed social media for creating an increasingly polarized voting public; Facebook and Google announced an initiative to go after so-called “fake news sites,” despite controversy over which sites, exactly, should qualify as fake; and more and more platforms have adopted increasingly restrictive policies regarding acceptable speech.Nick Gillespie and Flemming Rose are among the many classical liberals who worry about the trajectory freedom of speech and freedom of the press seems to be taking. As editor in chief of Reason Magazine and Reason TV, Gillespie has faced Department of Justice subpoenas and a gag order from the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York. When Rose, then-culture editor of the Danish newspaper Jyllands-Posten, became the target of death threats and more after commissioning 12 cartoons of the prophet Muhammad to be published around an op-ed on Islam, free speech, and multiculturalism in 2006, he refused to retract his opinions, instead becoming a global activist for free speech—detailed in his book The Tyranny of Silence: How One Cartoon Ignited a Global Debate on the Future of Free Speech, published by the Cato Institute. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
A conversation with Danish author and journalist Flemming Rose, who says the increasing practice of self-censorship due to terrorism threats is a grave danger to free speech and free press around the globe. In 2005, Rose was editor of Jyllands-Posten newspaper when it published cartoons of Islam’s Prophet Muhammad, which sparked a worldwide controversy still debated today.
The guest on this episode is advocate and free thinker Mark Oppenheimer. Jonathan and Roman chat to Mark about his recent encounter at Think!Fest in Grahamstown, in which he was silenced and denied his freedom to speak because of his race and purported family background. This attack on free speech is highlighted further in discussion around the deplatforming of Flemming Rose at UCT, the furore over Zapiro cartoons, and the reaction to various paintings of political actors and their genitalia. Mark unpacks the specifics of speech protected by the Constitution and the interpretation thereof, especially in light of the concepts of hate speech versus hurtful speech.
August 2016 featuring Emma Ashford, Tom Clougherty, Nadine Strossen, Flemming Rose, William Ruger, Hon. William H. Pryor, Hon. Blaine Luetkemeyer See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Flemming Rose, Danish journalist and author of The Tyranny of Silence, is the recipient of the 2016 Milton Friedman Prize for Advancing Liberty. In 2005, Rose, then an editor at the Danish newspaper Jyllands-Posten, sparked worldwide controversy when he commissioned and published 12 cartoons meant to depict the prophet Muhammad. The illustrations, intended to draw attention to the issue of self-censorship and the threat that intimidation poses to free speech, provoked deadly chaos in the Islamic world and put Rose in the center of a global debate about the limits to free speech in the 21st century. The Milton Friedman Prize for Advancing Liberty, named in honor of perhaps the greatest champion of liberty in the 20th century, is presented every other year to an individual who has made a significant contribution to advance human freedom. Learn more at: https://www.cato.org/friedman-prize Produced by Caleb O. Brown and Cory Cooper.
In presenting the Milton Friedman Prize for Advancing Liberty to Danish newspaper editor Flemming Rose, former ACLU president Nadine Strossen discusses the importance of unfettered freedom of speech. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Flemming Rose is the 2016 recipient of the Milton Friedman Prize for Advancing Liberty and is a senior fellow at the Cato Institute. Rose is the author of The Tyranny of Silence. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Flemming Rose var avisredaktøren som først publiserte muhammed-karikaturene for 11 år siden- og satte hele den muslimske verden i brann. Går det noen grense for ytringsfriheten for ham? Reporter: Halfdan Bleken.
Ytringsfrihets-fundamentalisten - Flemming Rose. Han har blitt kalt en ytringsfrihets-fundamentalist. Men i motsetning til mange andre fundamentalister i dag er danske Flemming Rose ikke -voldelig. Møt redaktøren som satte verden i brann for 11 år siden da han publiserte de berømte Muhammed-karikaturene i sin avis.
In 1993, a young Jonathan Rauch published “Kindly Inquisitors: The New Attacks on Free Thought.” It was his response to what he saw as the West’s lackluster and apologetic defense of the novelist Salman Rushdie’s free speech rights. Since its publication, “Kindly Inquisitors” has never gone out of print and has been described by Foundation for Individual Rights in Education President & CEO Greg Lukianoff as the best modern defense of free speech and by “The Washington Post” columnist George Will as “slender and sharp as a stiletto.” In this episode, Nico Perrino sits down with Jonathan, a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution, to talk about his book and its impassioned moral (not legal!) defense of liberal inquiry and criticism. They also discuss the role that free speech played in the gay rights movement, the life story of Frank Kameny, the state of free expression at Jonathan’s alma mater (Yale University), and the heroism of Danish newspaperman Flemming Rose. Nico also chats with Greg about FIRE’s recent work at Williams College and what happened during Greg’s first meeting with Jonathan (hint: it involved comic book superheros). Don’t forget to subscribe and rate this podcast! Follow us on Twitter: twitter.com/freespeechtalk Like us on Facebook: facebook.com/sotospeakpodcast Email us: sotospeak@thefire.org
Flemming Rose er kulturredaktøren som tok initiativet til å publisere Muhammedkarikaturene i Jyllandsposten, og utløste den største ytringsfrihetsdiskusjonen i Europa i nyere tid. Våren 2016 er han aktuell med utgivelsen Hymne til friheten, hvor han på forskjellige måter oppsummerer hva ytringsfriheten er og bør være i vår tid. I denne episoden av Bokprat hører dere et opptak av Flemming Rose i samtale med forlegger Anders Heger. Innledning er ved Knut Olav Åmås, direktør for Stiftelsen Fritt ord. Samtalen ble tatt opp på arramgementet Åpen dør hos Cappelen Damm 19. april 2016. Samtalen ble arrangert i samarbeid med Stiftelsen Fritt ord.
Vi anmelder "Hymne til friheten" av mannen som publiserte de omstridte Muhammedkarikaturene i 2005, tidligere kulturredaktør i Jyllands-Posten, Flemming Rose.
This week we are joined by Flemming Rose, the editor who defended Danish newspaper Jyllands-Posten’s printing of 12 cartoons of the prophet Mohammed in 2005. We talk about the tradition of religious satire in the Western world, the importance of free speech to pluralistic societies, and the dangers of censorship—even self-imposed censorship—on those societies.Show Notes and Further ReadingFlemming Rose’s book, The Tyranny of Silence (2014), has a new paperback edition coming out this year. In the book he provides a personal account of an event that has shaped the debate about what it means to be a citizen in a democracy and how to coexist in a world that is increasingly multicultural, multi-religious, and multi-ethnic. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
January 2016 featuring Flemming Rose, Jonathan Turley, George S. Tavlas, Hon. Alex Kozinski, Matt Ridley See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Mediepodden del 16, om yttrandefrihet enligt Flemming Rose och den stora finlandssvenska bloggaten. by KSF Poddar
In the autumn of 2005 a Danish newspaper published 12 images of the Prophet Muhammad. The pictures shocked local muslims, and went on to cause outrage around the world. Hear from Danish journalist Flemming Rose who published them, and Imran Shah a spokesman for the Danish Islamic Society. (Photo: Pakistani protestors burn a Danish flag in Multan, Pakistan. Credit: AP)
The debate "Europe is failing its Muslims" took place on February 23rd at Cadogan Hall in London, in association with BBC World News and the British Council. Arguing in favour of the motion were Tariq Ramadan and Petra Stienen; against the motion were Douglas Murray and Flemming Rose. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
full 0:03:31 Flemming Rose
Som start på det nye år giver jeg dig en podcast med et overvejende politisk indhold: Flemming Rose, stor ruslandskender og udlandsredaktør på Jyllandsposten giver svar på alle de spørgsmål, du har om Rusland, Ukraine og Putin. Flemming Rose, giver dig sit syn på Putin før og nu. Han har fulgt Putin lige siden dennes […] The post #22 Podcast: Flemming Rose: Putin før og nu appeared first on Ruslandseksperten.
Flemming Rose, in a conversation with Jonathan Rauch, describes his newspaper's decision to publish depictions of the prophet Mohammed and the firestorm that followed. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
January 2015 featuring David Boaz, John Maniscalco, Flemming Rose, Jonathan Rauch, Gene Healy, Kevin Dowd, Damon W. Root, Steven Pinker See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
When the Danish newspaper Jyllands-Posten published the cartoons of the prophet Muhammad nine years ago, Denmark found itself at the center of a global battle about the freedom of speech. Flemming Rose is author of The Tyranny of Silence.The Tyranny of Silence Cato Book ForumThe Tyranny of Silence Cato Store See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
The Newseum Institute’s Gene Policinski is joined by Jyllands-Posten cultural editor Flemming Rose for a discussion about the Danish newspaper's still-disputed decision to publish a series of cartoons satirizing the prophet Mohammed in 2005.
Journalists face constant intimidation. Whether it takes the extreme form of beheadings, death threats, government censorship or simply political correctness—it casts a shadow over their ability to tell a story.No one knows this better than Flemming Rose, the editor at the Danish newspaper Jyllands-Posten who, in 2006, published cartoons of the prophet Muhammad, inciting a worldwide firestorm. In his new book, The Tyranny of Silence: How One Cartoon Ignited a Global Debate on the Future of Free Speech he not only recounts that story, but takes a hard look at the slippery slope of attempts to limit free speech.Rose writes about the people and experiences that have influenced the way he views the world and his understanding of the crisis, including meetings with dissidents from the former Soviet Union and ex-Muslims living in Europe. Rose offers more than a personal account of a riveting event. He defends freedom of speech as essential to a world that is increasingly multicultural, multireligious, and multiethnic. Please join us to hear this important voice favoring freedom of speech. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.