«» Europewatch what you say
By Joel Hilliker
Philadelphia Trumpet, July 2001
Europe uses the blasphemy stamp, and free speech takes a hit.
Many Europeansbut far too fewwere shocked and indignant. On October 19,
2000, the European Court of Justice (ecj) tipped its hand and exposed a fearsome mindset
in the European Union bureaucracy.
The Spectator magazine responded by announcing "The New Inquisition"
on its November 18 cover.
The question at hand was the landmark free-speech case of Bernard Connolly, a British
economist arguing that he was illegally fired from the European Commissions monetary
affairs department for writing The Rotten Heart of Europe.
In his opinion on the case, the ecjs advocate-general compared Mr.
Connollys book, which criticizes European monetary integration, to an extreme form
of blasphemy. He invoked a case where the British government had refused a distribution
license for a perverse porn video with outlandish religious themes, showing that some
forms of expression are so offensive to the "rights of others" that they can
rightfully be restricted. Rotten Heart had so annoyed the EU elite, he reasoned,
that they were justified in penalizing Mr. Connolly.
Having tortuously twisted one British case to support his point, the judge went on to dismiss
another British case that stated, "It is of the highest public importance that
any democratically elected governmental body, or indeed any governmental body, should be
open to uninhibited public criticism." That ruling had "no foundation or
relevance" in European law, he said.
The opinion offered a chilling glimpse at the kind of power Europes politicians
are intent on taking to themselves. The authority to silence criticism is simply a
hallmark of fascism.
A few critics of the opinion, including the Spectator, rightly pounced on it.
Ambrose Evans-Pritchards Spectator cover story began satirically, "This
article is blasphemous. It contains irreverential criticism of the European Union.
On the Richter scale of disrespect it is a seven or an eight, and undoubtedly falls under
the European Courts emerging blasphemy doctrine."
Unfortunately, such assessments were generally viewed as hyperventilation on the part
of the extreme Euroskeptic fringe.
Dissent Dismissed
The European Union is widely looked upon as a collection of open, democratic
communities trying to come together to find a place in the new world order. With so many
different representative nations and cultures, Europe is bound to encounter difficulties
in its pursuit of "ever closer union," but each step in its
unificationfirst economic, then political, then militaryis seen as a logical
and necessary outgrowth of the previous steps. It seems nearly everyone is pro-Union to
some degree. In Britain, Tony Blair, a patent Europhile, just won a second term from
possibly the most integration-shy electorate in the EU. America has asked Europe to
militarize itself enough to take over peacekeeping jobs like Kosovo. Eastern European
countries are clamoring to join the EU. The Israelis and Palestinians are nearly begging
for Europe to help quiet the storm in the Mideast.
To harbor the notion that there is something sinister brewing, to voice concern over
Europes anti-democratic practices, to suggest even the possibility of a cause for
alarmthese are enough to nettle or even anger many.
You can be sure Ambrose Evans-Pritchard has felt it. In the same Spectator
article, he told the story of an EU press conference at which he asked what would prevent
a particular article in Europes Charter of Fundamental Rights, ratified in Nice last
December, from being misused for authoritarian purposes. "There were audible hisses
from a number of EU journalists in the room, and the justice commissioner, Antonio
Vitorino, let out one of those patronizing little laughs that the EU elite has so
perfected. Nobody really answered the question."
Such condescension toward naysayers calls to mind some words Mr. Connolly himself wrote
in Rotten Heart, before finding himself at the center of Europes free-speech
debate: "In Stalinist Russia, dissent was regarded as evidence "In Stalinist Russia, dissent was regarded as evidence
of lunacy. In the present-day European Community, dissent does not yet warrant
incarceration in brutal mental hospitals, but unorthodox
thought is still a dissonance."
Bernard Connolly
of lunacy. In the present-day European Community,
dissent does not yet warrant incarceration in brutal mental hospitals, but unorthodox
thought is still a dissonance" (p. xiv).
Mr. Connolly would soon feel the pain of penalty for his dissent. After Rotten Heart
was published, the Commissions rough treatment of Mr. Connolly didnt end with
firing him. As Rodney Atkinson reported in the Trumpet last August, he "was
excluded from the Commission buildings, his picture was put up in public corridors, "The court is acting as the sinister organ of a tyranny in the making... The EC court does not
think that anything could be above itand that is the reason why it behaves so badly."
Bernard Connolly
he was orderedillegallynot to leave the
country, his phone was tapped, his wife was followed and received many nuisance calls, and
his house was broken into."
This magazine has repeatedly pointed out that the cause for alarm in Europes
uniting is more than a mere possibility. It is a prophetic certainty. Yet the vast
majority of the criticism we receive comes from readers who disagree with our warnings
about Europe.
Future of Free Speech?
This past March, when Mr. Connolly received final judgment from the ecj, the alarming
ruling sparked few headlines.
The court threw out the blasphemy charge but still found that the Commission had been
justified in sacking Mr. Connolly, who as an EU official had only a
"circumscribed" right to freedom of expression. Describing his book as
"aggressive, derogatory and insulting," it said the Commission was at liberty to
punish those who "damaged the institutions image and reputation." Drawing
upon the Charter of Fundamental Rights, it strangely rationalized that Connolly had
breached the "human rights" of the European Community itself.
Connolly was directed to pay the Commissions legal costs.
The ecj ruling swept aside English Common Law, in effect resurrecting the charge of
"seditious libel" banned by the House of Lords. It also placed two sets of human
rights in direct conflict. The European Convention on Human Rights, in existence since
1950 and ratified by nearly all EU member states, is upheld by the European Court of Human
Rights in Strasbourg. That court has repeatedly ruled that public institutions cant
restrict criticismthat "protection of the rights of others" doesnt
apply to governing bodies.
The EU itself, not being a country, hasnt ratified that convention, and is in
fact trying to push it aside with its new Charter of Fundamental Rights. Though the
charter is technically a political statement with no legal status, the ecj has started to
refer to it in its rulingsa backdoor method of taking power in questions of civil
liberty.
"The court is acting as the sinister organ of a tyranny in the making," Connolly
responded. "The EC court does not think that anything could be above itand that
is the reason why it behaves so badly."
The Connolly ruling opened the door for the ecj to begin exercising control over
ordinary EU citizens, or even Euroskeptic newspapers. Christopher Booker made this comment
in the March 25 Sunday Telegraph: "When one considers that the Nice Treaty is
seeking to elevate the new European Charter of Fundamental [Human] Rights into an EU Bill
of Rights, to be interpreted by the ecj as the EUs equivalent of the U.S. Supreme
Court, the future of free speech under this strange new system we are now living under
seems seriously in doubt."
It is Article 52 in the new charter that is causing the greatest concern. It says the
EU can limit all rights and freedoms in the charter, "subject to the principle of
proportionality," where "necessary" in order to "meet objectives of
general interest recognized by the Union." Just what does that mean? Where would
a firm line be drawn on the power of politicians over citizens?
Evidently, the majority of Europeans dont care.
Control Over Communication
The EUs desire for greater control over Europes citizenry is not limited to
its judiciary. Another revealing legislative motion was forwarded in May, this time at the
behest of the 15 EU members states themselves.
The individual European governments urged the European Commission to require that law
enforcement agencies have access to all private phone, fax, e-mail and Internet data.
According to the bbc, communications companies would be required to keep records of every
call or fax made, e-mail sent or website visited for a period of seven years, in case
anything needed to be retrieved for a criminal investigation. The new laws would overturn
current rules which require agencies to get permission before trawling through such
evidence and that restrict the period companies may keep the data before it must be
destroyed.
Setting aside the impossible logistics involved in such an undertaking, the fact that
it would even be proposed says volumes about the abuses of power being considered in
Europe! In no other country does government have that level of power over its
peopleand this prospect is being raised within the supposedly open and democratic
EU!
Civil liberties groups have complained that these laws, if passed, would give the
police powers denied even to repressive regimes. "Authoritarian and
totalitarian states would be condemned for violating human rights and civil liberties if
they initiated such practices," said Tony Bunyan of Statewatch, a British civil
liberties group. "The fact that it is being proposed in the democratic EU
does not make it any less authoritarian or totalitarian."
Why not a more significant outcry from the people of Europe?
And without a massive public outcry, what is to stop politicians from assuming those
kinds of powers?
"In a true democracy, it is
the people who decide which powers to lend to their leaders. In a false
democracy, it is the leaders who decide which freedoms to lend
to the people."
Adrian Hilton
"In a true democracy, it is the people who
decide which powers to lend to their leaders. In a false democracy, it is the leaders
who decide which freedoms to lend to the people" (Adrian Hilton, The
Principality and Power of Europe).
That is exactly the kind of "democracy" Europe is showing itself to be.
Right-Wing Power Surge
Europe has a checkered history of repressive, authoritarian governments. And history
proves that when a people lives under such authority long enough, they are conditioned to
actually desire it.
The Trumpet has been tracking the rise to power of a number of right-wing and
center-right governments within European countries. Openly fascist or formerly fascist
political parties are sweeping up respectable percentages in popular elections, getting
representation within governments across Europe. Uniting these far-flung parties is not a
love of freedom, but a love of strong, nationalistic governance and an irritation with
foreigners.
A silent majority of Europeans are quite sympathetic to these views. If they
werent, the outcry against the right-wing surge, against neo-Nazism, would be
overwhelming and sustained!
Imagine the commotion if an anti-immigrant politician brought in 15 to 25 percent of
the presidential votes in the United States! Imagine the protest from the public at large,
fueled by civil rights groups and the media.
Yet that is exactly what is happening all over Europe.
And intensifying the problem is the deafening lack of protest from the freedom-loving
nations of the world!
A 1997 survey conducted by a Vienna-based watchdog group revealed that one third of
Europeans consider themselves "very racist" or "quite racist."
Step by step, that kind of thinking will be institutionalizedmade into
lawby an increasingly autocratic EU government! "A specter is haunting united
Germany
the specter of a brown resurrection! This time, unlike its appearance in the
mid-60s, it is no temporary phenomenon, but is today deeply rooted in the
society, and tomorrow will have established itself in the parliamentary structure
at both the federal and provincial level" (The Future of German Democracy,
p. 75; emphasis mine). Again, one has only to look at the direction things are headed, the
steps that are being taken today, to see the inevitable end result.
These trends may seem separate from the governmental intrusions and power-grubbing. But
in fact they are two strands of the same thread.
Europes Fatal Flaw
Make these accusations to the EU leaders today, and you are sure to hear the hisses,
the patronizing laughs, or the indignation of one falsely accused. That is because not
even the most powerful of these officials understand the full extent of what they are a
part of!
As the Trumpets editor in chief, Gerald Flurry, has informed our readers,
following the pattern of Herbert W. Armstrong before him, a führer more fearsome than
Hitler is prophesied to hijack the European Union!
Keep in mind the power plays being taken by the EUs political elite today,
recognize just how the ground is being prepared for such a man to take overand now
read the prophetic description of this future führers rule: "And in his estate
shall stand up a vile person, to whom they shall not give the honour of the
kingdom: but he shall come in peaceably, and obtain the kingdom by flatteries
. And
after the league made with him he shall work deceitfully: for he shall come up, and
shall become strong with a small people. He shall enter peaceably even upon the fattest
places of the province; and he shall do that which his fathers have not done, nor his
fathers fathers; he shall scatter among them the prey, and spoil, and riches: yea,
and he shall forecast his devices against the strong holds, even for a time
. And
the king shall do according to his will; and he shall exalt himself, and magnify
himself above every god, and shall speak marvellous things against the God of gods, and
shall prosper till the indignation be accomplished: for that that is determined shall be
done. Neither shall he regard the God of his fathers, nor the desire of women, nor regard
any god: for he shall magnify himself above all" (Dan. 11:21-24, 36-37). A vile,
violent, brilliant politician named Antiochus Epiphanes fulfilled this prophecy anciently.
But he was only a type of a man who is prophesied to wreak many times over the havoc in
this end time! He will be possessed by Satan the devil himself.
We are living in these times todaywatching before our eyes the political
landscape of Europe being prepared for the entrance of this ghastly figure.
The good news is, this mans reign, though terribly violent, will be short-lived.
"And through his policy also he shall cause craft to prosper in his hand; and he
shall magnify himself in his heart, and by peace shall destroy many: he shall also
stand up against the Prince of princes; but he shall be broken without hand"
(Dan. 8:25). Jesus Christ will put an end to his rule, replace this worlds corrupt
governments, and teach people the joys of living, truly free from the inhumane rule of
man, under the loving authority of the one true God of creation!
Until then, we must watch these dismaying events unfoldand warn a careless and
unsuspecting world.
reproduced with permission: ©2001
Philadelphia Church of God. All rights reserved.
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