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Politics : Formerly About Advanced Micro Devices

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To: Elroy who wrote (272381)2/6/2006 1:31:55 AM
From: Taro  Read Replies (1) of 1576348
 
Here the essential background of the publishing of the 12 Mohammed drawings by 12 Danish cartoonists published back in September in Denmark,

Taro

Newspaper Jyllandsposten commissioned the cartoons to make a point about freedom of speech. It was protesting the climate of intimidation that had made it impossible for a Danish author to find an illustrator for his children's book about Mohammed. No artist would agree to illustrate the book for fear of being harmed by Muslim extremists. Appalled by this self-censorship, Jyllands-Posten invited Danish artists to submit drawings of Mohammed, and published the 12 it received.

Most of the pictures are tame to the point of dullness, especially compared to the biting editorial cartoons that routinely appear in US and European newspapers. A few of them link Mohammed to Islamist terrorism -- one depicts him with a bomb in his turban, while a second shows him in Heaven, pleading with newly arrived suicide terrorists: ''Stop, stop! We have run out of virgins!" Others focus on the threat to free speech: In one, a sweating artist sits at his drawing board, nervously sketching Mohammed, while glancing over his shoulder to make sure he's not being watched.


Lifted from Boston Global
boston.com
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