Obnoxious speech and trusting the Other

Gene Expression
By Razib Khan
Sep 28, 2010 7:09 PMNov 20, 2019 4:10 AM

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Update: After watching the videos of what went down at the cultural festival I seem to have unwittingly slandered the Act 17 missionaries. They behaved well and were obviously unjustly arrested. Their YouTube site is testimony to the reality though that they're pretty shallow and obnoxious in some contexts, but that's frankly not atypical for this sort of evangelical Christian from where I stand. I apologize for engaging in stereotyping in this case, because my expectations were out of line with what I saw on the tapes (though their attempt at apologia is stereotypically laughable, and the goonish response of some of the Muslim youth to Act 17's antics unfortunately predictable). Ed Brayton points to a resolution of a case of aggressive and seemingly obnoxious Christian missionaries being arrested for "public disturbance". Ed observes:

Those four Christian missionaries I wrote about who were arrested for disorderly conduct and breach of the peace while preaching at the Dearborn International Arab Festival in June were acquitted by a jury on Friday. That's the right result, but frankly the charges should have been dismissed by the judge in the first place.

[my emphasis - R] That last result is still a bit disturbing because the order she was given was an unlawful one. The officer had no legitimate reason to give her the order to stop videotaping what was going on and therefore she should not be held liable for violating that order. Unfortunately, the mayor of the town continues to be confused about the legal realities....

I've only followed the case casually. From what I can gather it seems that these preachers were sort you find around college campuses, or sometimes in downtown areas of big cities. Going by stereotypes of how objectionable Middle Eastern Muslims tend to find proselytization by Christians in their own countries I assume that this sort of behavior would result in a public disturbance, because this sort of preaching tends to be "in your face" and confrontational. The politician is behaving in the craven manner politicians are wont to behave.

Nabeel Qureshi of Virginia, Negeen Mayel of California and Paul Rezkalla and David Wood, both of New York, were acquitted of breach of peace, 19th District Court officials in Dearborn said after the verdict. Mayel was found guilty of failure to obey a police officer's order.

That's why we have the Bill of Rights.

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