Wiley Miller, whose \"Non Sequitur\" comic strip has won several national awards and appears daily in roughly 800 newspapers, said he was not surprised by the decision to yank the single-panel, \"Where's Muhammad?\"cartoon because even the word itself is such a \"dicey thing\" nowadays.
On the other hand I really wish that we, as a society, could move on from petty concerns like this
Yes Null...petty concerns like speech being stifled because of possible threats and intimidation by a religious group of fanatics. Maybe there would be more outrage if the group of fanatics were baptist or catholic.
. "Political power grows out of the barrel of a gun"- Mao Zedong
On the other hand I really wish that we, as a society, could move on from petty concerns like this
Yes Null...petty concerns like speech being stifled because of possible threats and intimidation by a religious group of fanatics. Maybe there would be more outrage if the group of fanatics were baptist or catholic.
And on the gripping hand I really wish that people would read my posts, instead of kneejerk raging.
On the other hand I really wish that we, as a society, could move on from petty concerns like this
Yes Null...petty concerns like speech being stifled because of possible threats and intimidation by a religious group of fanatics. Maybe there would be more outrage if the group of fanatics were baptist or catholic.
I'm going to fall for the trap here and make a comment.
I think as a business decision it was the right call. There is no violation of free speech laws since Miller can still publish his work independently. And wouldn't you think it was a good move if The Washington Post refused to run a strip titled "Where's the ★■◆●?" In fact, you might even question why the cartoonist thought it was OK to to even draw it.