Blasphemy Day
The publication of the cartoons came about a year after the murder of Theo van Gogh in the Netherlands by an Islamist after he had made a short film about the oppression of women under Islam. The cartoon controversy drew a hard line between the defenders of Western values and human freedom and their enemies. The Danish prime minister stood firm for free speech, refusing to meet with a group of eleven ambassadors from Muslim countries who demanded he act against Jyllands-Posten. The French magazine Charlie Hebdo later reprinted the cartoons. On the other side, mobs of violent Muslim thugs attacked Western embassies in several countries. Shamefully but predictably, several major Christian authorities including the Vatican condemned the cartoons.
This condemnation, of course, was well in line with the centuries of Christian persecution of scientists, nonbelievers, independent thinkers, gays, women, adherents of different religions, and even adherents of the locally "wrong" form of Christianity, during the thousand years of darkness and stagnation in which the West was submerged between the fall of Roman civilization and the Renaissance.
I have always held that religion in general is the most malignant and reactionary force acting across the course of human history, and that in particular the Abrahamic religions, notably Christianity, are a toxic alien contaminant within our civilization, inherently inimical to true Western culture and values. The absolute right not only to criticize and argue against religion, but to subject it to mockery and ridicule, is an integral and essential part of freedom of expression, necessary for any hope of freeing our minds from this dangerous psychological infection.