ICE-T AND SISTER SOULJAH : A Danger in 'Cop Killer's' 'Free Expression of Ideas'? - Los Angeles Times
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ICE-T AND SISTER SOULJAH : A Danger in ‘Cop Killer’s’ ‘Free Expression of Ideas’?

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As a writer, teacher and past victim of censorship, I’m appalled that Time Warner Inc. would justify support of Ice-T’s “Cop Killer†by citing a commitment “to the free expression of ideas†(“Texas Police Call for Boycott of Time Warner,†June 12). This perversion of the First Amendment plays directly into would-be censors’ hands.

A civilized society cannot allow freedom of expression to include the freedom to yell “Fire!†in a crowded, fire-free room or to advocate the murder of citizens, whether or not they happen to be cops. A democracy that allows such behavior will collapse into anarchy, or harden into fascism.

Time Warner’s “free expression†defense is the kind of self-serving and transparent twisting of truth that Americans have come to expect from political leaders and company spokespersons.

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I’m also distressed that Source magazine senior editor James Bernard would call the protests of “Cop Killer†an attack on black art. Would he defend the rights of Klansmen to market a song directly advocating the murder of African-Americans?

If Ice-T or any artist wants to express anger, he is free to create fictional characters who express it in any way he sees fit. Ice-T or any artist is also free to express anger in his own voice, as long as he does so in some socially constructive, or simply non-destructive, way.

The U.S. Constitution gives citizens a freedom of expression that most people in the world can only dream of--freedom that is currently under real attack on many fronts and that Time Warner jeopardizes and trivializes by its irresponsible stance.

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CHARLES H. WEBB, Professor of English, Cal State Long Beach

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