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Comment on this article

Precedents in the media
Yale University Press and the Danish cartoons

The Yale Press’s decision is not without precedent, and it is noteworthy that, at the time of the initial crisis over the cartoons in 2005-06, the New York Times, Washington Post, and Boston Globe declined to print these images as well, along with almost every leading newspaper in the United States. These media outlets no more wished to incite violence by publishing the cartoons than did the Yale Press, and they too reached the conclusion that the context in which they would have published them—as part of objective news coverage—did not make a difference.  the end

 
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Read in full the debate excerpted here

 

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"A major form of blasphemy"

Why did the Press consult counterterrorism experts?

"De facto veto power"

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