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A Caning for Thee but Not for Me
September 10th, 2018
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Health & Medicine
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6 minute read
A Caning for Thee but Not for Me
Earlier this month, an Islamic court in Malaysia sentenced two women to caning for pursuing a sexual relationship with each other. The women, ages 22 and 32, were each struck six times with a rattan cane by a female prison officer as witnesses looked on. The Terengganu state government and Sharia lawyers pointed out that the women were fully dressed during their punishment, which they say was not intended to be brutal or oppressive, but rather to serve as a lesson in Islamic law for onlookers. Opinions, of course, vary, with other legal practitioners, human rights advocates, and LGBT groups condemning the sentence as degrading and inhuman. While the older woman stood stoically as she was beaten, the younger woman sobbed as the caning began.Americans might consider this punishment barbaric, and rightfully so. They may also be glad they live in a “free country,” where things like this “don't happen.” Perhaps. But we in America have our own conservative social and religious streak running through our culture. So far, it has (more or less) been held at bay by a strong progressive tradition that values individual freedom, but that may not always be the case going forward.Consider Mike Huckabee. The former governor of Arkansas, Mike Huckabee still retains a jaunty “Gov” in front of his Twitter handle, despite now being little more than a failed Republican presidential wannabe and conservative talking head. When he saw protesters making a fuss during Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh's Senate hearing, Huckabee tweeted his condemnation. “How did those rude loons disrupting the Kavanaugh hearings get in there? Clear the room or start caning them when they open their yaps! Durbin says it's voice of democracy. No sir--it's the voice of ppl w/o basic manners or respect for others,” he wrote.Mike Huckabee suggested that we ought to start caning protesters. Just like Sharia law demanded the caning of two women in love.Let's think about that.Step with me into a time machine, if you will, and let's go all the way back to late summer, 2016 – ancient history now – in Wilmington, North Carolina. Presidential candidate Donald Trump stood up in front of a crowd and warned them about the possibility of Hillary Clinton's judicial nominations. "By the way, and if she gets to pick her judges, nothing you can do, folks. Although the Second Amendment people, maybe there is, I don’t know." Wink wink, nudge nudge.Now that Trump is nominating judges just as abhorrent to his opposition as Clinton's would have been to hers (or worse!), they are protesting by using their First Amendment rights. Would Trump, or Huckabee, prefer that they use their Second Amendment rights instead? Why does it seem that violence is always the rhetorical answer to pushback against right-wing conservatism, whether it's the subtle suggestion that gun advocates assassinate a hypothetical President Clinton over judicial nominations, or that nonviolent verbal protests of a conservative nominee should result in caning?Let's take another time hop, this time to President Obama's State of the Union speech in 2009. Barack Obama, flanked by Vice President Biden and Speaker Pelosi, stood to deliver the Constitutionally mandated address. Speaking to conservative concerns about his new health care legislation, he mentioned that it wouldn't cover undocumented immigrants. Just then, Rep. Joe Wilson (R-SC) yelled “You Lie!” at the President.If Huckabee had his way, Wilson, a protester without basic manners or respect (not to mention factually incorrect), would have deserved a caning for opening his yap. As it happened, Wilson apologized for the incident, but he wasn't the only protester that evening, just the loudest. Should all the disrespectful Republican protesters have been caned or expelled?
Mike Huckabee proposed caning protesters; Trump suggested they should be illegal. How would the Tea Party have liked corporal punishment and crackdowns? Here, a protester holds a sign at a Tea Party tax day protest in 2010. Photo by Fibonacci Blue, via Flickr. Background cropped. CC BY 2.0
Sources:
Muslim Court Canes Malaysian Women for Same-Sex Relationship
Mike Huckabee on Twitter
Trump suggests '2nd Amendment people' could stop Clinton
Trump in trouble over 'Second Amendment' remark
GOP Rep. to Obama: "You Lie!" [Video]
Rep. Wilson shouts, 'You lie' to Obama during speech
Joe Wilson of South Carolina said Obama lied, but he didn't
Trump suggests that protesting should be illegal
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About Dawn Allen
Dawn Allen is a freelance writer and editor who is passionate about sustainability, political economy, gardening, traditional craftwork, and simple living. She and her husband are currently renovating a rural homestead in southeastern Michigan.