Source: BBC

Human rights are important, but they will never be a solution to ending conflict, writes John Gray.
When we hear reports of nightmarish atrocities being committed in Syria, it’s easy to respond by thinking these horrors could be prevented if only the country had a government that respected human rights. We’ve come to believe rights are the answer to many of the world’s ills. But rights aren’t a cure for human conflict, and I think it’s a mistake to treat them as an article of faith.
In an essay published in 1938, the novelist EM Forster gave two cheers for democracy: “One because it admits variety, and two because it permits criticism… Two cheers are quite enough,” he wrote. “There is no occasion to give three.” Forster thought that no political system – not even democracy – should be turned into an icon. What mattered, he thought, was that individuals should have the chance to live as best they can.
Categories: Civil Rights, Equal Rights, Europe and Australia, Free Speech, Freedom, Human Rights, Peace and Love
Freedom of expression is a good thing, but so is protection from hate speech. We all want to be free to voice our views without fear, but we also want to be free from being insulted or stigmatised. The two freedoms will always be at odds, for they protect different and competing human interests. Both are universal human values, but they’ll never be reconciled in any kind of harmonious whole.
An interesting article demanding a deep study.