'Gratuitous Insults Must Be Punished'
Jacob Sullum | September 17, 2008, 3:49pm
A prosecutor is threatening Italian comedian Sabina Guzzanti with a five-year prison term for telling a joke about Pope Benedict XVI in Hell, "tormented by great big poofter devils," at an anti-government rally in July. According to the London Times, Rome prosecutor Giovanni Ferrara claims Guzzanti violated the Mussolini-era Lateran Treaty between Italy and the Vatican, which "stipulates that an insult to the Pope carries the same penalty as an insult to the Italian President." (I gather that Italians also can go to prison for insulting their president, currently a former senator named Giorgio Napolitano.) Ferrara has to get permission from the Ministry of Justice for the prosecution, which Guzzanti's father, a member of Parliament, called "a return to the Middle Ages." One of his colleagues, Christian Democrat Luca Volonte, either disagrees or pines for the days of the Inquisiton, saying "gratuitous insults must be punished." The pope, meanwhile, already has forgiven Guzzanti, or so a Jesuit scholar speculates.
[via The Freedom Files]
Mad Max | September 17, 2008, 4:26pm | #
From the article:
"Father Bartolomeo Sorge, a Jesuit scholar, told La Repubblica the move to prosecute Ms Guzzanzi was incomprehensible. 'We Christians put up with many insults, it is part of being a Christian, as is forgiveness. I feel sure the Pope has already forgiven those who insulted him on Piazza Navona.'"
Damn, those crafty Jesuits, messing with the metanarrative of Papal oppression against free thought!
Article 8 of the
Lateran Treaty:
"Considering the person of the Supreme Pontiff to be sacred and
inviolable, Italy declares any attempt against His person or any
incitement to commit such attempt to be punishable by the same penalties
as all similar attempts and incitements to commit the same against the
person of the King.
"All offences or public insults committed within Italian territory
against the person of the Supreme Pontiff, whether by means of speeches,
acts, or writings, shall be punished in the same manner as offences and
insults against the person of the King."
Apparently, now that Italy is a Republic, the same principle has been applied to the President of Italy as to the King. In other words, the President of Italy doesn't get to have *greater* protection against assassination, libel, and other assaults and insults than the Pope.
If this comedian chick can legitimately be prosecuted for talking about the Italian President being in Hell, then she can be prosecuted for saying something similary about the Pope.
A key planted axiom - that it is a crime under Italian law to talk about the President of Italy being in Hell. I don't see how this could be a crime, but if it it, it's not a church/state problem, but a problem of the state taking itself too seriously.
Blaming the Pope for having the same protection as the Italian President is absurd.
Does this alleged comedian actually want to claim that she can legitimately be sent to prison for insulting the President of Italy, so long as she leaves the Pope alone?
No, both officials should have the same protection - which in this case should mean *no* protection.