Hate‑speech Laws Theologize Courts

Updated: 2026.01.02 27D ago 2 sources
Australia’s 18C hate‑speech litigation reportedly forced a secular court to decide whether parts of Islamic scripture, as explained by a cleric, were 'worthy of respect in a democratic society.' Expert religious witnesses were called on both sides, effectively turning a speech case into theological arbitration. — If hate‑speech regimes push courts into judging religious doctrine, they risk compromising state neutrality, chilling scholarship, and turning law into de facto blasphemy enforcement.

Sources

Silencing debate about Islam: one of the big threats to free speech in the UK in 2026
Matt Goodwin 2026.01.02 78% relevant
The article warns that blurring criticism of a religion with racialised hostility pushes public bodies and possibly courts into judging theological and doctrinal disputes—echoing the concern that hate‑speech regimes force legal actors into theological adjudication.
Some Links, 10/5/2025
Arnold Kling 2025.10.05 100% relevant
Helen Dale’s report that an Australian court in the Haddad case evaluated Islamic scripture’s legitimacy under 18C.
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