Political and social commentator Mark Steyn weighs in on current court proceedings against Dutch MP Geert Wilders in the latest issue of Maclean’s, arguing the Amsterdam trial, like Canadian human rights tribunals, are a black eye to justice and the rule of law. As Steyn notes:
“At a certain level, the trial of Geert Wilders for the crime of ‘group insult’ of Islam is déjà vu all over again. For as the spokesperson for the Openbaar Ministerie put it, ‘It is irrelevant whether Wilders’s witnesses might prove Wilders’s observations to be correct. What’s relevant is that his observations are illegal.’ Ah, yes, in the Netherlands, as in Canada, the truth is no defence.”
Steyn argues the show trial is motivated more by the political aspirations of the Dutch ruling elites and freedom-limiting forces of political correctness than the blind pursuit of justice. Steyn writes:
It’s remarkable how speedily ‘the most tolerant country in Europe’, in a peculiarly repellent strain of coercive appeasement, has adopted ’shoot the messenger’ as an all-purpose cure-all for ‘Islamophobia’.”



