Bill Maher Spanks Berkeley Students as Commencement Speech Flap Continues. By Lisa de Moraes. Deadline Hollywood, November 1, 2014.
Rula Jebreal to Bill Maher: “When you talk about Islam in a certain way… some people feel threatened.” Salon, November 1, 2014.
The hypocrisy of Rula Jebreal. Elder of Ziyon, November 2, 2014.
Rula Jebreal sounds off on Bill Maher Islam spat: “What he is doing is un-American.” By Luke Brinker. Salon, November 3, 2014.
Wake up and oppose theocracy: Bill Maher, Rula Jebreal and the urgent Islam debate. By Jeffrey Tayler. Salon, November 15, 2014.
Muslims’ beliefs are “untrue” and “ridiculous,” Salon author says, offering support for Maher’s intolerance. By Philip Weiss. Mondoweiss, November 18, 2014.
Political Correctness Is Back. By Peter Beinart. The Atlantic, October 31, 2014.
Don’t Muzzle the Clown: Berkeley Students Shouldn’t Censor Bill Maher. By Timothy Egan. New York Times, October 30, 2014.
UC Berkeley students organize to block Bill Maher from speaking on campus. By Aleister. Legal Insurrection, October 28, 2014.
Berkeley on offense for Bill Maher. By Amy Miller. Legal Insurrection, October 20, 2014.
Bill Maher Responds to UC Berkeley Petition. Video. Real Time, October 31, 2014. YouTube.
Real Time with Bill Maher: Islam and Free Speech. Video. Real Time, October 31, 2014. YouTube. Also here. Overtime.
Transcript:
BILL MAHER: Next issue, Berkeley. Normally, I would throw out an issue and let the panel then just interrupt me, which they always do before I finish the question. But all week long I’ve had all these request for interviews about this. Let me just get out my statement about it because people have been asking. I said I would save it for HBO because they pay me.
So here’s
what happened. A couple of months ago I was asked to deliver a commencement
speech for Berkeley's December graduation. I was like great. I love Berkeley, I’m
off in December and it will be a sentimental journey. Who doesn’t remember
their graduation in December? But whatever, I’m happy to do it because although
I never attended Berkeley, I was very aware of their place in the American
debate. On the far left in a country where the Democratic party has sold out to
the center and even the right, this is what is needed. This is why I wanted to
accept this invitation and they invited me because it was the 50th anniversary
of something that is legendary on that campus, The Berkeley Free Speech
Movement. I guess they don’t teach irony in college anymore.
And
then a few weeks ago, Ben Affleck was on our show and we had a discussion about Islam that I’ve had a thousand and one nights with a lot of other people, but
he’s an A-list movie star so our very deep media started to care about it. It’s
always easy to do a story about somebody being mad as somebody so when a few
thousand people online who didn't have to do anything more than click a button,
who didn’t even go to Berkeley necessarily wanted me to be disinvited as the
commencement speaker, because, you know, I'm a racist. Right, because Islam is
a race.
You
know, this is the level of logic we are dealing with. By the way, even Reza
Aslan, my most strident critics has gone to pains to say he doesn’t think I’m a
bigot. Here’s what he said on HuffPost Live – “Bill Maher is not a bigot. I
know him. We are friends. We hang out with each other backstage. He loves
having me on the show despite the fact that he disagrees with me on a lot of
things and that shows the kind of person that he is.” If even my most
respectable critic who is a Muslim says this, what leg does the “protest” have
to stand on? He and I disagree on some stuff but he’s always welcome on this
show. That’s how it’s done, kids. Whoever told you you only had to hear what
didn’t upset you?
So
anyway, the university has come down on my side, saying what I hoped they would
say all along, which is that we’re liberals, we’re supposed told like free
speech. So I want to come. I’m planning to come. I’m planning a trip to the
Redwoods the next day. My only reservation in not coming is the argument that
it will be a media circus and turn which should be a day about the graduates,
which it should be, you, into something else. I don’t want to do that. It’s the
only reason I would ever pull out.
But let
me say this to those students worried about that: I promise this will be your
day. This is a commencement speech. The issue is you. My speech was, is, I
hope, going to be about you and whatever tips I thought that could actually
help you in life because I already lived through it. That and my funk about how
Jewish women hate to have sex. So here’s my final plea to you liberal – in the
truest sense of the word – college students. Not just as Berkeley but all over
the country. Please, weigh in on this. My reputation isn’t on the line. Yours
is.
Okay,
so what do you think about this? There’s my piece.
RULA
JEBREAL, GUEST: I don’t think it’s about free speech. I’m sorry to tell you
this, Bill. And I’ll tell you why, it’s very simple. These same students who
signed that petition actually invited you to a debate. And they said they are
welcome so they can have a conversation, they can ask you a question. If they
don’t like your views on television, they can switch channels. But the
commencement speech, it’s a platform, actually, that doesn’t give the
opportunity for questions, it doesn’t give an opportunity for push back, even
for a debate. It’s a monologue, it’s not a dialogue. These same students feel
offended that your views of Islam – the generalization, and they said it
clearly in their declaration, they said the generalization perpetrates bigotry.
This is what they said.
Look, I
am all for freedom of speech. I love debates; I hate monologues. When you
invite somebody to a commencement speech, you said it, it’s about the students.
And The New York Times, in this piece
this morning said you can’t counter a bad speech with a good speech except they
don’t have that venue. They don’t have that opportunity on that day of
graduation. They can’t out of that.
MAHER:
I’m not coming to speak about that subject as I just said.
SEN.
ANGUS KING (I-MAINE): Does that mean we never have speeches? Every speech has
to be two people?
JEBREAL:
But this is a commencement speech. This is a commencement address.
KING: Every
commencement speech has one speaker.
JEBREAL:
Listen, would you accept an openly anti-Semitic person to give a commencement
speech to Jewish students? I actually would not accept that.
MAHER:
As I just said, even Reza Aslan says I’m not a bigot. So I rather resent the
idea that I’m comparable to an anti-Semite. All I’ve ever done was basically
read facts.
JEBREAL:
What facts did you read? I’m sorry, you are comparing jihadists, Salafists,
Sunni, you don’t know the difference. You are comparing all Muslims in one part
–
MAHER:
You are Palestinian?
JEBREAL:
I am actually a secular Muslim. And when you talking about Islam in a certain
way, I have to tell you, it’s offensive sometimes.
KING:
But it’s okay to be offensive. That’s what free speech is all about. If free
speech is only speech you like, it’s not free speech.
JEBREAL:
No, but they invited him for a debate. He can go to that debate. I can
accompany you on that debate if you want. I am happy to have that debate
wherever you want.
KING:
He was invited to be a commencement speaker and then he made a statement that
people didn’t like.
JEBREAL:
I don’t know what to say.
MAHER:
Can you be gay in Gaza?
JEBREAL:
Yes, you can.
MAHER:
Really?
JEBREAL:
Yes you can.
MAHER:
And live?
JEBREAL:
Absolutely, you can. You know what? It’s even more offensive because you are
saying –
MAHER:
I’m just asking because –
JEBREAL:
You can be gay in Gaza.
MAHER:
Really?
JEBREAL:
I've traveled the Middle East.
MAHER:
Is there a gay bar in Gaza?
JEBREAL:
This is what I do for a living. You are comparing the majority of Muslim states
with Saudi Arabia or with
KING:
Should I call [Ben] Affleck and get him back here?
JEBREAL:
You know – do you want to listen or do you want to –
RET.
GEN. WESLEY CLARK: I think the issue is beyond Muslims. I think it’s about
whether someone can be invited to give a speech and people will listen. Maybe
they’ll agree, maybe they won’t. But we don’t have a situation in Berkeley
where people can’t give a speech. I mean, that’s the whole essence of the
American system, people can give a speech, not everyone has to agree.
JEBREAL:
That’s ridiculous, I’m sorry General. The Muslim community in this country, you
are treating them like Fifth Columnists, and they are not.
MAHER:
No I am not.
JEBREAL:
And guess what? If these people – the Muslim community feels threatened and
feel offended and they were underrepresented in the media and underrepresented
in political avenues. You never invite them here on these issues.
MAHER:
Never invite them here? You’re here.
JEBREAL:
On these issues.
MAHER:
Reza is here. They’re here all the time.
JEBREAL:
On these issues.
MAHER:
What do you mean on these issues? I’m the one who says I want to stop talking
about this. I can’t because things happen in the news.
JEBREAL:
Reza Aslan was inviting to talk about something else. It was August 1st.
MAHER:
Well, Reza’s been here a lot.
JEBREAL:
And I'm happy that he’s been here and I’m here and I’m so happy to be invited
here. However, if you want to have a serious conversation about Islam, and I’m
sorry to say this Bill –
MAHER:
Every time I tell you something you don’t like it’s not a serious conversation
or I’m a bigot. I’m sorry, in your world either I say exactly what you want me
to say or else I’m a bigot. It doesn’t work that way.
JEBREAL:
Look, if you’re – you don’t have to say what I want because what I want is not
a war on Islam. I want to win the war on terror. When you are repeating the
same things that actual al Qaeda says, the same thing, you are doing the work
for them. Al-Zawahiri used to say, bin Laden used to say this is not a war on
terror, this is a war on Islam. My father was Muslim, he was Sufi. Guess what,
let me tell you something. You don’t even know the difference between Sufi,
Sunni, Sunni Shafi’i, Sunni Hanbali.
MAHER:
Yeah, I do.
JEBREAL:
You don’t. For you, we are all jihadists.
MAHER:
I know that in many places in the world, if you left your religion, what would
happen?
JEBREAL:
Guess what, let me tell you something. Many people in Indonesia –
MAHER:
You could walk inside a door in Gaza and say you know what, I’m a Presbyterian
today?
JEBREAL:
Maybe not in Gaza, to be honest. But you can do it in Jordan, you can do it in
Lebanon. The majority of – you are blaming the majority for the criminal acts
of a minority. Unfortunately, the majority are disorganized and there's a small
minority that are well-organized and controlling the majority.
MAHER:
I have to move on.
JEBREAL:
I am happy that you’re moving on but I’m telling you, there are some people who
– if you would have said some of the things you would have said about
African-Americans and about Jews, you would be fired.
MAHER:
But African-Americans and Jews don’t belong to a religion that wanted to kill
Salman Rushdie for writing a book, if we want to get back to the free speech
issue. So, I’m sorry, that’s called false equivalency. Not all religions are
alike. I have to move on. I’m so sorry. (HBO’s Real Time with Bill Maher,
October 31, 2014)