A free world needs satire Patrick Chappatte

I’ve been a political cartoonist
on the global stage for the last 20 years.

Hey, we have seen a lot of things
happen in those 20 years.

We saw three different Catholic popes,

and we witnessed that unique moment:

the election of a pope
on St. Peter’s Square –

you know, the little white smoke

and the official announcement.

[It’s a boy!]

(Laughter)

(Applause)

We saw four American presidents.

Obama, of course.

Oh, Europeans liked him a lot.

He was a multilateralist.

He favored diplomacy.

He wanted to be friends with Iran.

(Laughter)

And then …

reality imitated caricature

the day Donald Trump became the President
of the United States of America.

(Laughter)

(Applause)

You know, people come to us and they say,

“It’s too easy for you cartoonists.
I mean – with people like Trump?”

Well, no, it’s not easy

to caricature a man
who is himself a caricature.

(Laughter)

No.

(Applause)

Populists are no easy target for satire

because you try to nail them down one day,

and the next day, they outdo you.

For example, as soon as he was elected,

I tried to imagine the tweet
that Trump would send on Christmas Eve.

So I did this, OK?

[Merry Christmas to all!
Except all those pathetic losers. So sad.]

(Laughter)

And basically, the next day,
Trump tweeted this:

[Happy New Year to all,
including to my many enemies

and those who have fought me
and lost so badly

they just don’t know what to do. Love!]

(Laughter)

It’s the same!

(Applause)

This is the era of strongmen.

And soon, Donald Trump was able to meet
his personal hero, Vladimir Putin,

and this is how the first meeting went:

[I’ll help you find the hackers.
Give me your password.]

(Laughter)

And I’m not inventing anything.

He came out of that first meeting
saying that the two of them had agreed

on a joint task force on cybersecurity.

This is true, if you do remember.

Oh, who would have imagined
the things we saw over these 20 years.

We saw Great Britain run towards
a European Union exit.

[Hard Brexit?]

(Laughter)

In the Middle East,
we believed for a while

in the democratic miracle
of the Arab Spring.

We saw dictators fall,
we saw others hang on.

(Laughter)

And then there is the timeless
Kim dynasty of North Korea.

These guys seem to be coming
straight out of Cartoon Network.

I was blessed to be able
to draw two of them.

Kim Jong-il, the father,

when he died a few years ago,
that was a very dangerous moment.

[That was close!]

(Laughter)

That was –

(Applause)

And then the son, Kim Jong-un,

proved himself a worthy
successor to the throne.

He’s now friends with the US president.

They meet each other all the time,
and they talk like friends.

[What kind of hair gel?]

(Laughter)

Should we be surprised

to be living in a world

ruled by egomaniacs?

What if they were just
a reflection of ourselves?

I mean, look at us, each of us.

(Laughter)

Yeah, we love our smartphones;

we love our selfies;

we love ourselves.

And thanks to Facebook,
we have a lot of friends

all over the world.

Mark Zuckerberg is our friend.

(Laughter)

You know, he and his peers
in Silicon Valley

are the kings and the emperors

of our time.

Showing that the emperors have no clothes,

that’s the task of satire, right?

Speaking truth to power.

This has always been the historical role
of political cartooning.

In the 1830s, postrevolutionary France
under King Louis Philippe,

journalists and caricaturists fought hard
for the freedom of the press.

They were jailed, they were fined,
but they prevailed.

And this caricature of the king by Daumier

came to define the monarch.

It marked history.

It became the timeless symbol
of satire triumphing over autocracy.

Today, 200 years after Daumier,

are political cartoons
at risk of disappearing?

Take this blank space on the front page of
Turkish opposition newspaper “Cumhuriyet.”

This is where Musa Kart’s
cartoon used to appear.

In 2018, Musa Kart was sentenced
to three years in jail.

For doing what?

For doing political cartoons
in Erdoğan’s Turkey.

Cartoonists from Venezuela, Russia, Syria
have been forced into exile.

Look at this image.

It seems so innocent, right?

Yet it is so provocative.

When he posted this image,

Hani Abbas knew it would change his life.

It was in 2012, and the Syrians
were taking to the streets.

Of course, the little red flower
is the symbol of the Syrian revolution.

So pretty soon, the regime was after him,

and he had to flee the country.

A good friend of his,
cartoonist Akram Raslan,

didn’t make it out of Syria.

He died under torture.

In the United States of America recently,

some of the very top cartoonists,
like Nick Anderson and Rob Rogers –

this is a cartoon by Rob –

[Memorial Day 2018.
(on tombstone) Truth. Honor. Rule of Law.]

they lost their positions

because their publishers
found their work too critical of Trump.

And the same happened
to Canadian cartoonist Michael de Adder.

Hey, maybe we should start worrying.

Political cartoons
were born with democracy,

and they are challenged when freedom is.

You know, over the years,

with the Cartooning for Peace Foundation
and other initiatives,

Kofi Annan – this is not well
known – he was the honorary chair

of our foundation,

the late Kofi Annan, Nobel Peace Laureate.

He was a great defender of cartoons.

Or, on the board of the Association
of American Editorial Cartoonists,

we have advocated on behalf of jailed,
threatened, fired, exiled cartoonists.

But I never saw a case
of someone losing his job

over a cartoon he didn’t do.

Well, that happened to me.

For the last 20 years, I have been
with the “International Herald Tribune”

and the “New York Times.”

Then something happened.

In April 2019,

a cartoon by a famous
Portuguese cartoonist,

which was first published
in a newspaper “El Expresso” in Lisbon,

was picked by an editor
at the “New York Times”

and reprinted in
the international editions.

This thing blew up.

It was denounced as anti-Semitic,

triggered widespread outrage,

apologies

and a lot of damage control by the Times.

A month after, my editor told me

they were ending
political cartoons altogether.

So we could, and we should,
have a discussion about that cartoon.

Some people say it reminds them
of the worst anti-Semitic propaganda.

Others, including in Israel,

say no, it’s just
a harsh criticism of Trump,

who is shown as blindly following
the Prime Minister of Israel.

I have some issues with this cartoon,

but that discussion did not happen
at the “New York Times.”

Under attack, they took the easiest path:

in order to not have problems
with political cartoons in the future,

let’s not have any at all.

Hey, this is new.

Did we just invent
preventive self-censorship?

I think this is bigger than cartoons.

This is about opinion and journalism.

This, in the end, is about democracy.

We now live in a world

where moralistic mobs
gather on social media

and rise like a storm.

The most outraged voices
tend to define the conversation,

and the angry crowd follows in.

These social media mobs,

sometimes fueled by interest groups,

fall upon newsrooms
in an overwhelming blow.

They send publishers and editors
scrambling for countermeasures.

This leaves no room
for meaningful discussions.

Twitter is a place for fury,
not for debate.

And you know what?

Someone described pretty well
our human condition in this noisy age.

You know who?

Shakespeare, 400 years ago.

["(Life is) a tale told by an idiot, full
of sound and fury, signifying nothing."]

This speaks to me.
Shakespeare is still very relevant, no?

But the world has changed a bit.

[Too long!]

(Laughter)

It’s true.

(Applause)

You know, social media is both
a blessing and a curse for cartoons.

This is the era of the image,
so they get shared, they get viral,

but that also makes them a prime target.

More than often, the real target
behind the cartoon

is the media that published it.

[Covering Iraq?
No, Trump!]

That relationship between
traditional media and social media

is a funny one.

On one hand, you have
the time-consuming process

of information, verification, curation.

On the other hand,
it’s an open buffet, frankly,

for rumors, opinions, emotions,

amplified by algorithms.

Even quality newspapers mimic the codes
of social networks on their websites.

They highlight the 10 most read,
the 10 most shared stories.

They should put forward
the 10 most important stories.

(Applause)

The media must not be
intimidated by social media,

and editors should stop
being afraid of the angry mob.

(Applause)

We’re not going to put up warnings
the way we do on cigarette packs, are we?

[Satire can hurt your feelings]

(Laughter)

Come on.

[Under your burkini
you could be hiding a sex bomb]

Political cartoons are meant
to provoke, just like opinions.

But before all, they are meant
to be thought-provoking.

You feel hurt?

Just let it go.

You don’t like it?

Look the other way.

Freedom of expression
is not incompatible with dialogue

and listening to each other.

But it is incompatible with intolerance.

(Applause)

Let us not become our own censors
in the name of political correctness.

We need to stand up, we need to push back,

because if we don’t,
we will wake up tomorrow

in a sanitized world,

where any form of satire and political
cartooning becomes impossible.

Because, when political pressure
meets political correctness,

freedom of speech perishes.

(Applause)

Do you remember January 2015?

With the massacre
of journalists and cartoonists

at “Charlie Hebdo” in Paris,

we discovered the most
extreme form of censorship:

murder.

Remember how it felt.

[Without humor we are all dead]

Whatever one thought
of that satirical magazine,

however one felt about
those particular cartoons,

we all sensed that something
fundamental was at stake,

that citizens of free societies –
actually, citizens of any society –

need humor as much as the air we breathe.

This is why the extremists,

the dictators, the autocrats and, frankly,
all the ideologues of the world

cannot stand humor.

In the insane world we live in right now,

we need political cartoons more than ever.

And we need humor.

Thank you.

(Applause)

在过去的 20 年里,我一直是全球舞台上的政治漫画家。

嘿,在这 20 年里,我们看到了很多事情
发生。

我们看到了三位不同的天主教教皇

,我们见证了那个独特的时刻:

在圣彼得广场选举教皇
——

你知道的,一点点白烟

和官方公告。

[是个男孩!]

(笑声)

(掌声)

我们看到了四位美国总统。

当然是奥巴马。

哦,欧洲人很喜欢他。

他是一个多边主义者。

他赞成外交。

他想和伊朗做朋友。

(笑声

) 然后……

现实模仿

了唐纳德特朗普成为美利坚合众国总统那天的漫画

(笑声)

(掌声)

你知道,人们来找我们,他们说,

“这对你们漫画家来说太容易了。
我的意思是——和特朗普这样的人在一起?”

嗯,不,

漫画一个
本身就是漫画的人并不容易。

(笑声)

不。

(掌声)

民粹主义者不容易成为讽刺的对象,

因为有一天你试图把他们钉死,

而第二天,他们就超过了你。

For example, as soon as he was elected,

I tried to imagine the tweet
that Trump would send on Christmas Eve.

所以我这样做了,好吗?

[祝大家圣诞节快乐!
除了那些可怜的失败者。 太伤心了。]

(笑声

)基本上,第二天,
特朗普在推特上写道:

[祝大家新年快乐,
包括我的许多敌人,

以及那些与我战斗
并输得如此惨重的人,

他们只是不知道该怎么做。 爱!]

(笑声

) 一样!

(鼓掌)

这是强人的时代。

很快,唐纳德·特朗普就见到
了他的个人英雄弗拉基米尔·普京

,这就是第一次会面的方式:

[我会帮助你找到黑客。
把你的密码给我。]

(笑声)

而且我没有发明任何东西。

他在第一次会面后
表示,他们两人已

就网络安全联合工作组达成一致。

这是真的,如果你记得的话。

哦,谁能想到
我们在这 20 年中看到的事情。

我们看到英国
跑向欧盟出口。

[硬脱欧?]

(笑声)

在中东,
我们一度相信

阿拉伯之春的民主奇迹。

我们看到独裁者倒台,
我们看到其他人坚持下去。

(笑声

) 然后是朝鲜永恒的
金王朝。

这些家伙似乎
直接来自卡通网络。

我很幸运
能够画出其中的两个。

父亲金正日

几年前去世时,
那是一个非常危险的时刻。

[很接近!]

(笑声)

那是——

(掌声

)然后儿子金正恩

证明了自己是一位当之无愧
的王位继承人。

他现在是美国总统的朋友。

他们
经常见面,像朋友一样交谈。

[什么样的发胶?]

(笑声)

生活在一个被自大狂统治的世界里,我们应该感到惊讶

吗?

如果它们只是
我们自己的反映呢?

我的意思是,看看我们,我们每个人。

(笑声)

是的,我们喜欢我们的智能手机;

我们喜欢自拍;

我们爱自己。

多亏了 Facebook,
我们在世界各地拥有了很多朋友

马克扎克伯格是我们的朋友。

(笑声)

你知道,他和他
在硅谷的同龄人

是我们这个时代的国王和皇帝。

显示皇帝没有衣服,

这就是讽刺的任务,对吧?

对权力说真话。

这一直是政治漫画的历史作用

在 1830 年代,路易菲利普国王领导下的革命后法国

记者和漫画家
为新闻自由而奋斗。

他们被判入狱,他们被罚款,
但他们占了上风。

杜米埃对国王的这幅漫画

用来定义君主。

它标志着历史。

它成为
讽刺战胜专制的永恒象征。

今天,在杜米埃之后 200 年

,政治漫画是否
有消失的危险?


土耳其反对派报纸“Cumhuriyet”头版的这个空白处为例。

这是Musa Kart的
卡通曾经出现的地方。

2018 年,Musa Kart 被判
入狱三年。

为了做什么?

因为
在埃尔多安的土耳其做政治漫画。

来自委内瑞拉、俄罗斯、叙利亚的漫画家
被迫流亡国外。

看看这张图片。

看起来很无辜,对吧?

然而它是如此的挑衅。

当他发布这张图片时,

哈尼·阿巴斯知道这将改变他的生活。

那是在 2012 年,
叙利亚人走上街头。

当然,小红花
是叙利亚革命的象征。

很快,政权就在追捕他

,他不得不逃离这个国家。

他的一个好朋友,
漫画家阿克拉姆拉斯兰,

并没有离开叙利亚。

他死于酷刑。

最近在美利坚合众国,

一些非常顶级的漫画家,
比如尼克·安德森和罗伯·罗杰斯——

这是罗伯的漫画——

[2018 年阵亡将士纪念日。
(墓碑上)真相。 荣誉。 法治。]

他们失去了职位,

因为他们的出版商
发现他们的工作过于批评特朗普。

同样的情况也发生
在加拿大漫画家迈克尔·德·阿德身上。

嘿,也许我们应该开始担心了。

政治漫画
与民主一起诞生,

而当自由出现时,它们就会受到挑战。

你知道,多年来,

通过卡通和平基金会
和其他倡议,

科菲·安南——这并不
为人所知——他是我们基金会的名誉主席

,已故的诺贝尔和平奖获得者科菲·安南。

他是漫画的伟大捍卫者。

或者,在
美国社论漫画家协会的董事会上,

我们曾代表被监禁、
威胁、解雇、流放的漫画家进行宣传。

但是我从来没有
见过有人因为

他没有做的卡通而丢掉工作的案例。

嗯,这发生在我身上。

在过去的 20 年里,我一直
在《国际先驱论坛报》

和《纽约时报》工作。

然后发生了一些事情。

2019年4月,

葡萄牙著名漫画家的漫画

首发
于里斯本《快报》,


《纽约时报》编辑选中,


在国际版上重印。

这件事炸了。

它被谴责为反犹太主义,

引发了广泛的愤怒、

道歉

和《纽约时报》的大量损害控制。

一个月后,我的编辑告诉我,

他们将完全结束
政治漫画。

所以我们可以,也应该,
就那部卡通片进行讨论。

有人说这让他们
想起了最糟糕的反犹太主义宣传。

包括以色列在内的其他人

说不,这只是
对特朗普的严厉批评,

特朗普被证明是盲目跟随
以色列总理。

我对这幅漫画有一些问题,


《纽约时报》没有讨论过。

受到攻击,他们走的是最简单的路:

为了以后政治漫画

不出问题,我们就一点都不出。

嘿,这是新的。

我们只是发明了
预防性的自我审查吗?

我认为这比卡通更大。

这是关于舆论和新闻的。

归根结底,这与民主有关。

我们现在生活在

一个道德暴徒
聚集在社交媒体上

并像风暴一样崛起的世界。

最愤怒的声音
往往会定义对话

,愤怒的人群也随之而来。

这些社交媒体暴徒,

有时由利益集团助长

,以压倒性的打击落在新闻编辑室。

他们让出版商和编辑
争先恐后地采取对策。

这没有
为有意义的讨论留下空间。

Twitter 是一个愤怒的地方,
而不是辩论的地方。

你知道吗?

有人很好地描述
了我们在这个嘈杂的时代中的人类状况。

你知道谁?

莎士比亚,400 年前。

[“(生活是)一个白痴讲述的故事,充满
了喧嚣和愤怒,没有任何意义。”]

这对我说话。
莎士比亚仍然很重要,不是吗?

但世界发生了一些变化。

[太长了!]

(笑声)

这是真的。

(掌声)

你知道,社交媒体
对漫画来说既是福也是祸。

这是图像的时代,
因此它们会被分享,它们会像病毒一样传播开来,

但这也使它们成为主要目标。

通常,漫画背后的真正目标

是出版它的媒体。

【掩护伊拉克?
不,特朗普!]

传统媒体和社交媒体

之间的关系很有趣。

一方面,你
有一个耗时

的信息、验证、策划过程。

另一方面
,坦率地说,这是一个开放式的自助餐,

用于通过算法放大的谣言、意见、情感

即使是优质报纸也会
在其网站上模仿社交网络的代码。

他们突出显示阅读
次数最多的 10 个、分享次数最多的 10 个故事。

他们应该
提出 10 个最重要的故事。

(掌声

)媒体不要
被社交媒体吓倒

,编辑
不要害怕愤怒的暴徒。

(掌声)

我们不会像在烟盒上那样贴警告,是吗?

[讽刺会伤害你的感情]

(笑声)

来吧。

[在你的布基尼下,
你可能藏着一个性炸弹]

政治漫画是
为了挑衅,就像意见一样。

但首先,它们
是发人深省的。

你觉得受伤了吗?

放手吧。

你不喜欢吗?

换个角度看。

言论自由
与对话

和倾听并不矛盾。

但它与不宽容是不相容的。

(鼓掌)

我们不要
以政治正确的名义成为我们自己的审查员。

我们需要站起来,我们需要反击,

因为如果我们不站起来,
明天我们将

在一个净化的世界中醒来

,任何形式的讽刺和政治
漫画都变得不可能。

因为,当政治压力
遇到政治正确时,

言论自由就会消失。

(鼓掌)

你还记得2015年1月吗?

随着

巴黎“查理周刊”对记者和漫画家的屠杀,

我们发现了最
极端的审查形式:

谋杀。

记住它的感觉。

[没有幽默,我们都死了]

无论人们怎么
想那本讽刺杂志,

无论人们对
这些特定的漫画有何看法,

我们都感觉到某种
根本性的事情危在旦夕,

自由社会的公民——
实际上,任何社会的公民——都

需要 幽默就像我们呼吸的空气一样。

这就是为什么极端分子

、独裁者、独裁者,坦率地说,
世界上所有的理论家

都无法忍受幽默。

在我们现在生活的疯狂世界中,

我们比以往任何时候都更需要政治漫画。

我们需要幽默。

谢谢你。

(掌声)