Australia’s Hate‑Speech Debate and the Lessons Hidden in History

Australia Prime Minister Anthony Albanese has authorised a Royal Commission in the aftermath of the Bondi Massacre. The Bondi Massacre has renewed calls for Hate-Speech Laws to be passed.

Australia’s renewed push to strengthen hate‑speech laws, after the Bondi Massacre, has stirred up a familiar conversation across the Tasman. Whenever one democracy tightens the boundaries of acceptable speech, its neighbours inevitably ask themselves the same questions: What exactly are we trying to prevent? Do these laws work? And how do we avoid repeating the mistakes of the past?

To answer those questions, it helps to step back and look at the long, winding history of how societies have tried to regulate dangerous speech — from medieval blasphemy laws to modern hate‑speech statutes — and how New Zealand found itself wrestling with these issues in recent years.

Before “Hate Speech”: The Era of Proto‑Laws

Long before anyone coined the phrase “hate speech,” societies were already policing words. But the targets were very different from today.

Early speech restrictions were designed to protect the powerful, not the vulnerable. Medieval and early‑modern Europe punished blasphemy, heresy, and insults to monarchs. Sedition laws protected the state. Public‑order laws punished speech that threatened stability. These weren’t hate‑speech laws — but they were the ancestors of modern speech regulation. They recognised that words could inflame, destabilise, or provoke violence.

They were, in a sense, proto–hate speech laws: early attempts to control dangerous expression, but aimed at shielding institutions and dominant religions rather than minority communities.

Weimar Germany: A Warning From the Middle Ground

By the early 20th century, democracies began experimenting with laws that looked closer to what we recognise today. The Weimar Republic had statutes against inciting hatred, insulting religious communities, and spreading inflammatory propaganda. These laws were used — sporadically — against Hitler and the Nazi Party.

But they were weak, inconsistently enforced, and applied by courts often sympathetic to nationalist rhetoric. They failed not because the idea of regulating incitement was flawed, but because the state enforcing them was collapsing.

This failure became a turning point. After the war, the world understood that propaganda and dehumanising rhetoric weren’t abstract harms — they were precursors to genocide.

After the Holocaust: The Birth of Modern Hate‑Speech Law

Modern hate‑speech laws are a post‑WWII creation. Germany led the way with strict bans on Nazi symbols, Holocaust denial, and incitement against groups. These laws influenced the European Convention on Human Rights, UN anti‑racism conventions, and the frameworks adopted by Canada, the UK, and others.

For the first time, speech regulation was designed to protect vulnerable minorities, not the state or the dominant religion. The moral logic was clear: if hateful propaganda helped pave the road to genocide, democracies had a duty to intervene earlier.

But even with this moral clarity, the practical challenges remained.

The Drafting Dilemma: Why Hate‑Speech Laws Are So Hard to Get Right

Even supporters of hate‑speech laws acknowledge the same recurring problems.

Definitions are slippery.
Words like “hatred,” “insult,” and “hostility” are subjective. What one person sees as critique, another sees as bigotry.

Enforcement can become political.
Police and courts must interpret emotional concepts. That opens the door to inconsistency — or misuse.

Ideas are not people.
Laws should protect individuals from harm, not shield belief systems from criticism. When religion becomes a protected category, the line between hate‑speech law and blasphemy law can blur quickly.

Effectiveness is mixed.
Countries with strong hate‑speech laws still experience rising extremism. The laws can reduce public displays of hate, but they rarely change underlying prejudice.

These tensions are exactly what Australia is grappling with now — and what New Zealand confronted recently.

New Zealand’s High‑Threshold Approach

New Zealand has some of the narrowest hate‑speech laws in the democratic world. Under the Human Rights Act 1993, only racial incitement is covered. The threshold is high: the speech must be threatening, abusive, or insulting and likely to incite hostility or contempt.

Religion, gender, sexuality, disability, and political belief are not included. Most offensive or hateful speech is not illegal unless it crosses into threats, harassment, or incitement to violence — all of which are already covered by the Crimes Act and other statutes.

This approach reflects a strong cultural preference for free expression and a reluctance to criminalise attitudes rather than actions.

The Push to Add Religion — And Why It Backfired

After the Christchurch mosque attacks, the Royal Commission recommended expanding hate‑speech protections to include religion. The government proposed amending the Human Rights Act so that “insulting” or “hostile” speech about religious groups could become a criminal offence.

The reaction was swift and intense.

Critics warned that criminalising “insults” to religion risked creating a de facto blasphemy law — just two years after New Zealand had formally repealed its old blasphemy offence. The concern wasn’t abstract. Around the world, laws protecting religion from “insult” have been used to:

  • Suppress theological disagreement
  • Silence ex‑believers
  • Chill academic study of comparative religion
  • Shield harmful practices from scrutiny
  • Protect ideas instead of people

Public submissions overwhelmingly argued that the proposal would undermine open debate, academic freedom, and the ability to challenge belief systems — all essential in a pluralistic society.

In the end, the Law Commission declined to include hate‑speech reform in its work programme, and the government withdrew the proposal entirely.

What Australia Can Learn From New Zealand’s Experience

Australia’s debate is unfolding in a global context where hate‑speech laws are common but their effectiveness is mixed. The New Zealand experience offers a quiet but important lesson: even well‑intentioned reforms can stumble when they risk suppressing legitimate debate, especially around religion.

The challenge is not whether to protect vulnerable communities — everyone agrees on that. The challenge is how to do it without sliding back into the old pattern of protecting belief systems from criticism, the very thing modern democracies have spent decades moving away from.

If Australia wants to avoid repeating history — both ancient and modern — it will need to draft with extraordinary care, clear thresholds, and a firm commitment to protecting people rather than ideas.

Responsible and thoughtful free speech is the best way to fight hate speech, not censorship | Paul Moon

Professor Paul Moon giving a lecture on Hate Speech and Free Speech in New Zealand on June 16 at the Turanga Christchurch Central Library.

On June 16, 2019, Professor Paul Moon was invited by NZ Friends of Israel Association Inc. to speak about Freedom of Speech amidst the ongoing public debate on how to react to hate speech rhetoric in the aftermath of the Christchurch Massacre.

The shock of the Massacre, the murderer’s manifesto, its distribution via social media, and the potentially devastating ramifications on public discussion and debate of stronger Hate Speech Legislation have combined to fuel interest.  Not surprisingly, Professor Moon found himself speaking to a full house. 

Being a professor of history, Moon gave numerous historical  examples of how suppressing free and open debate had held back the development of Western society, and how the pioneers of the Reformation and the Renaissance had ushered in a new era of progress.

Free Speech has been a powerful agent of societal reform, enabling religious and ethnic tolerance under Cromwell, abolished modern slavery, given women the right to vote, birthed the US civil rights movement, the Waitangi Tribunal, and the Nuclear-Free Movement.

A survey of current legislation that impact freedom of speech in New Zealand showed that what can be publicly said was already moderated: The Human Rights Act, the Harmful Digital Communications Act, and the Defamation Act.  Each contributing toward prohibiting activities commonly associated with Hate Speech but none coming up with a robust definition of what Hate Speech might be.

The Human Rights Commission is exploring the idea of protecting minority religions and suppressing “disharmonious speech”. Moon’s attempts to clarify what constitutes “disharmonious speech” were met with bemusement.

And this is the principal weakness of Hate Speech legislation, the difficulty in arriving at a robust definition gives authorities too much license to shutter uncomfortable public discourse. 

But it is from the flow from the tap of confronting, uncomfortable and disruptive ideas that society maintains its vigour and vitality.  And it’s freedom of speech that enables the public discourse which will allow society to become aware of these ideas, to test them, and identify the good ones and reject the bad ones.

Moon concluded with three thoughts:

  1. Exercising free speech responsibly and thoughtfully — rather than suppressing it — is the best antidote to hate speech.
  2. Surrendering free speech — in any way — sacrifices intelligence to force.
  3. Free speech can be unpalatable, but the alternative — of the state controlling our speech — is immeasurably worse.

There was a lively Q&A session and, as is so often the case, it is here that much color is added to proceedings. 

Hate speech featured in the stories of the Holocaust and the Rwandan Genocide.  Doesn’t it seem obvious that hate speech should be prohibited?  On the other hand, both regimes prohibited freedom of speech and suppressed their opponents. 

Furthermore NZFOI would add that the Weimar Republic had Hate Speech Legislation in place yet the Nazi Party was able to use them as propaganda tools, citing them as evidence of a “conspiracy” against them;  implying that the Nazi party had answers to society’s problems that the German government didn’t want the public to hear. People flocked to Nazi rallies.

Others were apprehensive of further immigration from societies that have normative practices that most New Zealanders would find repugnant.  Although these practices might be currently illegal, our society has shown an appetite for showing deference to minorities. 

It was conceivable that these practices, such as vaginal circumcision, forced marriages and honour killings, could become permissible as legal exceptions on cultural grounds. 

Yet voicing these concerns would likely make them appear paranoid, Islamophobic and bigoted.  How could they exercise their right to free speech, and take part in legitimate public debate without being pilloried, ostracized or even attacked?

Others noted that many of Moon’s examples involved the Roman Catholic church and while they acknowledged that it had its faults, voiced their concern that the presentation could leave listeners with an unbalanced view of that institution.

Moon assured them that he had only chosen those examples because he felt that a New Zealand audience would be sufficiently familiar with that period of history to relate to them.

By the time the meeting ended there was a consensus that respectful discussion and debate that focused on the merits of opposing arguments rather than attacking the people who made them, was the best way for society to build solutions to life’s problems and to discredit hate speech.

Within that collegial atmosphere, Dr Duncan Webb, MP for Christchurch Central, approached us and said he would be happy to openly debate Dr David Cumin.

John Minto, after introducing himself as an advocate of Palestinian rights, said that if a supporter of Palestinians rights ever crossed the line into racism, then he invited NZFOI to contact him, and he would have a word with them.

Perhaps there is hope for humankind after all.  

Professor Moon’s PowerPoint slide deck can be downloaded from here.

NZ Friends of Israel Association Inc wishes to acknowledge the support of the Holocaust Centre of New Zealand and Professor Paul Moon’s generous gift of his time and money in making this event possible.

How a ban on hate speech helped the Nazis | The Australian

Adolf Hitler

The Weimar Republic of the 30s had laws against “insulting religious communities”. They were used to prosecute hundreds of Nazi agitators, including Joseph Goebbels. Did it stop them? No. It helped them.

The Nazis turned their prosecutions for hate speech to their advantage, presenting themselves as political victims and whipping up public support among aggrieved sections of German society, their future social base. Far from halting Nazism, hate speech legislation assisted it.

It is surely time every hate speech law was repealed. They are a menace to free thought and speech, and the worst tool imaginable for fighting real hatred.

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Law against hate speech helped Hitler’s rise | NZ Herald

Hate Speech Laws passed to suppress the Nazis, ironically paved the way for Nazis to burn books and do away with others who opposed them

Controversy around recently-cancelled talks in New Zealand raised important questions about free speech. Ostensibly it was threats of violence that led to speakers being “de-platformed” but there is a strong whiff of political bias. Either way, accusations of “hate speech” have been raised, and some commentators have suggested that we need laws against the expression of hateful ideas.

This is an argument that has been implicitly put forward by the Human Rights Commission with a special emphasis on “religious hate speech directed at Muslim New Zealanders” and is predicated on the assumption that we need to protect people from harmful words, much like we outlaw harm caused by physical violence.

There is no good evidence that offensive language or challenges to ideas, however provocative or unreasonable, creates such severe harm as to require legislation. However, there is reason to argue that direct threats or speech that incites direct violence should be illegal — and it is already prohibited under our existing laws (along with reasonable restrictions on defamation, and breaking contracts by sharing information or plagiarising). Advertisement

Yet, even with such a seemingly objective test as inciting violence it is even difficult to determine what is and is not speech that incites violence. For example, the Human Rights Commission did not think that shouting “…bash the Jewish, cut their heads off…” in an Auckland protest was worthy of investigation, let alone prosecution.

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