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So we're having no debate about how to extricate ourselves from our biggest foreign policy mess and a cartoon debate — "I'm tough; he's not" — about everything else.
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The long-running "Danish cartoons" debate began in 2005 when the newspaper Jyllands-Posten published satirical drawings of Muhammad, leading to protests around the world.
It became a best-seller, a talking point in factories and drawing rooms, the subject of hundreds of newspaper articles, parodies, cartoons and debates.
Could this year's Presidential debates possibly be as funny as a New Yorker debate cartoon?
Credit View full screen Could this year's Presidential debates possibly be as funny as a New Yorker debate cartoon?
E-mail address GO SIGN UP Share Tweet Could this year's Presidential debates possibly be as funny as a New Yorker debate cartoon?
By The New Yorker October 3, 2012 Could this year's Presidential debates possibly be as funny as a New Yorker debate cartoon?
Tweets by a number of writers with a photograph of the Charlie Hedbo cartoon provoked intense debate about whether the cartoon is overtly racist or is an attempt to satirise media coverage of refugees in Europe.
A collection of cartoons on the debate.
AMY DAVIDSON: While we're waiting for it all to begin, here's a treat: New Yorker debate cartoons.
Although the image of their raping and pillaging ancestors doesn't sit pretty with the good-natured and diplomatic Danes (let's leave the cartoons for another debate), they are more than happy to celebrate their bloodthirsty forefathers' heritage through festivals and reenactment plays.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com