Christian Christensen, a professor of journalism at the Department of Media and Communication Studies at Stockholm University, Sweden, showed in a 2023 essay that when Rushdie came under attack from a suspected Muslim fundamentalist in 2022, the incident was leveraged by politicians and journalists across Europe and the US to frame Islam as the greatest threat to the ‘Western’ value of free speech. “There were countless news articles, opinion pieces, tweets, Facebook posts and television soundbites,” he wrote. But when Rushdie, in 2023, identified “populist Right-wing authoritarianism” as a greater threat to free speech in ‘the West’ than fundamentalist Islam, “Gone were the news articles, opinion pieces, tweets, Facebook posts and television soundbites.”