There is a difference between saying individuals should do it and saying media should. If people in this thread (and I didn't read pages 1-5 that closely) are saying individuals have that obligation, I respectfully disagree.
I got into this discussion because of Draw Muhammed Day and calls for everyone to draw Muhammed in protest. I've pointed out several times that to do so would be to open a torrent of trolling and stupidity from the darker corners of the internet and let it lose on the world while simultaneously saying "We're doing this because of what happened". We would basically allow ourselves to be represented not by satirists like Charlie Hedbo but by 4chan and racist groups. Because it is those cartoons that would be the ones that the Muslim world passed around. It would be those ones that got recirculated under the message "This is what the West thinks of Islam"
I've said before that's why I feel that Draw Muhammed Day is a bad idea and that we should "Leave comedy to the comedians" rather than trying to get everyone to make a statement and confusing the issue.
I am also really getting annoyed - not specifically at anyone here, but generally in the greater Internet discussion - at the people insisting 1.6 billion Muslims are going to be oppressed and inflamed by ****ing drawings. No. Stop infantilizing these people. For Pete's sake, the bloody leader of Hezbollah came out and denounced the people committing these acts and said they place far more shame on Islam than the cartoons ever have.
The problem is that the people who try to make out that this is about cartoons are also infantilising the same damn people. Cause it isn't about Muslims seeing some cartoons and going all "HULK SMASH" over it. When the original (nasty, bigoted) cartoons appeared in Jyllands-Posten what was the response of the Muslim world? Exactly the same as when
this cartoon was published in Norway. The leaders of several Muslim countries made diplomatic protests. So why the difference in outcomes? Is cause Muslims are inherently violent man-children? Bollocks.
The reasons are many-fold but some of the main reasons are
1) The President of Denmark hid behind Free Speech and refused to personally denounce the cartoon. In this sort of diplomatic row, having the leader of the country denounce the insulting material is usually enough to separate "This particular newspaper is written by bigoted arseholes who hate you" and "This country's leaders are bigoted arseholes who hate you"
2) More importantly, a group of radical Danish clerics toured the Middle East with a 100 page document on "Western views of Islam" which contained the cartoons but which also contained material far worse (A cartoon of Muhammed as a pedophile, a Muslim apparently having sex with a dog while praying and picture of a man in a pig mask which was claimed to be the real representation of Muhammed but which was actually some random guy from a French pig-squealing contest). The clerics also allowed the impression that Jyllands-Posten was run by the Danish government to propagate (or that it was owned by the President of Denmark). The dossier the clerics handed out also claimed that Islam was not a recognised religion in Denmark and made out that Muslims in Denmark were mistreated.
One of those clerics has since stated that he should not have done it as it caused so much violence and that the cartoons themselves are ok.
Now I'm pretty certain that if some radical rabbi went to Israel with the picture I linked to above, added some pictures from other sources making fun of the Holocaust and made out that Norway's government supported it, some violent **** would go down at the Norwegian embassy.
When Charlie Hebdo reprinted those pictures they did so against that background. When they later printed an issue with Muhammed as the editor, they reminded people that they agreed with pig-faced Muhammed. Don't kid yourself into believing this is just about some cartoons of Muhammed. To do so is to be just as disrespectful to Muslims as you claim other people on the internet are being.
EDIT : Clerics not imams.