WHAT I REALLY MEANT
. . .
Political correctness! Political correctness has become a
scourge on public discourse, even private opinion on occasion.
PC, as it has become
to be called, is an insult to the First Amendment. As Americans, we have
freedom of speech. Let’s be blunt: Freedom of speech is meant under the first right
of the Bill of Rights to permit (encourage?) criticism of the federal
government. Controlling government – our governors
and would-be controllers – would be impossible without that freedom. If our
political leaders could manipulate what and how citizens speak and write, the
American Revolution would have been for naught. We the people might as well
have remained British subjects with all the restraints that existed for Britons
of that time. The republican form of government we have – and hope to continue
to enjoy – is dependent upon unfettered debate of public issues so that especially
elected governmental officeholders are indeed representative of the citizenry. Plain
talk is absolutely necessary to that end.
But as practiced,
political correctness goes further than attempting control over political
behavior; some intend it as a tool for controlling social behavior.
Every day, it seems,
some celebrity, local official, sports figure, senator, representative –
whoever – says something that is reported in the news media; and pundits and
others in the public eye opine and the person speaking his or her mind is
subject to derision. Statements subject to such oversight usually involve sex,
religion, self-conduct, in addition to politics. Switch on the TV right now to
some cable news outlet and chances are, within a relatively short time, such a
PC controversy will be front and center.
So pervasive has PC
become that political leanings proffer no immunity. Right, left or center,
someone is going to be offended by outspoken opinion, and he or she will
complain. If that comment is deemed useful to advancing a campaign of some sort,
the remark can go viral (in au courant
usage). Unintentional use of a wrong word to express a thought receives no
pass; such usage is deemed intentional and therefore damning. Widely known
personages can no longer react naturally to questions. They must be ever alert
to possible reactions to their speech.
A couple of problems
with PC: Who decides what words and thoughts are correct; who or what idea is
stifled by such restraint? What ever happened to tolerance?
The marketplace of
ideas is the equivalent of academic freedom. Tenured professors will fight to say
and teach whatever they wish in the name of pursuing truth as they see it. Yet,
academe is notorious for PC. Speech codes have been imposed on faculties and
students, speakers with certain political leanings have been barred from campus
or hectored when they appeared. Examples are legion.
In entertainment, ethnic humor has been scorned in the
name of political correctness. Only paeans to particular members of races or
ethnic groups themselves are tolerated. Some religions are protected by PC
while others are fair game. (Need Islam and Christianity be cited?)
Cries of racism are
perhaps the most numerous. Phrases that have entered the everyday jargon are now
being analyzed etymologically, bringing up origins that have long been forgot.
Yet speakers innocently using such a word or phrase are hounded by both PC
practitioners and political opponents. (See George Allen’s response to a
heckler; Colin Powell’s take on “shuck and jive” as used by Sarah Palin.)
More and more
prevalent are PC errors involving sexual preference. Since the onslaught of the
Pill, behavior once restricted to complete privacy has emerged, not into
sunlight, but into the glare of klieg lights (or whatever has replaced that
illumination in TV studios). Subjects once verboten
in locker rooms are the material of advertising campaigns. Adherents to certain
life styles are now celebrated when in the past they were the objects of
derision and sometimes, unjustly, violence. Even a smaller subset (LBGT) is
protected through legislation.
Some truly
prejudiced people still exist in this country and elsewhere. They can be found
up and down the class structure. But they are few. Society will always have its
boors, louts and oafs. Yet few of those are among personalities covered by
People magazine, The New York Times, CBS and Fox News.
Offended persons
most likely to cite PC fouls too often are motivated by other than purity of
human relations. Offending persons often seem not to have intended any
wrong-doing, learning only of their so-called faux pas upon being hounded by opponent and by the press.
So persuasive have
PC partisans become that everyday folks can receive correction from a PC
adherent in the office, at the grocery or on the golf course. Descriptions that
once were clear and used by professionals are now rejected. Cripple has become
physically handicapped. Why is one condemned and the other acceptable? There is
no obvious reason. The former inherently is no insult; the latter is no more
sympathetic.
People of good will
who champion polite behavior or who practice religion or who are “cultured”
will, by the brunt of their upbringing, shun offensive speech and mannerisms. Some
of these people, particularly the older ones, did grow up with some degree of
racism in their outlooks or attitudes; and now reject and control those
feelings. Not everyone, of course.
Political
correctness’s real danger is that a few influential sources might, over time,
steer an entire culture. Sure, mean intolerance and hatred have no place in any
productive society, and such cannot be defended in any way, PC, nonetheless,
can stifle and subvert open debate. Think not?
A great divide in
the United States has developed and is widening over the observable societal ramifications
of sexuality: Same-sex marriage, abortion, contraception, single-parent
families. All of these have consequences beyond general acceptance or
rejection. Besides moral aspects, there are governmental actions dealing with
problems that for amelioration end in expenditure of billions, trillions of
public moneys. And other societal aspects are similarly important to the common
weal. Listing them is for another exercise.
If those subjects
are removed from the public square by severe application of political
correctness and are not debated on their substance, this country founded for
the sake of individual freedoms will evolve into something else.
That something else
could be a country unrecognizable from what it now is.
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