October 1, 2017

Word: The misdirection of political correctness

This article from the American Scholar is among the best I've read on the topic. Being one of six children, I learned early in life that many would not agree with me but that I still had to get along with them. The same is true of being any American. This doesn't mean you don't argue, but among the our rights is the right to be wrong as long as you don't harm others in a manner more damaging than, say, using the wrong words. A few excerpts from the article follow - Sam Smith

William Deresiewicz, American Scholar - That, by the way, is why liberal students (and liberals in general) are so bad at defending their own positions. They never have to, so they never learn to. That is also why it tends to be so easy for conservatives to goad them into incoherent anger. Nothing makes you more enraged than an argument you cannot answer. But the reason to listen to people who disagree with you is not so you can learn to refute them. The reason is that you may be wrong. In fact, you are wrong: about some things and probably about a lot of things. There is zero percent chance that any one of us is 100 percent correct. That, in turn, is why freedom of expression includes the right to hear as well as speak, and why disinviting campus speakers abridges the speech rights of students as well as of the speakers themselves....

There is one category that the religion of the liberal elite does not recognize—that its purpose, one might almost conclude, is to conceal: class. Class at fancy colleges, as throughout American society, has been the unspeakable word, the great forbidden truth. And the exclusion of class on selective college campuses enables the exclusion of a class. It has long struck me in leftist or PC rhetoric how often “white” is conflated with “wealthy,” as if all white people were wealthy and all wealthy people were white. In fact, more than 40 percent of poor Americans are white. Roughly 60 percent of working-class Americans are white. Almost two-thirds of white Americans are poor or working-class. Altogether, lower-income whites make up about 40 percent of the country, yet they are almost entirely absent on elite college campuses, where they amount, at most, to a few percent and constitute, by a wide margin, the single most underrepresented group.....

I say this, by the way, as an atheist, a democratic socialist, a native northeasterner, a person who believes that colleges should not have sports teams in the first place—and in case it isn’t obvious by now, a card-carrying member of the liberal elite...

Let me be clear. I recognize that both the culture of political correctness and the recent forms of campus agitation are responding to enormous, intractable national problems. There is systemic racism and individual bigotry in the United States, and colleges are not immune from either. There is systemic sexism and sexual assault in society at large, and campuses are no exception. The call for safe spaces and trigger warnings, the desire to eliminate micro-aggressions, the demand for the removal of offensive symbols and the suppression of offensive language: however foolish some of these might be as policy prescriptions (especially the first two), however absurd as they work themselves out on the ground, all originate in deeply legitimate concerns.

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

Two thoughts...

First alludes to that old expression about 'Art'. Something about... 'I know what I don't like'. And, for many Americans that aren't on the Right, that statement might also pertain to 'government'. Although, most might not even notice or appreciate 'bad government' until it affects them personally.

Second might involve Sociology, Anatomy and Physiology.
And so... My impression is that it is easy to join groups of 'like-minded' individuals, giving personal comfort both emotionally, and physically (you know, 'power' in numbers). Personally, at times, I have felt it an easier thing to forgo the time-taking task of reading articles and weigh various sides to issues, and simply become carried away with the 'simple' rhetoric that I hear from people on the 'Right'. Short, emotionally laden, sometimes hate filled quips – that's the ticket. Things that 'feed' the population that read at the 6th grade level. Things that appeal to those being dominated by their 'reptilian' brain; ruled by fear, hate, adrenaline, and testosterone.

I've been 'young', I know.

As in 'Art', the process of expressing complex Political Ideas, Structures, Processes, etc. is not an easy task. It might be easy to simply say “Wow, look at those puppies” when looking at a painting of a nude. Or, Politically, “Kill those foreigners”... for some simply defined esoteric reason like Religion, Economic Structure, or Race.

There is no way to 'argue with logic like that'. Don't try. Walk away.

Unfortunately, we are entering an era of reenactment. Maybe it is something intrinsically wrong with people. Something genetically engineered over years of fighting wars between groups of people, tribes of people, nations of people, etc. for various reasons.

And like in the past, the meanest, toughest, greediest a..holes will win. Although, WWI and WWII were exceptions - but to make my point, there are those today that are making it something 'patriotic' to be exactly what we fought against in WWII.

Anonymous said...

Maybe it is something intrinsically wrong with people. ... And like in the past, the meanest, toughest, greediest a..holes will win.

Nope, the only thing "wrong with" people is that we're adaptable.

If those of us able to resist adapting to the overt psychopathy that's now dominant can get together and take over government, we can change the model to which people will then, whether consciously or unconsciously, adapt themselves.

It's our choice. We can reward goodness, cooperation, easy-going personalities, and punish greed, chicanery, and exploitation. And then sit back and watch people gradually adapt and become better, more cooperative and easy-going, less concerned about "stuff", and more punitive toward those that exploit others.

It's Nature's most basic rule: we do what pays off.

Anonymous said...

Re: Anon @ 6:54PM

It would be nice to believe that, but sounds like 'wishful-thinking'.