This
year’s Republican candidate for the office of President of the United States is
admired by his supporters for “telling it like it is.” Yesterday on the radio I
heard a young college woman say that “our country is in crisis and we can’t
afford ‘political correctness.’”
I
saw red.
The term ‘political correctness’ gets my goat. People say ‘politically
correct’ when they suspect some truth is being covered over, and they say
‘politically incorrect,’ with a smirk, when taking pride in being offensive. At
the risk of offending, let me say that the phrase makes me want to puke, whoever uses it, in
whatever context.
What
was the American language like before this nasty little term came into common
usage?
We
spoke of civil discourse, and we tried to be civil in our speech. We attempted
to remain polite when provoked, and when anger got the better of us, we were
ashamed afterward. We expected more of ourselves and one another – at least
when sober. Of course, we fell from grace now and then -- we are human -- but drunken ravings were not the standard for public speech.
Manners
and decency were respected in national life, as in smaller groups and
communities across the country. Abusive name-calling intended to humiliate or
belittle occurred, but most of us recognized it for what it was,
because we were taught, by parents and teachers, to avoid hurting other
people’s feelings. In turn, we taught our children the same lessons.
This
country has seen crisis before. The United States began with a Revolution,
survived wars, and struggled through crushing economic hardship during the
Great Depression. We have been divided as a nation more than once in our past.
Political campaigns have at times been ugly, and political cartoons have
stooped to cruel caricature. But when has a candidate for the highest office in
the land made public statements insulting women, minorities, people with
disabilities, and military veterans?
And
what is there in such statements that does anything to resolve crisis?
Cruelly
inflicting pain is not courage. Spewing abuse is not honesty. Thoughtlessness is not any kind of moral standard, and preying on fear
and encouraging hatred is not “doing what needs to be done.” Neither is any of that some
kind of trivial, just slightly naughty “political incorrectness.” Rude, boorish, cruel, hateful, hurtful, and inflammatory statements need to be called what they are.
Speech
is behavior, and inflammatory speech does not heal a nation.
“We
don’t have time for political correctness,” the young college girl said. We’re
in crisis, she believes. Given the reality of crisis, I would ask the following questions:
·
Do
we have time for name-calling and scapegoating?
·
Do
we have time to escalate fear and deepen divisions in our country, driving people further apart?
·
Do
we have time to alienate sincere lovers of America on either side of the aisle
– or out in the vestibule?
·
And
if national leaders don’t model for young Americans minimum standards of
decency, will we have time to start over, or will it be too late?
7 comments:
Well said, Pamela! The digs at "political correctness" are just a result of sloppy thinking---or no thinking at all.
Pamela, THANK YOU! You have expressed my own feelings, and those of many others! What's happening is unprecedented, our assumptions of basic civility and decency in our country are being shattered. We can only hope that the better side of our collective human natures will prevail. If only your voice would be listened to by those who, unfortunately, will never hear it.
If we're in crisis, look at how anreal crisis is handled. Does an airline pilot whose engine is failing curse and flail his arms and say, "It's rigged!" No, cool, calm, thoughtful and reflective behavior is what's called for. It's also what we need now in the Oval Office. (Ben's comment after I read this post to him.)
Thank you all. I ran across a great line today in a book by the Canadian philosopher Charles Taylor: "Civilization is in a sense a matter of feeling shame in the appropriate places." Some people think shame itself is a feeling we should abandon; on the contrary, I feel it is shameless behavior that should be jettisoned. Put another way, 'shameless' should not be made a term of approbation.
Great post, Pamela! I completely agree with you. You managed to express my thoughts so articulately!!
IMO, political correctness, in most instances simple politeness,
cuts both ways by the naysayers. Some would say that "Happy Holidays" is politically incorrect and an egregious insult to
a particular population sector. That sector feels free to call
desperate young women, even those raped, 'baby killers' and evolution and climate scientists as 'stupid' It is the age of
the illogical dichotomy.
And now, what to tell the children? Our children are fretting over what to tell their children! Well, it just has to be the same old lessons: bullying is wrong, name-calling is wrong, hurting other people is wrong, etc., etc. No backing down, my friends, now or ever!
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