By Jonah Goldberg
Tuesday, February 17, 2015
I once asked my late father if he had any experiences
with anti-Semitism. There weren’t many — although that was probably in part
because of his scoring methodology.
The Irish kids who beat up the Jewish kids in his Bronx
neighborhood didn’t do so because they were anti-Semitic, but because “they had
to fight somebody,” as my dad put it. Today, such behavior would probably be
called a hate crime.
So I suppose that’s progress.
He did tell me that the first time someone said to him
“Don’t Jew me” was during his freshman year at the University of Michigan.
He was more shocked than offended. He couldn’t believe
someone he was friends with could be so stupid.
Today we call such stupidity “insensitivity.” Whether
that counts as progress is an open question.
I visited my father’s alma mater for the first time last
week. The University of Michigan’s chapter of the Young Americans for Freedom
invited me to give a speech.
A banner warning the “thought police” of my imminent
arrival was torn down, presumably by the irony-impaired thought police.
The school has been in the news recently for such
shenanigans and worse. For instance, student Omar Mahmood, a columnist for both
the Michigan Daily and the conservative Michigan Review, was fired from the Daily
for writing a parody piece for the Review about the oppression of the
“left-handyd.”
In the piece, Mahmood’s narrator takes a comment from a
“white cis-gendered hetero upper-class man” as microaggression.
“Behind his words I sensed a patronizing sneer, as if he
expected me to be a spokespersyn for my whole race. He offered his hand to help
me up, and I thought to myself how this might be a manifestation of the
patriarchy patronizing me.”
The humor-deficient editors of the Michigan Daily claimed
the column had created a “hostile environment” because one editor felt
“threatened” by Mahmood’s mockery of microaggressions. He was ultimately fired.
Later, Mahmood’s dorm doorway was pelted with eggs and
festooned with profanity-laced notes and, oddly, a picture of Satan.
Administration efforts to find the perps appear lackadaisical compared to OJ’s
pursuit of the real killers.
Of course, if Mahmood had been attacked for something
related to his Muslim faith, you can bet the administration would go to DEFCON
1.
That’s because the University of Michigan wants to be an
intolerance-free zone — so long as it’s intolerance of things the administration
finds intolerable.
To that end, the school rolled out its Inclusive Language
Campaign. It contains a list of taboo phrases that no one should use lest they
give offense.
The campaign is intended to be “educational, not
regulatory,” though some students report that they’ve been asked to sign a
pledge vowing to avoid using such phrases as “ghetto,” ‘‘that’s so gay,”
‘‘that’s retarded” and “tranny.”
Students are also told they shouldn’t say things like “I
want to die” (say, after doing badly on a test) because it can “diminish the
experience of those who have attempted or committed suicide.”
I would’ve thought those who have committed suicide would
be immune to such concerns.
Also on the list is any effort to turn Jew into a verb.
So, roughly 75 years after my dad was told by an idiot “Don’t Jew me,” the
battle continues.
I have no problem with teaching students to have good
manners. I’m less convinced that the PC priesthood is winning the war on
intolerance.
It’s absolutely true that majorities owe minorities
respect. What’s lost is any appreciation of the fact that minorities owe
majorities respect too. That’s what Mahmood was getting at.
Instead, we’re teaching young people that being offended
is an ideological priority.
Indeed, the coin of the campus realm today is victimhood,
grievance and offense. An entirely well-intentioned — and syntactically
accurate — use of the wrong word is an invitation to being called a racist,
homophobe, sexist, etc. (while actual disagreement is tantamount to heresy).
The burden of proof then falls on the accused, a burden
that often can’t be met absent re-education. And for the offended “victim,” a
stupid comment or even a harmless newspaper column becomes a source of trauma.
Yes, words can hurt. But teaching these delicate flowers
to make too big a deal out of them will likely do more lasting damage.
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