By Stella Morabito
Wednesday, June 06, 2018
People are either pro-thought or anti-thought.
The Supreme Court’s contortions on the Masterpiece
Cakeshop case should dispel any doubts about this. Defendant Jack Phillips had
chosen not to create an artistic cake for a same-sex ceremony because doing so
would violate his conviction that marriage is the sacred union of one man and
one woman.
As David Harsanyi noted in The Federalist, the Supreme
Court avoided the core issues of freedom of thought and speech while ruling for
Phillips: “Phillips only won his case because the Supreme Court found that Colorado
didn’t display religious neutrality when punishing him for his beliefs.”
So the usual political labels of Left and Right cannot
explain the exploding attacks on freedom of speech and conscience that are
running rampant today. The war on speech is basically a war on thought. Let’s
review just a few examples that confirm power elites’ interest in abolishing
freedom of thought:
• On college
campuses: Administrators increasingly permit and expect students to disrupt and
even riot at talks by invited speakers and scholars some deem politically
incorrect.
• At Google:
Software engineer James Damore was summarily fired for expressing a politically
incorrect opinion, despite his copious citations of facts to back up his
thesis.
• At The Atlantic Monthly: Writer Kevin
Williamson was quickly fired for publicly expressing a politically incorrect
opinion despite the fact that his opinion was well known before his firing, and
that he was actually hired in part for his reputation as a talented
provocateur.
• At Mozilla: Activists forced the resignation
of CEO Brendan Eich when they discovered that he privately donated to a
politically incorrect cause—California’s Proposition 8, which in 2008 confirmed
the legal definition of marriage as the union of one man and one woman. Eich
chose to resign rather than recant his thoughts.
• In New York
City: Fines of up to $250,000 if you “misgender” a person.
Human resources departments in corporations and
institutions across the nation can leverage political correctness to fire any
employee who might be overheard or construed to have expressed a politically
incorrect opinion. The paralyzing fear of misspeaking on the job has been an
issue of concern for at least 10 years now.
Consider also the growing hypocrisy of the American Civil
Liberties Union. Its professed purpose was to defend the First Amendment. Sure,
every once in a while it still tries to promote its cover story by choosing a
politically incorrect case to defend, such as one by Milo Yiannopoulos.
Yet it increasingly focuses its efforts on attacks on
freedom of conscience, especially when the defendant is expressing a
politically incorrect opinion. The ACLU now routinely joins the efforts of
special interests to force people in in artistic fields (photography,
decorating, music, etc.) to apply their creative efforts to ceremonies that
directly violate their religious beliefs.
The great divide is really between pro-thought and
anti-thought perspectives.
The Hinge Pin Is
Thought Freedom
Let’s try to crystallize what this all means. The push
for hate speech laws has little to do with promoting tolerance while protecting
speech. Compelled speech always—always—all boils down to an effort to control
what people think and how.
Of course, the old-fashioned and democratic way of
changing minds is through skilled persuasion, debate, reason, and open
discourse. But today’s heavy-handed forcing of speech—through court orders,
preventing real conversation on campuses, and students’ conditioned emotional
reflexes (the “trigger effect” over hearing a non-PC opinion)—is nothing less
than an attempt by various power elites to control what you are allowed to
think. It’s also to condition you, Pavlov-style, to comply.
So we now have two political camps that ever more
describe how Americans approach culture and life: pro-thought and anti-thought.
In one camp are those who respect and value everybody’s right to think his own
thoughts. In the other are those who already have the “right answer” and thus
are either not concerned about freedom of thought, or are outright hostile to
it.
For the latter, government regulation of speech is the
primary means to control thought. Speech is simply a byproduct and symbolic
expression of thought, after all. Each perspective is taken up in varying
degrees by both the pro-thought or anti-thought camp. But everything we’re
seeing in politics today, no matter the policy or the issue, hinges in one way
or another on those two outlooks.
So we ought to just drop all partisan labels as
meaningless. Calling someone “progressive,” “right wing,” “leftist,”
“conservative,” “liberal,” “Republican,” “Democrat,” “wingnut,” or “alt-right”
only hinders thoughtfulness and conversation. Those terms are little more than
pools of quicksand in the swamp of today’s vacuous political dialogue.
Put another way, we’d get more clarity if people simply
identified in one of two ways:
• As a free
thinker. Free thinkers believe freedom of thought is essential to the capacity
to think clearly and to interact with other people—and therefore to our ability
to achieve social harmony; or
• As a thought
policer. Thought policers generally view honest self-expression as dangerous to
collective solidarity (or to their personal perspectives), and therefore
something for the state to control.
Does Political
Correctness Promote Hate Speech?
Most actual “hate speech” is probably not spontaneous at
all. It’s much more a byproduct of hate speech laws that really look to read
people’s minds in order to sniff out the possibility of any hate thought.
Sometimes I even get the impression that people who thoughtlessly spew out
stupid and offensive rhetoric—as in the recent case of Roseanne Barr—are just
taking the bait of agitators who are in the very business of drawing out that
sort of behavior.
So here’s a question worth exploring: Can hate speech
laws and political correctness actually promote compulsive talking in some
people, or worsen, through social anxiety, other forms of obsessive compulsive
behavior? Are some offenders like Barr responding to today’s strictures on
conversation as any neurotic stricken with “talkaholism” might?
The delusion that we are all surrounded by Big Hate is
fed to us by the relentless work of well-funded organizations like the Southern
Poverty Law Center. I don’t think there can be any doubt that the SPLC has a
vested interest in stirring up the illusion of Big Hate, because it’s such an
integral part of their raison d’etre.
Sadly, nobody can ever pursue happiness in such a toxic, chaotic environment.
Not even the jailers.
The First Freedom:
Freedom of Thought
Freedom of thought comes before freedom of speech. We must remember that it is the source of
any inalienable right. We ought to be
talking about it as though it is. If we don’t recognize this reality, then we
can’t protect it.
Instead, we eventually enter a void in which increasingly
unknown authorities dictate our speech and attitudes. Once that happens, our
very capacity to think our own thoughts becomes eroded, and the downward spiral
continues. Without an ethos and legal structure to protect the right of
individuals to think clearly and independently, civil society collapses, along
with all respect for human dignity and individual uniqueness.
Let’s remember that all of the other First Amendment
rights follow in logical order from the first freedom of
religion/belief/conscience/thought. Freedom of speech is the right to express what you think and believe.
Freedom of press means the right to record
those expressed thoughts in writing or other media. In this vein, freedom of
association would mean being able to deliver
your ideas to anyone willing to listen. It means the right to peaceably
assemble and have open conversation with other people.
The heavy hand of the state has no right to cut off or
interfere in our ability to spark thoughtful conversations. If the state
violates our First Amendment rights, the First Amendment also gives us the
right to petition as a means of fighting back against that abuse of power.
Why Tyrants Always
Hate Free Thought
Dictators have relentlessly attacked freedom of thought
from time immemorial. Tyrants have always sought to control what people think,
in order to control what people say and do. Of course, since they can’t
mind-read, they always try to alter thoughts by controlling speech. So none of
the first freedoms is negotiable. But we shouldn’t kid ourselves that the big
prize for totalitarians isn’t thought.
The American founders were well-versed in the history of
tyranny, going back at least as far as the murderous reigns of Roman Emperors
Nero and Caligula or Attila the Hun. The twentieth century alone offers
countless examples, including Joseph Stalin’s Red Terror in the Soviet Union or
Adolf Hitler’s Germany or Mao Zedong’s Cultural Revolution in China. In such
dystopias, people were routinely punished—often harshly, including death—for
something as simple as laughing at an unauthorized joke.
Such diehard patterns of tyranny need a workable
antidote, and that antidote is first and foremost independent thought. That’s
exactly why the American Founders enshrined freedom of religion as the very
first freedom listed under the First Amendment in the Bill of Rights of the
U.S. Constitution. After all, freedom of religion simply means you have the
God-given right to think your own thoughts and believe whatever you believe,
even if you believe nobody but you should have that right.
Are You a Free
Thinker?
Once the Mass State starts manipulating language by
legislating everyday expressions, such as forcing every citizen to adhere to
unfamiliar pronoun protocols under the guise of anti-discrimination, it builds
walls between people. That’s exactly what it’s designed to do.
We’ve probably all observed how political correctness
controls speech and thought by inducing self-censorship. How does this happen?
Through manipulating the primal human terror of being socially isolated for
non-compliance. People comply with political correctness in order to avoid that
perceived isolation. Yet political correctness is designed to isolate us
socially through our compliance with it! Heads, they win; tails, you lose.
The only way to avoid that Catch-22 is to stand up to political
correctness before its illusions root too deeply. The First Amendment is a
use-it-or-lose-it proposition. And it’s all or nothing.
The only way the bubble of political correctness can pop
is if all free thinkers are inclined to follow through with the First
Amendment. Thinking will only remain free as long as we express our thoughts by
speaking them, recording them, and cross-pollinating them through peaceful
assembly. Nothing less can insure against the de-humanizing effects of thought
policing.
Let’s think about that. And talk about it constantly.
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