By Matthew Cochran
Thursday, July 05, 2018
As progressives continue to tear our social fabric apart
by mobbing people in restaurants, calling for social upheaval to overturn
elections, and so forth, they naturally provoke stronger and stronger reactions
from the Right. As we grapple with this new reality, conservatives have to
figure out how far is too far when fighting back. But while appropriate
restraint is always a part of this consideration, we go too far when we decide
that we must always adhere to every aspect of a dying civility no matter the
cost. Failing to openly defy the Left’s blatant aggression does not preserve
civility — it only emboldens the uncivil and betrays their victims.
Conservatives make a category error when we declare that
we should rather lose the culture war than be uncivil. Like most such errors,
this one is rooted in a powerful truth: On moral absolutes, we should
absolutely rather lose than violate them. It really is better to fail than to
succeed by murdering; it really is better to suffer than to enjoy adultery;
etc. Nevertheless, the error creeps in because conservatives tend to put
certain kinds of traditional behavior into this same category. Contrary to this
tendency, things like courtesy and civility are not moral absolutes; they are
social contracts.
Nowhere is this made clearer than when our rules of
courtesy and civility permit or even enjoin the violation of true moral
absolutes. Go back a little ways into our history and you’ll find that dueling
was a civil and courteous practice — violent, sure, but rooted in exactly the
sort of manners, rules, and traditions that mark courtesy. That doesn’t mean it
was moral — or even a terribly good idea — but it was civil.
Go back even further, and you can read some of the old
stories of chivalry. Doing so will reveal the extent to which people
romanticized things like knights errant committing adultery with their ladies
because it would be discourteous to refuse. One such story has Lancelot not
only sleeping with Guinevere at her request, but also following up the adultery
by killing a fellow knight who (rightly) accused his lady of adultery.
Chivalry, you see, demanded that Lancelot defend her honor. Conservatives pine
over the loss of chivalry, but the truth is that it was often pretty messed up.
There is, after all, a reason that Don Quixote was such effective satire.
Because civility is not a moral absolute and its form is
always adjusting along with culture, it’s requirements are determined primarily
by social contract — the kind of behavior we all implicitly or explicitly agree
to when interacting with one another. Historically, some of these contracts
have been great blessings while others have been reprehensible, but all are, by
nature, contracts.
The detail that conservatives tend to forget is that when
one party violates a contract, the other party is no longer bound by all of its
terms. If you sign a contract to buy a car, and the dealer refuses to turn it
over you, you aren’t “sinking to their level” by refusing to hand over your
money. If you contract an employee who never shows up for work, you aren’t
“repaying evil for evil” by withholding his wages. The same is true when
dealing with people who are deliberately uncivil to civil people — it fundamentally
changes what the rest of society owes them.
To be sure, this doesn’t mean that we must recklessly
abandon civility whenever we get angry at the latest atrocious behavior from
liberals. Civility is extremely valuable and is never something that should be
tossed aside lightly. You need only look at the social justice left to see the
consequences of doing so. Their enemies are not limited to conservatives. They
rail just as hard against common sense when they melt down over beliefs that
were shared by virtually everyone who ever lived until last week. They even
cannibalize the very leftists who carried them to term whenever they’re
triggered. Accordingly, conservatives are quite right to try and conserve
valuable social structures like courtesy — they prevent all manner of chaos and
suffering.
That said, civility does not actually exist between two
parties when even one of them is deliberately uncivil. The unfortunate reality
is that we increasingly find ourselves in circumstances in which there is
nothing left to conserve. We need to stop taking the lazy road of “be civil
though the heavens fall” and begin being deliberate about when to be civil —
and when not to be.
For starters, I suggest the following guidelines:
First, always be civil to those who are consistently
willing to be civil to you. There are liberals with whom you can sit down and
have a rational conversation. We can certainly argue about how many there are
as compared to social justice warriors, but I personally know some (and hopefully
you do too.) And realistically, the more SJW’s turn on the old guard, the more
liberals will start realizing that maybe civility isn’t such a bad idea after
all and work to conserve it. That is, after all, how Jordan Peterson (who does
identify as a liberal) became so popular.
Second, always be civil when a civil solution exists.
This is why we don’t respond in kind when a Bernie bro tries to assassinate
Republican politicians or when activists threaten to murder their children. The
rule of law may be imperfect, but it’s still adequate for dealing with these
kinds of problems. Patience is still a virtue. Given the inherent chaos of
incivility, its worth waiting for legal justice in these kinds of cases. The
same can be said of the unhinged liberal journalists and actors calling for
violence. Their institutions and bully pulpits are already dying — and good
riddance. We don’t need to speed up the process by threatening them in turn.
Third, always be civil when being uncivil will cause more
harm than good. Even when incivility is thought to be justified, it may still
remain unwise. Nowhere is this better exemplified than in the pro-life
movement. We know that the blood of the innocent continues to flow, but we’re
also temperate enough to not only know that murder is wrong, but also that
turning to violence is not a practical solution to saving the lives of the
unborn. In the broader culture war, there can likewise be great value in
restraint. After all, the more unhinged the left becomes, the more ordinary
people will be repelled by them and gravitate towards the right.
At least that’s what would happen if ordinary people
weren’t scared of being abandoned to these lunatics after accidentally saying
the wrong thing. That leads us to the fourth point: When none of the above
apply, we must be uncivil when we have a responsibility to protect the ordinary
people in our care from uncivil people. For the most part, these situations
crop up when we have to deal with committed social justice warriors — our
modern heretic hunters continuously raising cries of “racist,” “sexist,” and so
forth.
Some of the most pertinent of these situations concern
simple participation in the economy. Civility is what allows people of
different ideologies to work together effectively on those matters that aren’t
rooted in ideology. I can, have, and do work with people whose politics are
very different from my own, and getting along has never been a problem for any
of us.
What is a problem is what we’re now seeing from the SJW’s
who, unlike the rest of us, cannot abide working with people who are different.
When they detect badthink in coworkers or business owners, they do everything
they can to destroy them professionally. There’s no shortage of public
examples, from Brandon Eich to Barronelle Stutzman to James Damore, but there
are far more who never made the news.
Because of this viciousness, it is every good employer’s
responsibility to avoid hiring SJW’s in the first place, and if that fails, to
make sure they’re never put in any kind of position of authority where they can
harm their coworkers. Those in charge of organizations also need to start
reducing the power of human resources departments and rolling back the nebulous
codes of conduct that SJW’s have weaponized.
It may not be how we’ve always done things, and it may be
uncivil, but we absolutely need to blacklist the blacklisters. It’s not because
they have different politics, but because they’re breaking our social contracts
in terribly destructive ways and attacking our neighbors. When someone targets
one of your people over something that turns out to be innocuous, it’s the
accuser that needs to be disciplined. Anything less is a betrayal of the good
people for whom we are responsible. You cannot conserve civility by constantly
acquiescing to the uncivil.
Fifth, always be uncivil when truths that must be spoken
are deemed uncivil. The whole leftist program of calling everyone a bigot over
the tiniest of perceived slights is a transparent attempt to rewrite our social
contracts and portray illicit common sense and other alleged thought crimes as
uncivil, in order to enforce a code of silence. To our shame, these attempts
have been successful inasmuch as conservatives have shrunk back in fear and
agreed to these changes.
But truth is of far more consequence than courtesy. When
the left forces these two into conflict, there should be no question about
which of the two we need to maintain. We need to speak up, and we need to do so
unapologetically. Apology is pretty much the default setting for conservatives.
Having the capacity for self-reflection, we can always find something that we
could have done better or said differently.
Our inclination is therefore to apologize on demand as a
courtesy for the sake of defusing conflict (and usually demand that our
compatriots do the same.) But when it comes to SJW’s, apologies don’t avoid a
fuss — they whet appetites. Apologies are the inches which lead them to take
miles, because they are frequently treated as confessions and therefore license
for further retribution.
Finally, conservatives need to stop coming down so hard
on people who are being uncivil towards the uncivil. Deciding when civility is
appropriate is a fine line to walk, and it’s to be expected that we will
stumble from time-to-time as we find our way. On one side of that line is
bullying, but on the other is cowardice. As long as conservatives reserve their
outrage for the former, their representatives are always going to be the
latter.
President Trump is perhaps the quintessential example of
this dynamic. I am on the record as being one of those who was very
uncomfortable with electing him — because of his seemingly careless rhetoric,
his character flaws, and because he had been a Democrat until about 5 minutes
before running as a Republican. Nevertheless, I can’t help but admit that it’s
looking more and more like I was wrong. I don’t agree with everything he’s
done, and I think it’s literally impossible to agree with everything he’s said,
but all-in-all he’s performed much better than any other Republican candidate
was likely to do.
The recent violence against journalists at the Annapolis
Capital Gazette has resulted in many people falsely blaming President Trump
because of his open contempt for the mainstream media — despite the shooter’s
clearly unrelated motives. Is the president’s rhetoric often uncivil?
Certainly. And yet, we all know what kind of liars and ignoramuses often
populate the mainstream media.
Uncivil or not, it is entirely appropriate to disrespect
their professed delusions of being brave servants of the truth. And in fact,
the lion’s share of Trump’s success has resulted from his blatant unwillingness
to be civil to them. I might disapprove of his rhetorical extremities
sometimes, but that’s a moral failing which pales in comparison to the
atrocious cowardice shown by the average Republican tripping over himself to
kowtow to The New York Times.
Now, given how many conservatives are Christians (as I
am), we do need to consider whether these guidelines are acceptable from a
biblical perspective. Christians are, of course, bound to do unto others as we
would have them do unto us. But we sometimes forget that this means doing unto
all others.
Would you want your boss to hire as your coworker an SJW
who wants to co-opt your organization for his political ends and purge you from
your job? Then don’t do that to the workers under your own employ. Would you
want people to merely give a dismissive shrug and continue patronizing
restaurants who have thrown you out for you political beliefs because you’re
less valuable to people than their being seen as well-mannered? Then don’t
remain silent and shrug off what happened to people like Sarah Huckabee
Sanders. Dear Christian, if you were to suddenly become a vicious person,
wouldn’t you want to be restrained from harming your neighbors? Then do unto
the vicious SJW as you would have done unto a vicious you.
By all means, love your enemies, as Christ said; but in
so doing, don’t forget to love the family, friends, employees, and neighbors
whom God has given into your care. And let’s face it: Jesus was not always
civil and courteous, as many pharisees and money-changers could attest.
Christians must not take civility and courtesy as license to abandon the
vocations God has given us and thereby act immorally towards the past and
future victims of SJWs. Christians are by no means commanded to abandon their
neighbors by holding them to the terms of broken contracts.
Like it or not, we are in an existential struggle with
the social justice left. They do not want to compromise. They don’t really even
want to merely get their way. They want to annihilate opposing opinions. The
whole point of calling everyone who disagrees with them Nazis is that punching
Nazis is a socially acceptable solution. The only common debate about whether
it would be okay to kill Hitler is about whether it would still be okay to
travel back in time and kill him as an infant.
It is therefore no great mystery why the left is becoming
more and more comfortable with violence. You do not compromise with Nazis, you
eliminate them. So next time one of them flips out about Chick-Fil-A, ask
yourself something: If they can’t even stand the thought of Christians selling
chicken sandwiches; exactly what place do you think they will allow us to occupy
in society when they’re in charge? Are you really going to abandon your family,
your friends, your fellow conservatives, and your fellow Christians to the
left’s non-existent mercy simply because it would be impolite to do otherwise?
One doesn’t have to don a black mask and start throwing
bricks at social justice warriors in order to fight them. Nor do we need to
eject from our lives anyone who disagrees with us. We do, however, need to
protect our families and our nation from the ones who do these things. So stop
virtue signaling about how you’ll be polite to the very grave, and start
deliberating about when its right to be civil and when it’s not.
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