Political Correctness: what exactly is it?

topic posted Thu, September 17, 2009 - 3:22 AM by  ScreamBrian
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Hi everyone! This is the topic of our monthly gathering this Sunday in Santa Monica (9-20-09; see the event listing nearby on this tribe page). I hope to see you there!

Whether or not you come to Sunday's meeting, feel free to carry on a discussion by posting your own ideas here, either before or after Sunday's meeting.

Here's this month's topic, which was the clear winner of the email vote this week:


POLITICAL CORRECTNESS: What is it? How has it affected our thinking about politics, for better or worse? Does the term deserve the pejorative status it has? While "Politically Correct" is a fairly new term, it is, arguably, a new label for a very old thing. Think of the various kinds of things that have struck you as being "politically correct." What do they have in common? Are you/ we consistent in our use of the term? Do we simply call "PC" those restrictions on action or speech we disagree with, and withhold the term from those restrictions we agree with? Politically correctness is usually seen as arising from a politically left point of view. But is this accurate? One take on "PC" is that it leads to censorship and the stifling of free debate. Another take is that the label "PC" is little more than a demeaning term for values we should publicly espouse anyway, like appropriateness, politeness, fairness, and respectfulness. We can decide which of these positions (or neither, or both) we think is right.
--------------------------


See you Sunday!

Brian
posted by:
ScreamBrian
Los Angeles
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  • Re: Political Correctness: what exactly is it?

    Thu, September 17, 2009 - 4:07 AM
    OPTIONAL READINGS FOR POLITICAL CORRECTNESS-- I have a few very short readings and a podcast for you to enjoy this month. Many articles and web pages mention Political Correctness, but it was more difficult to find ones that dealt with the issue directly and had something interesting to say about it. Bone up on what philosophers and pundits have been saying about this controversy!


    1. I put three dictionary definitions and a short encyclopedia entry on our club's website (in a posting below this one). These won't by any means settle the question of what political correctness is, of course, but it's a place to start. I also put a short excerpt from a criticism of political correctness from a politically right/ Libertarian view. Combined, all of this is about a page long.

    2. The Philosophy Talk radio show and blog on "Political Correctness": this is a 45-minute audio podcast (downloadable) and 2-page blog entry by one of the Stanford philosophy professors who hosts the radio show. The audio program is a very interesting (I thought) discussion of the issue between three philosophers, each coming from different, though moderate, political points of view. It's hosted by professors but isn't loaded with jargon and doesn't require an academic background in philosophy to follow. Listen online or download to your mp3 player, www.philosophytalk.org/pastSh...ess.htm and/or read the blog entry, titled "Political Correctness and the Speech Fashion War," located halfway down the webpage, theblog.philosophytalk.org/2007....html

    3. The "Political Correctness" entry in the Routeledge Encyclopedia is a 3-4 page article that attempts a balanced, academic summary and analysis of the issue. It struck me as having a mildly politically left bent. www.routledge-ny.com/ref/eth...ness.pdf
    (When I clicked on this link, my web browser gave me a lame warning about making sure this file is "from a trustworthy source." Not to worry -- the page is completely safe.)

    4. Wikipedia, of course, has a "Political Correctness" entry, which gives the kind of uneven, idiosyncratic overview of the issue that we've come to expect from Wikipedia. It talks about its history of the term as well as the concepts and controversies involved, en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Poli...orrectness



    ----------------
    FYI, here are the full vote-by-email results for the month:
    1) Altruism: Is There Really Such A Thing? Should There Be? (20.0 Votes)
    2) Is The Idea Of "An Individual Organism" An Arbitrary Biological Notion? (8.50 Votes)
    3) Is Anything Certain Or Is All Knowledge Fallible And Revisable? (18.75 Votes)
    4) Do We Know Whether Something Is Good Art Rather Than Bad Art? (10.50 Votes)
    5) Political Correctness: What Is It? (32.75 Votes)

    Each topic stays on the list until it wins or consistently receives a paltry number of votes. You may have noticed that the votes do not come in whole numbers. This is not because fractions of a person turn in votes, but because you receive one vote for your top choice, a half vote for your 2nd choice (if you had one), a quarter vote for your 3rd choice, and so on. Recent, regular participants at our gatherings have their vote doubled.
    • Re: Political Correctness: what exactly is it?

      Thu, September 17, 2009 - 12:18 PM
      DICTIONARY DEFINITIONS, from the www.dictionary.com entry for "Political Correctness"

      1. marked by or adhering to a typically progressive orthodoxy on issues involving esp. race, gender, sexual affinity, or ecology. Abbreviation: PC, P.C.
      2. Of, relating to, or supporting broad social, political, and educational change, especially to redress historical injustices in matters such as race, class, gender, and sexual orientation.
      3. Being or perceived as being overconcerned with such change, often to the exclusion of other matters.



      And, an Encyclopedia entry

      US History Encyclopedia: entry for "Political Correctness" at www.answers.com/topic/poli...correctness

      Originally used by old-guard communists to mean toeing the party line, the term "politically correct" was resurrected in the 1970s and early 1980s by rightist writers and activists, who used it in an ironic sense to mock the Left's tendency toward dogmatic adherence to "progressive" behavior and speech.

      The term entered general use in the late 1980s, when neoconservatives adopted "political correctness" as a disparaging name for what they believed was rigid adherence to multicultural ideals on college campuses. Allan Bloom's The Closing of the American Mind (1987) and Dinesh D'Souza's Illiberal Education (1992) became best-sellers indicting academic political correctness. They argued that academic extremists had corrupted higher education through, among other things, affirmative action in admissions, speech codes, and the substitution in the undergraduate curriculum of recent literature by women and minorities for the classics of Western civilization. Proponents of multiculturalism defended expansion of the curriculum and greater diversity within the undergraduate student body as a means of strengthening democracy. They also argued that conservatives often distorted the views of academic liberals, invented widespread oppression from isolated incidents, and used charges of political correctness to silence their opponents.

      In the 1990s the use and meaning of the term continued to expand. "Politically correct" appeared on T-shirts and sports pages and in television show names, newspaper headlines, book titles, comic strips, and ordinary conversations. "P.C." became a label attached to a wide range of liberal positions, including environmentalism, feminism, and, in particular, use of inclusive, inoffensive terminology related to various groups. Rooted in dissatisfaction with university policies and fear of cultural change, charges of political correctness became a popular way to attack liberal activists and their causes.
      • Re: Political Correctness: what exactly is it?

        Thu, September 17, 2009 - 12:22 PM
        A short excerpt from a criticism of political correctness, this time coming from a politically right/ libertarian point of view:

        "Mill's salient distinction is between offence and harm; its implications for political correctness are pellucid. People who are offended by others' languages and practices should not have the liberty to eliminate them, as long as such words and deeds are not harmful. But once this critical distinction between offence and harm is blurred, as it is daily and extravagantly by the politically correct, then those who blur it arrogate to themselves the supremely illegitimate authority to proscribe whatever conduct they deem 'offensive' (for example, affairs between professors and graduate students, or ideologically unpopular research), to silence whatever speech they deem 'offensive' (such as ethnic humour or sexual innuendo), and to censor whatever ideas they deem 'offensive' (for example that there are biologically-based human differences that may not be eradicable by social engineering, or that equal opportunity virtually guarantees unequal outcomes). The near-ubiquitous conflation of offence with harm has sanctioned a thirty-year reign of political terror in North American universities, whose degenerate administrative ideologues daily micromanage the minutiae of thought, speech and deed."


        That's from "The PC Tyranny" by Lou Marinoff. Don't bother reading the entire piece; it's highly biased, hyperbolic and light on philosophical ideas, IMHO. But, if interested, it came from TPM (The Philosophers Magazine), www.philosophersnet.com/magazi...cle.php . You may need a subscription to view this page. If you can't access it, I can send it to you.
        • Re: Political Correctness: what exactly is it?

          Thu, September 17, 2009 - 2:00 PM
          Here's the abovementioned blog entry from the Philosophy Talk radio show (one of the "optional readings" in the posting above).

          theblog.philosophytalk.org/2007....html (located halfway down the webpage)

          Political Correctness and the Speech Fashion War

          posted by Ken Taylor

          It's been awhile since I've done this -- awakened at a god-awful hour on Sunday morning, to write a blog about an upcoming show. I hope I'm lucid.

          Today's show is about the political correctness. Our guest is Leonard Steinhorn, author of a rousing defense of the baby boom generation, to which I proudly belong, called The Greater Generation. According to Steinhorn, we baby boomers were the leading edge of a great sea change for the better in America. Our age cohort almost single-handedly ended racism, sexism, and homophobia. We brought down corrupt and mendacious presidents. We ended a pointless and forlorn war. By elevating the sanctity and fragility of the environment to national consciousness, we brought to heel a kind of anything goes capitalism that saw our lakes and streams and air as just more commodities to be used up and discarded. We took the university by storm, first as students and then as faculty, helping to make them more than perpetuators of narrow privilege. We took the conformist, hierarchical and oppressive America bequeathed to us by our so-called greatest-generation forebears and shook it up root and branch and in the process gradually remade it into a more caring, progressive, egalitarian society.

          Assuming that we boomers really do deserve all this praise, it's still fair to wonder what any of this has to do with political correctness. Well, I think it actually has a fair bit to do with at least the fate of the term 'politically correct' especially with the claiming, reclaiming and disclaiming of that somewhat odd phrase.

          I say that the phrase 'politically correct' is an odd one because I don't think I've ever heard anyone use that phrase in a straight-forward and sincere manner. In my experience, people on the left tend to use the phrase mostly in a sort of self-mocking, tongue and cheek way, while people on the right tend to utter the phrase only in a sort of defiantly dismissive tone.

          That's not to say that there aren't serious issues behind all this. One of them has to do with the both the decreasing prevalence of things like overt racism, sexism and homophobia. I'm not at all sure, to say the least, that sexism, racism and homophobia have really been decisively defeated in America. Steinhorn takes pains, though, to remind us just how sexist, racist and homophobic post WW II America really was. He is surely right that the world we live in today is nothing like that America. Thank god.

          Still, though there are still people who hold views that those on the left might want to characterizes as racist, sexist, or homophobic a striking thing started happening sometimes in the mid-sixties. At some point it became highly unfashionable, at least in the circles in which I travel, to publicly express views that could be considered even mildly racist, sexist, or homophobic. And I don't think that's just a reflection of the narrowness of the circles in which I travel. What I find striking about this is that I believe that the pace of change in the fashionably expressible vastly outstripped the pace of substantive social change on the ground. The result was that many people probably found that they could not fashionably say what they actually thought, for fear of being labeled racist, sexist, or homophobic.

          Let's distinguish two things here: (a) being racist, sexist, or homophobic; (b) being labeled racist, sexist, or homophobic. I take it that you can be labeled racist either correctly or incorrectly. But I also take it that you can fail to be labeled racist even though you are one.

          Now if it's unfashionable to express certain views and if the cost of expressing such views is that you get labeled a racist, then if people care enough about what they are labeled, several things can happen. First, many racists may retain their racist views, but fail to express them, because they disvalue being labeled racists, even though they value being racists (and may even value expressing their views, but not enough to incur the cost of being labeled racist.) Second, some non-racists may fail to express their views because of the disvalue of being wrongly labeled racists. Third, some people who believe themselves not to be racists and who value the expressing their views, will pay the cost of being labeled racists, but will resent those who do the labeling.

          If the left thought that victory in what we might call the speech fashion war really meant a substantive victory on the ground, then the left may have made a significant miscalculation. Making it unfashionable to say certain things -- which, for awhile at least, the left really did seem to have done -- doesn't ipso facto make it unfashionable to believe those things. I take that to be a pretty obvious point. But the thought may have been that by driving certain views, as it were, underground, you make it impossible to for the views to be publicly defended. And one might think that views that can't be publicly defended will ultimately wither away.

          I'm not so sure. What can't be fashionably defended because it can't fashionably be said, can still be believed, and believed with great conviction and confidence. Rendering such views costly to express does not ipso facto render them costly to hold. Moreover, when a view held by many can't be fashionably expressed, one can't, I would think, really know whether the arguments on public offer that purport to refute the unexpressed views are actually being taken up and acknowledged by those who hold the underground beliefs. That is to say, the fashionable arguments on offer that parade as victorious may be enjoying an illusion of victory rather than the real thing.

          I suspect that for at least some period in recent history, many people believed things that they thought couldn't fashionably be said. And I think some, especially on the left, may have once mistaken victory in, as it were, the speech fashion war for substantive victory on the ground. I think it no longer possible to make this mistake. Partly because the views that once looked to have been driven underground are now refusing to stay underground. That's part of an anti-political correctness backlash. But that, I think, is all to the good. What arguably lay behind the strategy of trying to eliminate certain attitudes by rendering the expression of those attitudes unfashionable was a quasi-whorfian hypothesis that that what can't be said can't be believed. But the whorfian hypothesis is false. And the strategy based on it only appeared to win the day.

          There is much more to say. And certainly it could be said more clearly. But my juices are flowing at least. And I'm sure that after I'm exposed to John Perry and Leonard Steinhorn's arguments, I'll have completely changed my perspective.

          • Re: Political Correctness: what exactly is it?

            Fri, September 18, 2009 - 2:09 AM
            Yet another short but good reading for you politically correct and incorrect people! This one is a nice articulation of a moderately conservative take on the phenomena of political correctness, by contrast to the other "optional readings" I mentioned above, most of which are center-left in their view on PC. I say "moderately conservative" because many of those on the Right would, I think, reject this article's position as far too accommodating to political correctness.

            I found this 2007 article on the website of well-known conservative journal The National Review. The author, Jonah Goldberg, is the editor-at-large of National Review Online.


            article.nationalreview.com/


            P.C. Kabuki Theater

            Imus enters the "national dialogue" phase of the cycle.

            By Jonah Goldberg

            Everything worth saying about the Don Imus thing — which isn’t much — has been said already. We’ve now moved beyond Imus to the “national dialogue” phase of this familiar cycle. This is where we’re supposed to tackle hard questions and deep truths about our society.

            People have been calling for national dialogues and conversations for decades. It usually works something like this: Liberals say we need a frank discussion about race (or class or gender) in this country, and then they proceed to bludgeon any conservative stupid enough to take them up on their offer.

            Consider a recent non-Imus example: Newt Gingrich said last month that bilingual education keeps some people in the “ghetto.” Within hours, the same “let’s have a frank dialogue” crowd denounced the former House speaker, insisting that he apologize for being so frank. And Gingrich promptly complied.

            That’s how the political-correctness Kabuki theater works. There’s a reason so many were quick to point out that Imus’ “shocking” shtick is museum-lecture dull compared to what black rappers spew on a regular basis. Too often, political correctness is a fixed fight where white guys get beat up for things others are allowed. The selective enforcement of P.C. shibboleths undermines the credibility of liberal do-gooders. For example, when campus administrators turn a blind eye to goons burning conservative newspapers or shouting down right-wing speakers, it makes it hard to take them seriously when they bleat about free speech.

            But don’t get me wrong. For the right — not to mention the creators of South Park — political correctness can be the gift that keeps on giving. The earnest leftists of the academy who seriously use “herstory” for “history” or “ovular” instead of “seminar” make it easy to discredit the entire PC project as a lot of pretentious, even Orwellian, nonsense.

            But pointing out these excesses has costs for conservatives, too. Standing up to political correctness has become an unlimited warrant to be rude for its own sake. And if you catch flak for it, you can just say you were defending free thought. Ann Coulter, for example, justifies her cruder barbs and insults on the grounds that she’s pushing back against the liberal thought police. Sometimes she’s even right. But calling John Edwards a “faggot” is hardly a triumph of conservative principle.

            I’m all in favor of acid wit and barbed satire. But too many partisans on both sides sound like Beavis and Butt-Head, tittering over trivia. More important, if political correctness is as absurd as so many people think it is, why is it so successful? This newspaper, your local schools, police and fire departments, city hall, your church and workplace all likely subscribe to vast swaths of what was once called a politically correct agenda, from rules barring sexual harassment to the language you can use in casual conversation or e-mails. Surely if P.C. is the Orwellian imposition so many conservatives claim it is, Americans would reject it the way they resisted other alien impositions, such as the metric system, bidets, or David Hasselhoff’s Germanic personality cult.

            The reality is that much of political correctness — the successful part — is a necessary attempt to redefine good manners in a sexually and racially integrated society. Good manners are simply those things you do to demonstrate respect to others and contribute to social decorum. Aren’t conservatives the natural defenders of proper manners?

            Remember that D.C. bureaucrat who lost his job for using the word “niggardly” correctly in a sentence? That was outrageous overkill, but I don’t know that many well-mannered white people who would use “niggardly” in a room full of black people either, for fear of offending. The problem with political correctness resides in the demand that new manners be created from scratch, which is bound to turn people off. I mean, did we really need to replace “old” with “senior” or purge “Dutch treat” from the vernacular?

            P.C.’s problems become even more acute when the Left insists on smuggling larger agendas into what should be a polite conversation about what constitutes politeness. There’s remarkable overlap between conservative and liberal complaints about the culture. But when traditionalists talk the language of decency and morality, the Left hears bigotry and theocracy. And when liberals talk about sensitivity and white privilege, the Right hears something totalitarian. The result is that the two sides hold separate conversations. And when they do talk to each other, each side is listening for hidden agendas.

            Perhaps the reason the national conversations always sputter out is that they start off too ambitious. Rather than tackling America’s fundamental problems, we could start by talking about how we should talk.


            Jonah Goldberg is editor-at-large of National Review Online and the author of Liberal Fascism: The Secret History of the American Left from Mussolini to the Politics of Meaning.
            • Re: Political Correctness: what exactly is it?

              Sat, September 19, 2009 - 8:45 AM
              Well, see my other remarks, because they describe this article.

              Gingrich's remark presumes that people who speak a language other than English are living in a "ghetto."

              It also presumes that the ticket out of the "ghetto" is to learn English, and it further presumes that the withholding of education in a non-English native language will automatically result in English being learned and adopted by all, rather than those who speak a foreign language simply remaining uneducated.

              But Goldberg ignores such criticisms, focusing instead on the fact that Gingrich was criticized and that he apologized for his statements, implying that he had nothing for which he ought to apologize, without, however, exploring any of the specific issues raised.

              And so, we are "defending" the free speech of those who already have immense access to media, as a way of deflecting actual criticism of those powerful persons. Exactly the kind of ad hominem avoidance of issue-based dialogue that I have described in my other post to this thread.

              The thing about black rappers is once again an avoidance of the issues. Oh, these powerful white guys ought to be allowed to spew racism on the air, because some black musicians use some of the same terms themselves. Note that he doesn't say that both should stop it - rather, he implies that the white guys shouldn't be criticized for doing it.

              And, by the way, a white guy using a racist term is *not* the same thing as a black guy using that same term, when the term refers to blacks. Racism is *not* in general a two way street - it is a system of oppression that goes from a privileged group (whites) down to a less privileged group (persons of color). If a member of the oppressor group uses a racist term, he or she is affirming those oppressive relationships that benefit her or his race. It's like the difference between a soldier with his boot on a peasant's neck saying "I'm going to crush your neck under my boot" and that same peasant shouting "you're crushing my neck under your boot!" There really is a difference - see if you can figure it out.

              Then he ends up trivilalizing everything by saying, oh, it's really just about politeness, and we're polite folks, so shouldn't we embrace it? Right. Let's kill it and then all of us give it a big hug, shall we?
        • Re: Political Correctness: what exactly is it?

          Sat, September 19, 2009 - 7:20 AM
          Those wielding the term "politically correct" are typically blurring the line between offensive and harmful in the other direction, attempting to avoid criticism of their own harmful uses of language by suggesting that their statements are merely offensive. To accomplish this, they imply that the "politically correct" who criticize them are more concerned with offenses committed against their own PC orthodoxy than with the actual harm that discriminatory language does to others.
  • Re: Political Correctness: what exactly is it?

    Sat, September 19, 2009 - 8:13 AM
    At the heart of this concept of "political correctness" is moral relativism. Those using the term "politically correct" pejoratively are implying that there are no arguable moral standards. You have your view, and I have mine, and if you criticize the words I have spoken, then you're attempting to interfere with my free speech - which is apparently the one thing that we are allowed to value, by the way, in some non-relativistic way.

    Those wielding this term are arguing that critics are acting from some petty, controlling sense of offended "politically correct" orthodoxy rather than to the actual harm that their "politically incorrect" attacks are causing to others. This amounts to an ad hominem argument against any and all critics, and to a refusal to deal with criticism on its own merits.

    Regarding free speech, we should remember that the power of the press belongs to the person who owns one. Massive corporations dominate most of our media. Yes, we all have free speech, but some are much more equal than others in that regard. And it is precisely the right wing talk radio flacks supporting corporate interests who are raising the red herring of supposed attacks upon their own "free speech" to silence criticism that is already all but drowned out by the sheer power of their own microphones.

    These hired mouthpieces are not talking about "free speech" for the underdog, for the minority views that would not otherwise be heard. They are talking about "free speech" for people who already have overpowering access to the media, and who are already wielding immense power in the related spheres of politics and the economy. And so they are defending the "free speech" of those who need no help at all in that regard, as a cover for their real goal, which is attacking their critics without answering the issues that they have raised.

    What we are discussing in this thread is not a philosophical issue; it is an issue of rhetoric and propaganda.
    • Re: Political Correctness: what exactly is it?

      Mon, October 19, 2009 - 2:08 AM
      "Those using the term "politically correct" pejoratively are implying that there are no arguable moral standards."

      That doesn't follow. "Political correctness" runs the gamut from relatively benign efforts to get people to be more polite and respectful in their speech, to more intolerant efforts to suppress ideologically unpopular speech. Critics of some forms of "political correctness" like myself are just very pro free speech. The best response to offensive speech is more speech to counteract it, not suppression. Sure, some speech can be offensive, but that doesn't justify all kinds of instiututional punishments for such people. I don't agree that homosexuality is a psychological disorder, but it was wrong for one school to require a student who expressed such an opinion to get counseling. And it was wrong for Cal State SLO to drag a student before a disciplinary hearing and require him to apologize for trying to post fliers in the multicultural community room advertising a speech by a conservative black speaker. And it was wrong for students at Berkeley to steal and destroy thousands of copies of the student newspaper just because they were offended by an editorial that supported prop 109, which was anti affirmative action.

      I consider those all examples of political correctness (attempts at enforcement of ideological orthodoxy on speech) run amuck. Just because one opposes suppression of speech doesn't make one a moral relativist. I can consistently say that I think some speech is morally wrong and objectively so and yet it's also morally wrong for a public institution to punish someone just for expressing that point of view.