(First published in the Nelson Mail and Manawatu Standard, June 5.)
What do a world-famous historian, a British author and a New
Zealand cartoonist have in common?
On the face of it, not much – except that all three have
been embroiled recently in controversies that show how fragile the right of
free speech has become in supposedly liberal democracies.
Let’s start with the historian: Niall Ferguson, arguably
the most distinguished contemporary British historian, and a man whose face is
familiar internationally as a result of several television documentary series
based on his books.
In response to a question at a recent seminar in California,
Ferguson referred to the fact that John Maynard Keynes, the British economist
whose writing had a huge influence on 20th century governments, was
homosexual.
He went further, suggesting that Keynes’ economic philosophy
was influenced by the fact that he was childless. According to one reporter’s
notes, Ferguson implied this meant that Keynes was indifferent to the long-term
effects of economic policies.
The historian’s off-the-cuff comments sparked a storm of
indignation. One overwrought commentator, journalist Tom Kostigen, wrote that it
took gay-bashing to new heights. “Anyone with a moral
conscience should be outraged,” Kostigen spluttered.
What Ferguson said about Keynes
wasn’t new. The Austrian economist Joseph Schumpeter, in his obituary of
Keynes, had made an explicit link between Keynes’ childlessness and his
“short-run” philosophy of life. Other scholars have suggested that Keynes’
famously fatalistic remark, “In the long run we are all dead”, was influenced
by the fact that he had no offspring to be concerned about.
But it seems we have become a much
more touchy society. Certain ideas are no longer allowed to be expressed. The
uproar over Ferguson’s remark was such that he felt compelled to apologise and
retract.
No doubt he had his reasons for
doing so. However it’s hard to escape the impression that more and more often,
public figures who have made controversial statements feel forced to back down
not because what they said was indefensible, but because their wrathful critics
promise to make their life intolerable unless they do.
A man as scholarly and experienced
as Ferguson is unlikely to be in the habit of blurting out silly remarks
without any forethought. He would have studied Keynes’ life and formed certain
conclusions about him. So you have to wonder whether he was intimidated into
backing down despite genuinely believing what he had said.
Even if his theory about Keynes is
pure speculation and possibly erroneous, so what? People are entitled in a free
society to get things wrong.
Academics float theories all the
time. Some are wacky and die a natural death, while others extend the
boundaries of human understanding. If people were barred from expressing
unpopular or unorthodox ideas, conventional wisdom would never be challenged
and human thought would be at a standstill.
The worrying thing about the
Ferguson controversy is that it adds to a growing body of evidence that certain
subjects are off-limits. Ultra-sensitive minority groups – the gay lobby being
one – are primed to react explosively to every imagined slight.
Anyone who opposes same-sex
marriage risks being labelled a gay-basher, just as people espousing welfare
reform are routinely condemned as beneficiary-bashers. If you question the
politics of separatism, you’re a racist; if you criticise Israel, you’re an
anti-Semite.
These are tactics designed to
stifle legitimate debate and intimidate people into silence. Ferguson is simply
the latest to learn that in today’s discrimination-obsessed society, you
express an opinion at your peril.
Now let’s look at the case of
British author David Goodhart, whose recent book The British Dream: Successes and Failures of Postwar Immigration
has polarised reviewers.
Goodhart’s book argues that mass
immigration is damaging to social democracy, erodes national solidarity and is
not in the interests of the source countries, because it deprives them of some
of their most dynamic people.
It’s a view that has not gone down
well with some on the British left, who consider it an obligation of the
prosperous West to throw open its doors to people from less advantaged
countries, even when some of those immigrants violently turn against their host
society.
The director of Britain’s leading
literary festival, the Hay festival, was so affronted by Goodhart’s book that
he refused to invite him to appear. Effectively, Goodhart was barred. The
director, Peter Florence, arbitrarily pronounced that his book wasn’t very
good.
So much for free speech, then.
Having hijacked the once honourable word “liberal”, which my Oxford Dictionary
variously defines as “directed to general broadening of the mind” and “generous
or open-minded”, the so-called liberal left has once again demonstrated that
it’s capable of being breathtakingly illiberal.
Mr Florence didn’t want his rigid
world view challenged. Neither did he want festival-goers exposed to dangerous
alternative opinions. I wonder if it has occurred to him that it’s only a short
step from barring authors to burning books, as the Nazis did.
A former Labour cabinet minister,
Lord Adonis, was appalled. “How about some free speech at the Hay festival?” he
tweeted.
For the third instance of free
speech coming under attack, we can look a lot closer to home. Al Nisbet’s two
newspaper cartoons on the subject of free school breakfasts brought out the
enemies of free speech in droves.
Remarkably, his critics included
journalists, which shows how far the rot has set in. When the people who have
the most to lose from the suppression of free speech are calling for someone to
be silenced, we’re in deep trouble.
For the record, I thought they
were crude cartoons; but the issue was not whether they were good cartoons,
still less whether they were funny. The issue was whether freedom of speech
includes the right to give offence, and it has long been recognised in liberal
democracies that it does, and must. Even conservative judges have repeatedly
upheld that principle.
There is an insidious double
standard at play here, and it was typified by the stance of the activist John
Minto, who complained about the cartoon to the Human Rights Commission.
Mr Minto’s own views upset and
offend a lot of New Zealanders, but to my knowledge no one argues that he
should be punished or silenced. Yet he seeks to deny others the right that he
enjoys himself – and I suspect that he’s incapable of seeing the contradiction.
4 comments:
I apologize in advance for any offence my comments may invoke, as I recognize that our most recently discovered ‘human right’ is not to be offended. If that offends you, then please see apology above.
While your article identifies some of the most regular serially offended, it leaves out our Islamic friends, who have attempted through the United Nations to have all criticism of Islam banned. Don’t be surprised if we see gradual moves in this direction to ensure that free speech is replaced over time with ‘correct speech’.
Free speech is effectively lost in the UK and Europe anyway. Note the Police’s arrest of two Twitter users and one Facebook user for ‘offensive’ remarks they posted subsequent to the murder of Drummer Rigby. Also Dutch Politician Geert Wilders protracted trial over his public criticism of Islam. He was eventually acquitted, but it’s the process that is the punishment. The same thing happened to Mark Steyn in Canada and for the same reason.
We are fighting a rear guard action in defense of Free Speech in the West, and I suspect we are losing.
I wonder if you couldn't have highlighted the case of Lord Monkton attempting to speak at Victoria University. He was banned which was bad enough but the defence of this action as articulated by some people was even more alarming. Their views all seemed to centre on the fact that he was 'wrong' and not on the fact that he should have been allowed to express his views. Apparently universities like Victoria are no longer (were they ever?) places where opiniions could be freely expressed and discussed.
Free speech is disappearing fast in NZ. Letters to the editor by anyone challenging "liberal" ideas are becoming rare, especially those from Christians. Is it Fairfax generally or just The Nelson Mail and The Press who have severely restricted letters from Christians? Editors of newspapers would scream murder if there was any hint of restricting the presses freedom but are happy to promote left-wing ideology without allowing criticism of it.
The right to free speech applies to all, including those who criticise the words of others.
I suspect you already knows this but have discounted it in order to drive a point in your column.
Also, it's absurd to suggest that this right means a newspaper owned by a private party has to print absolutely everything it receives in it's mailbag. There's enough rubbish in "Letters to the editor" sections across the country already.
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