The double standards of the left-leaning commentariat (is
that a tautology?) have been laid bare by the fuss over Australian philosopher
Peter Singer.
Singer, you’ll recall, was scheduled to speak at Auckland’s
SkyCity Theatre in June, but the event was cancelled by risk-averse management worried
about possible protests. Disability activists object to Singer, and with very
good reason: he has argued that in some circumstances, it’s morally acceptable
for parents to kill a seriously disabled child.
It should be noted that no one had threatened to disrupt
Singer’s appearance, so SkyCity’s cancellation was a case of corporate timidity
which the company tried to disguise with some PR mumbo-jumbo about the need to
respect values of “inclusion and diversity”. In any case, Singer’s tour
promoters soon secured an alternative venue, so his speech will go ahead – as
it should in a country that professes to allow freedom of expression,
regardless of whether some people find the speaker’s views repugnant (as I do
in this instance).
But never mind all that. The really significant thing about
the Singer kerfuffle was the sudden emergence of a whole bunch of new converts
to the cause of free speech. Commentators who were silent about the
de-platforming of the Canadian speakers Lauren Southern and Stefan Molyneux in
2018, and in fact by their silence gave the impression of approving it, seemed to
undergo a remarkable Road to Damascus-type experience now that it was a favoured
leftie philosopher’s right to free speech that was threatened. But their feeble
attempts to justify this about-face left them open to accusations of
rank hypocrisy.
Danyl Mclauchlan on The
Spinoff was among the first to object to SkyCity’s cancellation of Singer’s
speech. Possibly alert to the risk that he would be accused of double
standards, Mclauchlan asserted that Singer couldn’t possibly be compared with
the Canadians. Why not? Because according
to Mclauchlan, “Singer is a category of thinker we should pay attention to and
whose ideas we should consider, even though we disagree with some of them”.
So how, exactly, did this make him different from Southern
and Molyneux? That wasn’t explained. We are left to conclude that Singer should
be allowed to speak because Mclauchlan thinks he has something worthwhile to
say, whereas the Canadians couldn’t possibly have been worth hearing.
Perhaps I can help here by suggesting some reasons why
Mclauchlan might find Singer acceptable and the Canadians not. The obvious one
is that Singer supports causes that the left embraces. He donates 40% of his
income (which, given the enormous fees paid to celebrity speakers, plus his author’s
royalties and professor’s salary from Princeton, would be not inconsiderable)
to charity. He’s a champion of animal rights and veganism, and he believes
people in wealthy Western countries have an obligation to help those living in
poverty (none of which strikes me as either profound or original, but then what
would I know?).
All of these stances tick the right boxes with the left – so
much so that they seem willing to overlook the inconvenient fact that Singer
has advocated euthanasia for disabled babies, which even hard-core lefties must
find hard to defend.
While Mclauchlan is prepared to cut Singer a lot of slack, no
such tolerance was extended to Southern and Molyneux, who were summarily dismissed at the
time of their visit to Auckland as being “far right” or “alt right”, whatever
that means, and who therefore couldn’t possibly have had anything interesting
or provocative to say. (As it happens, New Zealanders still have little idea what
message the Canadians intended to push, because we weren’t able to hear them
and evaluate their arguments for ourselves. The totalitarian bigots of the far
left, ably assisted by Phil Goff, the Gauleiter of Auckland, made sure of that.)
Mclauchlan went on to write: “ … thinkers who genuinely
challenge conventional wisdom and the status quo are going to be wrong a lot of
the time, and even their good ideas are going to generate a lot of uncertainty.
If we ignore them because they’ve been cancelled for being wrong about
something else we diminish our ability both to change our own minds and change
things for the better”.
So this argument, which is a classic justification of free
speech, applies to Singer but not to the Canadians? We’re supposed to retain an
open mind about Singer’s provocative positions and allow that he might be
right, but squeeze our eyes shut and clamp our hands over our ears for fear
that Southern and Molyneux might have contaminated our thinking?
Here, laid bare, is the conceit of the leftist elite that
presumes to know what opinions other New Zealanders (presumably less
enlightened ones) may safely be exposed to. There’s an element of plain,
old-fashioned bigotry in play here, combined with an authoritarian urge to
control the public conversation. Together they make a toxic mix.
A similar line – essentially, “We believe in free speech,
but not for people we disapprove of” – was taken in a commentary by someone
named Emile Donovan on the Newsroom
website. Donovan recalled the controversy over the Canadians in
2018, then went on to say: “But this case is a bit different. Singer is a
world-renowned philosopher whose professional role is to conceive and debate
boundary-pushing ideas and arguments”.
There it is again. Singer is somehow "different" from Southern
and Molyneux, though Donovan makes no attempt to explain why Singer’s “boundary-pushing
ideas and arguments” are worth hearing while those of Southern and Molyneux were
not. The leftist commentariat has taken upon itself the right to decide whose
ideology makes them acceptable and who should be regarded as beyond the pale.
Donovan then goes on to quote broadcaster Graeme Hill, who
has twice interviewed Singer, about the dangers of society succumbing to
oppressive groupthink. Er, quite so.
Now we turn to a Stuff
editorial headlined The slippery
slope of cancel culture, which talked admiringly of Singer’s “deep
engagement with tricky and important moral issues” and his “eloquent” advocacy
for Syrian refugees wanting to emigrate to New Zealand. All of which is fair
enough – but the editorial simultaneously rebuked a rival media outlet for daring
to suggest that Singer was in the same category as those “infamous YouTube
activists” Southern and Molyneux.
Again, by implication the Canadians’ views
were without merit and therefore not worthy of a platform, although the
editorial writer didn’t bother, or perhaps wasn’t able, to make a case for that
proposition.
It was clear that the writer heartily approved of free
speech for Singer, but didn’t think the same right should be enjoyed by couple
of provocative neo-conservatives from Canada. But that’s not how free speech
works; it can’t be applied selectively so as to reinforce approved political
prejudices to the exclusion of unpopular ones. I find myself again forced to
quote Noam Chomsky: “If we don’t believe in freedom of expression for people we
despise, we don’t believe in it at all.”
3 comments:
A clever play on words Karl, and I quote "All of these stances tick the right boxes with the left ...".
Well done for once again exposing the glaring and nauseating hypocrisy that flows from all the elite of whichever leaning direction, but particularly the sanctimonious and self-righteous Left.
Absolutely superb commentary, but I must disagree on one point:
I think you're coming short in your statement "euthanasia for disabled babies, which even hard-core lefties must find hard to defend."
If you read: https://www.cbsnews.com/news/late-term-abortions-two-bills-banning-blocked-senate-democrats/
"Senate Democrats on Tuesday blocked a pair of Republican bills that would ban most late-term abortions and threaten prison for doctors who don't try saving the lives of infants born alive during abortions."
And notice how "infants born alive" are treated by CB as conceptually equal to "late term abortions".
So, I'd say YES, they are quite happy to defend "euthanasia for disabled babies".
If you want to defend free speech it costs you little to take up the cause of someone generally respected. It is much more costly to your personal reputation to defend the rights of someone generally despised, say Tommy Robinson. You will often hear people say something like Im not going to die in the trenches for .... But it is a better thing to do exactly that, to defend the right of the worst person you can think of to enjoy the benefit of free speech.
Post a Comment