Correctly squelched
A first-person account of manning the barricades against political correctness.
In 2006 I accepted an invitation to receive an honorary doctor of science
degree from Ryerson University in Toronto. When that was announced a powerful
storm of protest erupted from the activist gay community and their supporters
across Canada, demanding that, because of my views on same-sex marriage the
University withdraw its offer of the degree. That, in turn, generated an even
bigger media storm across Canada, in defence of freedom of speech.
One element of this "perfect storm" was many people expressing to me their deep concern about "what’s happening in our universities." One thing that is happening is a growth in moral relativism. This can lead to a loss, on the part of university students, of substantive values, certainly shared ones, or even ethical nihilism, in the sense that ethics becomes nothing more than personal preferences.
Postmodernism is now de rigueur in the humanities and social sciences. Postmodernists adopt a relativistic approach: there is no grounded truth; what is ethical is simply a matter of personal judgement and preference. Moral relativism means that values are all of equal worth and which take priority, when they conflict, is merely a matter of each person’s perception and preference. The result, paradoxically, is that "the equality of all values", itself, becomes the supreme value.
This stance ultimately leads, at least in theory, to extreme or intense tolerance as the "most equal" of equal values. But does that happen in practice?
That is where political correctness enters the picture. (I’m using this term as shorthand to cover a variety of identity-based social movements and the neo-liberal values that they espouse. I am not using it, as can sometimes happen, to describe people or their views or values derogatorily, which is not to say I agree with all of them.)
Political correctness excludes politically incorrect values from the "all values are equal" stable. It shuts down non-politically correct people’s freedom of speech. Anyone who challenges the politically correct stance is, thereby, labelled as intolerant, a bigot or hatemonger. The substance of arguments is not addressed; rather people labelled as politically incorrect are attacked as being intolerant and hateful simply for making those arguments.
Strategies for quelching debate
It is important to understand the strategy employed: speaking against abortion or same-sex marriage is not characterised as speech; rather, it is characterised as a sexist act or a discriminatory act against homosexuals, respectively, and, therefore, as, in itself, a breach of human rights or even a hate crime. Consequently, it is argued that protections of freedom of speech do not apply.
Another part of the same strategy is to reduce discourse to two possible positions. One must be either pro-choice on abortion and for respect for women and their rights, or pro-life and against respect for women and their rights. The possibility of being pro-women and their rights and pro-life is eliminated. The same approach is taken to same-sex marriage: One is against discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation and for same-sex marriage, or against same-sex marriage and for such discrimination. The option of being against such discrimination and against same-sex marriage, as I am, is eliminated. That is not accidental; it is central to the strategy that has been successful in Canada that resulted in having same-sex marriage legalised and maintaining the complete void with respect to having any law governing abortion.
In short, political correctness is being used as a form of fundamentalism, and fundamentalisms, especially "warring" fundamentalisms as manifested in the battles between religious fundamentalists and neo-atheist fundamentalists such as Richard Dawkins, Sam Harris and Christopher Hitchens, are a grave danger to democracy. They vastly widen the divides between us, creating an unbridgeable "us" and "them" when what we need is a "we".
Moral relativism and political correctness in practice
The issue that sparked the "Ryerson controversy", legalising same-sex marriage, is an example of what "pure" moral relativism and intense tolerance, as modified by political correctness, mean in practice.
While I abhor discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation and agree that same-sex marriage could be a powerful message of the wrongs of that, I oppose same-sex marriage because of its impact on children’s rights. In choosing between adults and children, I believe we should give priority to children. I argue that children need and have a right to both a mother and a father, preferably their own biological parents, unless the "best interests" of a particular child require otherwise, as in many adoptions. Marriage limited to the union of a man and a woman establishes that right; same-sex marriage eliminates that right for all children (which is why I oppose the redefinition of marriage), but support civil unions (which do not have that impact).
The Ryerson protestors sought to "deal" with me by labelling me. I was described as guilty of a hate crime; the new Ernst Zundel (who, like him, should be deported – they were grateful that I came from Australia and could be sent back there); a neo-Nazi; and a member of the Klu Klux Klan. My views had no place in the university, they claimed. This approach eliminated the need to deal with the substance of my arguments. It sent a very powerful warning to all those who might happen to share my views.
Was the Ryerson affair unique in our universities? I do not believe so. One current, very worrying example is the suppression of pro-life groups and pro-life speech on Canadian university campuses. Whatever our views on abortion, we should all be worried about such developments. Pro-choice students are trying to stop pro-life students from participating in the collective conversation on abortion that should take place. In fact, they don’t want any conversation, alleging that to question whether we should have any law on abortions is, in itself, unacceptable.
Some people are going even further: they want to force students to act against their conscience as a condition for graduating. The group "Medical Students for Choice" would like to make performing an abortion a "required procedure", that is, a student would have to competently perform an abortion in order to graduate. Delivering a baby at term is not a required procedure. I do not need to emphasise the dangers of this in universities, no matter how worthy one’s motives in promoting a certain stance. The most fundamental precept on which a university is founded is openness to ideas and knowledge from all sources.
The closing of the university mind
As well, over the last year or so, I have been dis-invited from three events. That has never happened before in my nearly 30 years of speaking engagements. And, probably uniquely, the withdrawals came from opposite ends of the values spectrum. One withdrawal was because my views were seen as not being pro-life and in another as not being pro-choice. Only a speech that would be preaching to the converted was seen as acceptable.
In the other case, a diplomatic explanation was given, but my hunch is that the university administrators, fund raisers, and public relations professionals involved were frightened of facing protests for having invited me. No one knows how many invitations are not issued because of fear of controversy. The cumulative effect is a silencing: And such silence is golden in more than a metaphorical sense -– potential donors are not offended.
Ryerson University received many calls from people saying they would never donate to the university again, if they conferred the honorary degree on me. A past Principal at McGill University received similar calls in relation to another controversial issue on which I spoke publicly, demanding that I be fired or they would never again donate.
Moreover, I was told that last semester law students at McGill had considered asking other students not to enrol in any of my classes as a means of public protest against my views on same-sex marriage, but changed their minds because that might have "made them look bad", especially as law students who should be defenders of rights such as free speech.
One of my classes was invaded by students, with TV cameras filming them, and had to be abandoned as they carried out a mock same-sex marriage. I’ve received very large amounts of hate mail, been the subject of an on-line protest petition and needed security precautions when speaking in public, all because I believe all children – including those who are gay as adults - need a mother and a father which opposite-sex marriage gives them and same-sex marriage takes away.
And, if that is how I’m treated, imagine how students, or even junior faculty, who hold views that are seen as not politically correct or, sometimes, just too conservative, feel. They are fearful of speaking out and feel intimidated.
What happened to shared values?
The further deep concern is that this conflict within our universities, and dealing with it by shutting down freedom of speech, might be a micro example of a much larger problem outside the universities. We might be at risk of annihilating some of our most important shared values and that creates a situation that threatens society itself. We can’t hold a society together in the long-term without shared values, that is, without a societal-cultural paradigm: the story about ourselves that supports our most important principles, values, attitudes and beliefs, one that we tell each other and all buy into in order to form the glue that holds us together. Tolerance alone, and especially unbalanced by other important values, is nowhere near enough to found that story.
To ensure our story does not disintegrate and continues to be enriched, we must engage in mutually respectful conversation. The public needs academics to speak freely – and respectfully, openly, honestly, and without threat of repercussions - about contentious but important societal problems. That requires respect for freedom of thought, freedom of speech, freedom of association, and academic freedom – the latter of which is meant primarily for the benefit of the public by allowing academics to feel they can speak the truth, as they see it, to power. The Ryerson events were in breach of all those freedoms.
Our universities should be models for the larger society of crossing the divides that separate us, not of widening them. In the broader context of our contemporary multicultural, pluralistic democracies, we must engage in mutually respectful conversation across those divides.
Margaret Somerville is founding director of the Centre for Medicine, Ethics and Law at McGill University in Montreal. Her essay "Brave New Babies" will appear in MercatorNet later this month.



Your University has but a little way to go to be right up there with Harvard University where Prof. Nancy WatchmeSpew andFaint caused the sacking of the Vice Chancellor for daring to ask people to muse for a moment on possible reasons why women are not well represented at the higher levels of science.
Even thinking can be politically incorrect. Far from being tolerated as part of the intellectual enterprise, ‘wrong’ thoughts must not even enter your mind.
Then there was the Duke University fiasco. The coach of the Lacrosse team was sacked because three of the 20odd team were accused of a crime. 88 professors condemned the three. They even signed a joint manifesto condemning the ‘racism’ of the boys. But the boys hadn’t committed any crime, which had been falsely alleged -ironically by a woman of a different race.
And you haven’t been firebombed yet. Just thank your stars you haven’t spoken out against feminism! Finding fault with political correctness in general or having a view on a specific such as same sex psuedo-’marriage’ is a doddle compared with speaking against feminism. The empathetic gender, you know, the one with all the communications skills and conflict resolution talent are apt to take strong measures against their critics. And I don’t mean just tantrums.
Another example not mentioned in this article of how political correctness has barred Margaret Somerville many doors is the refusal to honour her with the Order of Canada. Commenting on the appointment of Herny Morgentaler to the Order of Canada, H.Aubin writes in the Montreal Gazette of July 8: “An objective observer would say Somerville has unusually strong Order-worthy credentials. She breaks out of the ivory tower at every opportunity to contribute to legal and ethical debates over such issues as stem- cell research, euthanasia, biotechnology, animal research, nuclear-waste management and so on. Whether or not you agree with her, there’s no denying that her calm and logical approach helps sharpen public debate.
Somerville did not, of course, apply for membership - no one ever does - but was nominated two years ago by a faculty member of the Toronto School of Theology, Carol Finlay. Finlay says the Order told her it had turned Somerville down because she’s controversial.
That’s hilarious. Morgentaler is many times more controversial.”
Alternative voices, you say? I invite you to read and listen to criticisms of Fox News very closely. I especially invite you to watch the video on youtube called “Fox Attacks Black America”.
A hug and a kiss are most gratefully accepted, Angela. Thanks. Most of us need lots more of them.
By the way a huge drama linked to political correctness has erupted in Canada in the last few days. Dr. Henry Morgentaler, who has devoted his life to removing all restrictions from abortion, setting up abortion clinics, taking legal action to have the government pay for abortion, and performing abortions himself, is the hero of the “extreme” pro-choice advocates (those who reject any law on abortion, even after viability) as the symbol of having succeeded in having all abortion law struck down in Canada. He has just been named to the Order of Canada. There is a tsunami of public debate and media coverage and outrage by those who believe abortion always raises serious ethical issues and who are demanding the award decision be revoked. (I understand there will be a major demonstration at the Governor General’s residence in Ottawa this week.)
The pro-choice advocates are using the award to say it is public recognition that their stance is the one most Canadians agree with (which polls show is not correct), which adds to the problems this award causes.
It is one matter to decide not to legally prohibit all abortion (the approach taken in all countries like Canada, but not Canada) and to sadly regret that it occurs, it is quite another to celebrate it with a national honouring.
Margo
A big thank you to the always brilliant Margaret Somerville! ( I am tempted to add a kiss and hug too - but who knows how that ‘ll be construed in the crazy looking glass world of PC).
I’ve been a victim of this crap too, having been sacked from my job as opinion columnist for the Canberra Times. Apparently my pro life anti homosexual marriage views annoyed the new editor- even though the PC inhabitants of Australia’s capital all read my column ‘cos they loved the outrage. And of course if you actually lost your mouth piece, you have no comeback. But lucky for me the Murdoch “evil empire “is a bit more interested in alternative voices. Angela
The last time I checked, Nazism was the exact opposite of political correctness.
This article certainly has given me pause to consider how I face the demands of politicaly correctness on a daily basis. Some years ago, I spoke up in a meeting in which some of my fellow colleagues were advocating educating young children on the “specialness” of being homosexual. Rising from my chair, I informed not only my colleagues but the superintendant as well that teaching children to be kind to others does not require our teaching them anything about sexual orientation. I will never forget the silence in that room as I spoke. Thankfully, my speech ended with the proposal’s being dropped from consideration. I left the meeting feeling like one marked for execution, but satisfied in knowing that I spoke out. As I walked across the parking lot that afternoon, a few of my silent colleagues thanked me for my courage in saing the things they were too frightened to say.
Now, some ten years later, I find myself within a few short years of retirement, but not invited to policy meetings anymore. I hold my ground in my school. The children in my care have their innocence protected and I have found that their families respect and support me.
Still, I find it very hard sometimes to communicate with the the new staff members who flood in from the universities. I find myself thinking like a football coach, always seeking strategies to avoid getting tackled as I go for the touchdowns!
Davids initial comment sums it up nicely. It leads sadly to the “equality” that Steyn and others are facing. He is also correct that nature abhors a vacuum. This leads inevitably and immediately to abuses in the system. I can’t help but remember Orwells Amnimal Farm. In one chapter the pigs were changing the rules in the dark of night. The ladder fell over and woke up the other animals.To the “everyone is equal” had been added to “but some are more equal than others”. Well i’m part of “everyone” and I will not be bullied by petty bureaucrats much longer. We are at the point where we can only heap “extra equality” on special interest groups at the expense of freedom. Steyns book is chilling at times but it is still only a book. His conclusions are only true if one thinks in a straight line. This is not the reason the P.C. Nazis dont like it. They are simply terrified of the C.I.C. In short they are cowards. Steyns book points out that Islam may be fundamentally flawed. That the religion is incompatible with human rights as we understand them. That if Islam continues to grow along the demographic lines he has observed we will soon be in a moral dilemma. Obviously their right to execute gays and genocide Jews in the name of religion supersedes Steyns right to speak because they are more frightening to the clowns in the BCHRC. They are always looking for the soft target. The same mentality is creeping into American politics. We need to take away the legal firearms of law abiding citizens because the criminals are too scary. Don’t be a soft target. Stand up and know that you are in the right. Don’t let them tell you that you are morally deficient because of your skin colour or gender. Fight for true equality.
Evil wins when good people stand by and do nothing ... thanks for not just standing by.......
To Brian:
‘ ... concept of giving rights to women and people of color is “politically correct” ‘
Well of course it is! And morally correct also.
Denying unborn children the right to life is also politically correct but is it morally correct?
Is not the debate about political correctness and rights? And who determines those rights and the way they are determined?
To Brian. No one gave me or anyone else their rights. You are (morally speaking) endowed with rights at birth by your creator. He who claims to “give you rights” is also capable of taking them away.
As a comment to Dr. Somerville’s excellent (as always) article, I can only repeat my personal credo: I’d rather be a “bigot” than a politically correct idiot. Sticks and stones…
Excellent article Ms Somerville. Admire your well balanced stance; can be hard to come by these days.
P.S. To Mark Fletcher, who used the word “Jejune” in the last sentence of your comment. It’s an apt descriptive word and roles off the tongue very nicely. I once composed a song for guitar called “Jejune” in the key of A major. The lyrics basically consisted of the word “jejune” being repeated over and over again, with a few other words thrown in for good measure. It sounded fantastic. Remember performing it in the backyard of a huge Cocktail party held here in Australia. It was a big hit.
May I point out that the mere concept of giving rights to women and people of color is “politically correct”?
Ms Somerville has written an insightful and well reasoned article.
It IS important...and I say this as a gay man...that as many children as possible have by both a father and a mother.
I can accept, with little or no anxiety, the author’s distinction between civil unions and gay ‘marriage’ and the reasons for making those distinctions.
The conflict of gay rights/children’s rights is one of those unpleasant and unexpected consequences that have arisen from imbibing perhaps too much PC ideology.
And it is appalling that these so-called academics and progressives harass you and threaten you in a manner most reminiscent of a medieval witch-hunt.
It seems that for some ‘post-modern’ has a great deal in common with ‘pre-modern’, as pertains to levels of tolerance and free debate.
I admire your tenacity and your courage, Ms Somerville.
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