yego.me
💡 Stop wasting time. Read Youtube instead of watch. Download Chrome Extension

Why being politically correct is using free speech well | Martin Amis


2m read
·Nov 3, 2024

I think it’s indivisible, freedom of speech: I mean, either you’ve got it or you haven’t. And every diminution of freedom of speech diminishes everyone and lessens the currency of freedom of speech. But I feel nothing but unease when it’s done lightly. It has to be earned. The controversial statement has to be earned. It can’t just be tossed off. You have to be able to back it up.

So I would urge civilized standards of moderation on both sides. It has to be understood that freedom of speech isn’t just a sort of decadent frippery that we gather around us like all our other comforts and privileges. Democracy can’t work without freedom of speech. It’s an absolute cornerstone of democracy. So we have to be very responsible about this freedom but there’s no giving it up or modifying it, even.

I would say it’s an offshoot of what’s solidified under political correctness, and I’m a fan of political correctness. No one ever says, 'Oh, I’m very politically correct,' but, in fact, it’s good that we are—not the outer fringe PC, but raising of the standards about what can be said, and exclusion of things you could have said and got away with it 10 or 20 years ago and now seems discordant.

And who wants to go back to being opposed to gay marriage? The ease with which that became the orthodoxy was, I thought, tremendously encouraging, and the idea that Donald Trump has cast off these “shackles” and we can go back to being brutes again is a terrible prospect.

PC has been an agent for certain sort of evolutionary acceleration towards progressive ideas, and I think that’s been very good. I mean, when I look back at my very early fiction of 40-odd years ago I’m shocked and made uneasy by some of the liberties I took that I certainly wouldn’t take now. It doesn’t interfere with the freedom of writers, political correctness—it gives you challenges every now and then, you have to sort of work around it a bit.

But I never resent that, and I think it’s self-improvement on a general scale that we’ve all responded to.

More Articles

View All
Charlie Munger: How to Get Rich Starting at $0
Sew a lot of videos out there claim they will help make you rich, but these five wealth building principles from Charlie Munger actually will. When you type in the words “how to get rich” in YouTube or in the Google search bar, you get flooded with all so…
The 5 BEST Credit Cards For Beginners In 2024
What’s up, Graham? It’s Guys here. So here’s the deal: over the last 10 years, I have spent hundreds of hours researching how to maximize the value of every dollar that I spend to the point where now I could travel pretty much anywhere I want to in the wo…
Example finding critical t value
We are asked what is the critical value t star (t asterix) for constructing a 98% confidence interval for the mean from a sample size of n, which is equal to 15 observations. So just as a reminder of what’s going on here, you have some population. There’…
Gideon v Wainwright
[Instructor] Now we’re gonna talk about an important Supreme Court case that reinforced the idea that states have to provide the same rights when people are arrested and accused of a crime, as are guaranteed in the United States Constitution. And that c…
I Make Boring Videos
Before diving into this video, I have a question: do I have your undivided attention? If you’re working or playing a game, I highly suggest you pause everything for the next 10 to 15 minutes and only listen to my words. You don’t have to, of course, but I…
Your desires are not yours.
Most of our desires are picked up through society: what other people are doing, what my friends are doing, what my brother’s doing, what my classmates are doing, what my wife wants, etc. So we copy those desires, and then we make them part of ourselves, a…