Hey, Democrats! SNAP OUT OF IT! Stop playing the martyr. You are not morally
superior. A man who was accused of
sexually assaulting a young woman in high school was just appointed to the
Supreme Court of the United States and you are calling for the resignation of
the duly elected Governor of Virginia because he put shoe polish on his face to
impersonate Michael Jackson in a dance contest 30 years ago? Have you totally
lost touch with reality?
This is reality:
Human behavior is intrinsically neither good nor bad. People
naturally do whatever gets them what they need and want. That’s how survival
works. Which behavior is considered good, acceptable or legal, and which
behavior is considered bad, unacceptable or illegal is a social construct. That
means you can’t reasonably or fairly judge behavior outside of the social construct
(which includes the time, place and circumstances) in which it occurred.
Appearing in blackface was NOT socially unacceptable
behavior until liberal political correctness became a fad. Al Jolson, one of
the most prominent and beloved entertainers in the ‘20s and ’30s, was famous
for appearing in blackface and singing Swanee River. In the 1970’s the variety show Laugh In was the most popular show on
television and a large part of its humor was based on making fun of racial and
ethnic stereotypes. Saturday Night Live did the same thing in its early years. And, comedian
Don Rickels built his whole career around making fun of everybody – their race,
ethnicity, religion, physical characteristics, age, gender, clothes, job.....
nothing was sacred. And the people he
made fun of loved him for it. The idea was that if we could laugh at our
differences they wouldn’t be as threatening or divisive.
Then along came political correctness and now, not only is
the mere mention of our differences considered a sacrilege, we are judging
people’s pre-PC behavior by current PC standards. Maybe, in retrospect, some of
the pre-PC behavior was insensitive and hurtful to some people. But that
doesn’t justify judging and punishing people now for doing something that was
considered acceptable when they did it. If
we are going to continue down that path and judge past behavior by current
standards then we need to be consistent and take down all the paintings and
statues of Thomas Jefferson and rewrite our history books because, by today’s
standards, he was a racist and a sexual predator. He owned slaves and impregnated
some of them.
Speaking of sexual pedators, the rationale for judging behavior based on the social
construct in which it occurred applies to sexual behavior as well as diversity.
When I was a teenager, men were expected to initiate sexual activity. If you
didn’t, people would think you were a “fairy”. And women were expected to
resist sexual advances and say “no”, at least initially, even if they actually
wanted the advances. If you didn’t, people would think you were a “slut”. Women’s
Lib and the sexual revolution in the ‘60s changed those expectations and it
became acceptable for women to desire, enjoy and even initiate sexual activity
and, conversely, for men to not be the initiator.
OK. I know what you are saying. “Some things are always
wrong.” No, they are not. Take murder for instance - killing another human
being. It is the most serious crime a person can commit in almost every civil
society. But, not in the military. If
you are in the military, you are supposed to kill the people that have been
designated as your enemy, even if they never did anything to hurt you
personally and live half way around the world from where you live. In fact, the more enemy people you kill, the
more medals you get. And if you kill some people who are not actually fighting
against you and just happen to live where the fighting is taking place, that’s
OK, too. We call it collateral damage and consider it unfortunate, but
acceptable. Different Social Setting - Different Social Construct - Same Behavior.
l don’t happen to think political correctness is a step
forward in terms of improving our social interactions or our quality of life. I
think being able to laugh at our differences DOES make them less threatening
and divisive, but that’s a different conversation. This is about judging
behavior and there is no doubt in my mind that we have to stop judging behavior
outside of the social construct in which it occurred. It’s driving us apart and
diverting our energies from the many real, substantive issues we need to
resolve; and we simply can’t afford to be spending time and effort on this kind
of nonsense.
What do you think?
*In case you are not old enough to remember Laugh In, the title of this blog is from
a recurring bit that Sammy Davis Jr. did on the show, where he pranced across
the stage in a long judge’s robe that dragged on the floor, snapping his fingers
and chanting, “Here come da Judge. Here come da Judge. Here come da Judge.” It was considered funny at the time, not racist.