MUST-READ: Mark Steyn discusses how Britons inform on each other

Mark Steyn writing in MacLean’s magazine. Apparently, the practice of informing the government about speech that is not in conformity with political correctness is widespread in the UK.

Excerpt:

A couple of years back, 14-year-old Codie Stott asked her teacher at Harrop Fold High School if she could sit with another group to do her science project as in hers the other five girls all spoke Urdu and she didn’t understand what they were saying. The teacher called the police, who took her to the station, photographed her, fingerprinted her, took DNA samples, removed her jewellery and shoelaces, put her in a cell for 3½ hours, and questioned her on suspicion of committing a Section Five “racial public order offence.” “An allegation of a serious nature was made concerning a racially motivated remark,” declared the headmaster Antony Edkins. The school would “not stand for racism in any form.” In a statement, Greater Manchester Police said they took “hate crime” very seriously, and their treatment of Miss Stott was in line with “normal procedure.”

And:

Six weeks ago, Roy Amor, a medical technician who made prosthetics for a company called Opcare, glanced out of the window at their offices at Withington Community Hospital, and saw some British immigration officials outside. “You better hide,” he said to his black colleague, a close friend of both Mr. Amor and his wife. Not the greatest joke in the world, but the pal wasn’t offended, laughed it off as a bit of office banter, and they both got on with their work. It was another colleague who overheard the jest and filed a formal complaint reporting Mr. Amor for “racism.” He was suspended from his job. Five days later, he received an email from the company notifying him of the disciplinary investigation and inviting him to expand on the initial statement he had made about the incident. Mr. Amor had worked in the prosthetics unit at Withington for 30 years until he made his career-detonating joke. That afternoon he stepped outside his house and shot himself in the head. The black “victim” of his “racism” attended the funeral, as did other friends.

The part that scares me about this is the confidence that the other side has in pushing their viewpoint using coercion.

Were did this nanny-like opposition to feeling offended, feeling excluded and feeling judged come from? Who puts elevates feelings and compassion over the risky, confrontational exchange of ideas? Who minimizes truth and debate and maximizes self-esteem and happiness? Who emphasizes victimhood?

You know what? Life is tough. Sometimes people say things that make you feel bad. And if you are a grown-up, you let it go. You don’t empower government to coerce people so that you can have happy feelings. Freedom and prosperity are more important than happy feelings. Life isn’t fair.

For the record, I am a very visible minority, and consider the secular left PC thought police to be the worst racists on the planet.

4 thoughts on “MUST-READ: Mark Steyn discusses how Britons inform on each other”

  1. Au contraire!

    I am just finishing up Aldous Huxley’s excellent work “A Brave New World” wherein he depicts a society that is obsessed with “happiness” (in the modern “feel-good” sense).

    In short, if people posses the wrong ideals (namely happiness wrongly defined as a good feeling as opposed to a virtuous life) they will forfeit any rights they need to in order to ensure a never ending “happy hour”.

    Like

  2. I started to read this post thinking it was a “let’s bash the Brits” but carried on anyway.

    What you’ve picked up on is the extremism that exists in ANY country but becuase we are seen as a civilised western nation it isn’t behoven that we should also appear as a police state.

    After the natural suspects of places like China, etc, Britain is the fourth or fifth most monitored country in the world. We might as well be a police state and we can’t “plead the 5th”.

    Unfortunately what we Brits tend to do is follow America but then we make it uniquely ours by being ultra pedantic, ultra picky, ultra sensitive, etc…. and there are far too many “do-gooders” who think it is their role to interfere in minor items such as feelings being hurt, but when a child is abused that same do-gooder says it’s not their roe and they might get hurt themselves.

    It’s a bizarre country and people but I do love it dearly.

    Like

Leave a reply to Stuart Cancel reply