Back in the 1990s, I used to dismiss the anti-politically-correct with the belief that they just wanted to be able to say the N-word in public again without some kind of social sanction.
I don't think I've ever seen more evidence of that than in this Presidential election.
I keep getting into these debates with Trump supporters online where something they say turns out to be offensive, and I express that I was offended by what they said. And their immediate reaction is to get offended at the fact that I was offended.
"Hey, you can't say all Muslims are terrorists. That's racist."
"Stop calling me racist! That offends me!"
Then stop being bloody racist, is what springs immediately to mind.
But getting back to my first paragraph, it seems that the goal of Trump's supporters in eradicating political correctness is to declare a monopoly on being offended. We're not allowed to be offended by Trump's comments on Mexicans and Muslims or his reposts from white supremacist websites, but they're allowed to run for the fainting couch in a cloud of verklempt whenever someone criticizes their rhetoric.
They don't want to eliminate political correctness, they want to own it. And when you own political correctness, you control the language. There was a letter to the editor from someone who claimed to be just as offended by the word "racist" as others were by the dreaded N-word and demanding that the word be relegated to the same status.
No side gets to declare a monopoly on outrage, and neither side has the right to an audience, and even the most deplorable speech has the right to exist, but right-wingers have always been clumsy with left-wing rhetoric, and this bizarre shadow version of political correctness is no different. When Trump said he had the best words, I sometimes wonder whether the unspoken predicate was, "But I never get to use any of 'em!"
I don't think I've ever seen more evidence of that than in this Presidential election.
I keep getting into these debates with Trump supporters online where something they say turns out to be offensive, and I express that I was offended by what they said. And their immediate reaction is to get offended at the fact that I was offended.
"Hey, you can't say all Muslims are terrorists. That's racist."
"Stop calling me racist! That offends me!"
Then stop being bloody racist, is what springs immediately to mind.
But getting back to my first paragraph, it seems that the goal of Trump's supporters in eradicating political correctness is to declare a monopoly on being offended. We're not allowed to be offended by Trump's comments on Mexicans and Muslims or his reposts from white supremacist websites, but they're allowed to run for the fainting couch in a cloud of verklempt whenever someone criticizes their rhetoric.
They don't want to eliminate political correctness, they want to own it. And when you own political correctness, you control the language. There was a letter to the editor from someone who claimed to be just as offended by the word "racist" as others were by the dreaded N-word and demanding that the word be relegated to the same status.
No side gets to declare a monopoly on outrage, and neither side has the right to an audience, and even the most deplorable speech has the right to exist, but right-wingers have always been clumsy with left-wing rhetoric, and this bizarre shadow version of political correctness is no different. When Trump said he had the best words, I sometimes wonder whether the unspoken predicate was, "But I never get to use any of 'em!"
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