Global Times - Weekend

Overly political correct in US losin losing the plot

- By Rong Xiaoqing The author is a New York-based journalist and Alicia Patterson fellow. rong_xiaoqing@hotmail.com Page Editor: liqingqing@globaltime­s.com.cn

Amid the protests spurred by George Floyd’s death, the demand for political correctnes­s has reached new heights.

A statue of Christophe­r Columbus in St. Paul, the capital of Minnesota, was toppled. Another one in Boston was beheaded, because of allegation­s from some historians that his voyages, that led to the colonizati­on of the Americas, resulted in appalling abuse of native people. He is accused of tyranny, genocide and engaging in slavery – and is now regarded by the left of the political spectrum as an explorer to be abhorred rather than applauded.

Columbus is not alone in this new trend of erasing political incorrect culture. Cable channel HBO has temporaril­y pulled Gone With the Wind because of “racist depictions” in the 1939 classic movie. The movie was only revised once and given an introducti­on that had been written by a black scholar that puts the film into its historical context.

Meanwhile, Marta Kauffman, co-creator of the legendary sitcom Friends, which ran for ten seasons between 1994-2004 and is still popular today, apologized publicly for the lack of diversity in its cast – all of the major characters are white.

These and many other events – including a series of firings and forced apologies in the news media and academia – have startled many Chinese in the US who thought that freedom of speech is being infringed upon. Some even suggested that the Cultural Revolution, a sociopolit­ical movement between 1966 and 1976 in China, has been reincarnat­ed in the US. For many older Chinese, that period was a nightmare.

These fears are exaggerate­d. What is going on now in the US is not an American cultural revolution in many senses. For one, no single person or small group of people has the power to ignite, halt or tame the movement. And when the left are smashing the statues, the right are not being locked in reeducatio­n camps. Rather, they are fighting back via their own media platforms. They also have street activities in which right-wing militias arm up with guns to square off against the “black lives matter” protesters. But there should be some concern among liberals that the tactics the left are adopting are too zealous to mobilize more people to join their side.

It is true that racism has never loosened its grip on the US. Although the civil rights movement has made progress in the past half century, clearly overt racism has not been reduced enough, let alone eliminated. Minorities are still fighting for their basic human rights.

This was made clear by the death of George Floyd, a black man whose life was terminated by a police officer when he put his knee on Floyd’s neck for eight minute and 46 seconds on May 25.

It was underscore­d a few days ago when Rayshard Brooks, another black man, was shot dead by the police in Atlanta on June 12 after he resisted arrest in a fast-food drive-through.

It is such incidents that have pushed the black community and the left to fight back with behavior that sometimes may seem to be radical.

And the targets aren’t only wellknown politician­s or pundits who can defend themselves more easily. A Chinese-American high school student recently suffered a verbal pummeling simply because she didn’t say anything, according to a WeChat post written by her mother that went viral.

Based on the mother’s account, her daughter, who was the president of the Asian students associatio­n at the school, had been working hard to build bridges between different ethnic groups. But during the recent protests, because she didn’t sign on the petitions students initiated in social media to support the Black Lives Matter movement, she was singled out and cyber bullied.

“In a society built on principles of equality, democracy and law and order, if keeping silence is considered a crime, I doubt how many different voices it can accommodat­e,” the mother wrote in the article entitled, “Do We Have the Right to Keep Silent.” This could be the Achilles’ heel of this movement. When the real racists are well shielded by their indifferen­ce to the cries of protesters, those who are sympatheti­c are bleeding from the wounds left by the steamrolle­r of anti-racism.

And things could be even worse for the left if some of those moderate supporters are pushed to the other side in November’s presidenti­al election.

 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from China