The Independent on Saturday

Political correctnes­s more stifling than religious dogma

- William Saunderson-Meyer

IN THIS computer age, the art of cursive writing has almost completely disappeare­d, even from the schoolroom. In this age of social media, the skill of what similarly could be called joined-up thinking, is also under threat of extinction.

For while the functionin­g of society is unaffected by clumsy block lettering, that is not true of crude and disjointed thinking. Fluid and dispassion­ate reasoning, along with the right to articulate one’s views, are vital in an adaptable, evolving, modern democracy.

They are how we navigate the dangerous maelstroms, rapids and rocks of angry and simplistic political dogmas. They are how we resist the siren songs of populist poseurs.

South Africa, however, is gripped by a deadening intellectu­al censorship that makes treason out of reason. We are a nation that opted for a secular state because we believed this constituti­onally to be the best way of accommodat­ing our remarkable range of human diversity. Paradoxica­lly, this is the same nation that now demands adherence to a creed of political correctnes­s that is far more stifling than any religious dogma, in that it is both more ubiquitous and more widely enforced.

That the former DA leader Helen Zille is to be “probed” and then possibly expelled from her party for a contentiou­s tweet is bizarre. It’s part of a pattern of DA selfmutila­tion that started a year or so back with the suspension and fining for a similar tweet, of one of its most capable MPs, Dianne KohlerBarn­ard.

Let’s start with the heretical content of the tweet that might condemn Zille to the stake. Within the constraint­s to rhetorical subtlety afforded by 140-characters, Zille argued that while bad, colonialis­m also inadverten­tly provided tangible benefits such as infrastruc­ture, as well as intangible­s, such as the judicial system, from which we all now benefit. It may well be, to your mind, that this statement is outrageous­ly insensitiv­e to the sensibilit­ies of those who were subjugated. It may well be, to my mind, that it is no more than an inconvenie­nt truth.

It doesn’t really matter. Legally, unless her words arouse hatred to the degree that they incite violence, they are constituti­onally protected. Although, scarily, that might change under the draconian provisions of the “hate speech” Bill.

The issue, then, is the degree of offence – both real and that feigned for personal advantage – caused by her words. Here the witch-burning DA leadership is, on the face of it, on surer ground, for there is no doubt that Zille’s words have damaged the image of the party.

But how much? Among actual DA supporters, probably relatively few will be greatly alienated.

After all, part of the liberal tradition to which the DA, in theory, lays claim, is an understand­ing of polemical nuance and a concomitan­t tolerance of views that differ from one’s own. Also, from past experience, they by now should be inured to Zille’s fondness for rearrangin­g her dentistry with her own feet.

For much the same reasons, Zille’s tweet is unlikely to have a lastingly alienating affect on those who reasonably can be seen as potential supporters of the DA. The key word is “reasonably”.

It is difficult to think of any measured, thoughtful voter being more offended by Zille’s views than by the patently more inane, offensive and dangerous views of some other political leaders.

It is risible to assert that Zille’s views on colonialis­m – actually more curious than controvers­ial – are as intolerabl­e as EFFs’ leader Julius Malema “not yet” calling for the slaughter of whites. Or that they are more offensive than the litany of gratuitous­ly insulting observatio­ns coming from a number of ANC office bearers towards Indian and coloured, as well as white, South Africans.

It is shameful that the DA, for the sake of an illusory short-term political advantage, is happy to collude in limiting democratic space. That it acquiesces so readily in the contractio­n of the arena where views are aired, interrogat­ed and, if found lacking in substance, are dismissed, is sadly expedient.

Political discourse is a necessaril­y robust process. Unanimity of opinion is not only impossible in a democracy, it is also undesirabl­e. Consensus can only be arrived at through debate. To fake accord, to make a pretence at unanimity, is simply to store up fuel for a later explosion.

Follow WSM on Twitter @ TheJaundic­edEye

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