Attitude

COLUMNIST — AMROU AL- KADHI

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Amrou on meeting Laurence Fox

Early in June, I responded impulsivel­y to an annoying tweet by Laurence Fox. It was at the height of the global response to the harrowing murder of George Floyd, and the world seemed to be having a collective reckoning with systems of white supremacy. Laurence tweeted that “Every single human life is precious,” and as this seemed to be invoking an ‘ All Lives Matter’ sentiment — and by virtue, a discrediti­ng of the Black Lives Matter project — I tweeted that this was a “profoundly dumb” statement. Next thing I knew, Laurence Fox was telling his followers that he knew which park I took my dog to, and that he would like to have a chat.

We arranged to meet. I was nervous, I admit. As a queer, non- binary person of colour, I was dreading talking to a man who has said provocativ­e and hurtful things about issues that aff ect my life on a daily basis. But I decided to approach the meeting in good faith. Perhaps I could change his mind and encourage him to use his platform more sensitivel­y, and make him see why words really do matter in conversati­ons around race. We met and, in truth, he was perfectly nice as we had a calm, polite conversati­on. When the sting is taken out of an online feud, it’s easier to recognise your foe’s humanity.

He explained why he felt taking a knee for George Floyd was an assault on people’s Britishnes­s. I was wholly unconvince­d — mainly because his argument seemed to have very little awareness about how the aristocrat­ic connotatio­ns of kneeling are tied up in a brutal history of colonialis­m; Britain is Britain because of its continued kneeling on the necks of non- Western nations.

I recommende­d he read a book that might challenge some of his beliefs ( namely, that minorities and the Left are assaulting free speech). In return, he suggested that I read a book by a notorious transphobe, who believes racism and sexism to be fake constructs that have gone “too far” and who has written repeatedly against “trans activism”. I know this author’s work well, but I declined to read his new book. This is when the Twitter goading of me escalated — it even formed the subject of a video interview Laurence released online.

I appreciate Fox’s willingnes­s to read the book I recommende­d, but there’s an important distinctio­n. We should all be open to having our ideas challenged; it’s why I went on the walk with him. But I was being asked to read an author whose toxic writings don’t just challenge my ideas, but my very rights and lived experience­s. This is where Laurence, and many others on the Right, have, I think, made a mistake. I would never ask anyone to read something that undermined their existence. Their ideas? Yes. Their humanity? Never. By refusing to engage in debates about our humanity, minorities are not shutting down ‘ free speech’ – we are simply refusing to engage with ideas that seek to deny us freedom in the fi rst place.

“We should all be open to having our ideas challenged”

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