Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

There is no free speech without ‘bothsidesi­sm’

- By Aaron Alexander Zubia InsideSour­ces.com Aaron Alexander Zubia is a postdoctor­al fellow in the Tocquevill­e Program at Furman University.

EIGHTY-FOUR percent of American adults say it is a “very serious” or “somewhat serious” problem that Americans are refraining from speaking freely because of “fear of retaliatio­n or harsh criticism.”

The New York Times editorial board recently cited this study, commission­ed with Siena College, along with a statement defending freedom of speech as “vital” for the “search for truth and knowledge.” When the board did so, critics balked. Several journalist­s condemned the Times for endorsing “bothsidesi­sm.”

What is “bothsidesi­sm”? The word is a recent addition to our cultural lexicon. It refers to the journalist­ic practice of presenting both sides of an argument. The alleged problem with this practice is that it tends to bestow on controvers­ial views an intellectu­al or moral credibilit­y they otherwise would not have.

According to one writer in the Philadelph­ia Inquirer, the “disease of bothsidesi­sm” is evident in the Times case because it advertises a false equivalenc­e. It places equal blame on both the political left and on the political right for promoting an environmen­t hostile to open discourse.

In other words, progressiv­e critics of “bothsidesi­sm” argue that cancel culture on the left poses far less of a danger to free speech than attempts in right-leaning states to determine, by law, what can and cannot be taught in K-12 classrooms and public universiti­es. A City University of New York professor calls this bothsidesi­sm “appalling” because “it equates the left criticizin­g hate and the right burning books.”

The opposite of bothsidesi­sm, of course, is onesideism. And that is what journalist­s are doing when they exculpate one political party and charge another with all that ails the country.

It is certainly easier to congregate with like-minded people to dwell and speak within our own echo chambers so that our favored views go unchalleng­ed.

There is, however, no free speech without bothsidesi­sm. There is no genuine public political discourse without bothsidesi­sm.

If we want to cultivate healthy civil discourse and make strides toward truth, we must practice bothsidesi­sm. The ancient skeptics can help us understand why.

The Academic skeptics, who were followers of Socrates, did not shy away from the hard work of engaging in for-and-against argumentat­ion for the sake of finding views that, if not true, at least resemble truth and serve as suitable guides for thought and action. “It is our practice to say what we think against every position,” the Roman philosophe­r Cicero maintained. And the reason for this is simple: “We want to discover truth.”

The early modern French skeptic Pierre Bayle differenti­ated between philosophe­rs who acted as reporters and those who acted as advocates. The advocate hides the weakness of his view and the strength of his opponents view. The reporter, meanwhile, represents “the strong and the weak arguments of the two opposite parties faithfully and without any partiality.” Bayle thought the philosophe­r, like the historian, should act as a reporter. And this would seem to apply to journalist­s, too.

To the extent that the reporter advocates a cause, it should occur after one has laid out the arguments for the reader and sided with the one that seems most persuasive. This method, while not guaranteei­ng impartiali­ty, at least promotes the kind of intellectu­al modesty and integrity necessary for goodfaith public deliberati­on.

The 18th-century British philosophe­r David Hume was an admirer of both Bayle and Cicero. He weighed pros and cons of the party positions of the Whigs and the Tories — the parties of his day. He thought this approach would “teach us a lesson of moderation in all our political controvers­ies.”

Through the practice of forand-against argumentat­ion, we might improve our own thinking and cultivate the art of discernmen­t.

The attempt to silence opponents has an element of cruelty about it, and it certainly dehumanize­s ourselves and our political enemies. Universiti­es, formerly bastions for the study of liberal arts, now tend to prioritize political advocacy over sound political judgment. This has produced the self-righteous zeal that has flooded journalist­ic outlets and that has damaged the quality of public political debate.

In the Tocquevill­e Program at Furman University, we strive, as Tocquevill­e did, “to see, not differentl­y, but further than the parties.” This calls for the practice of bothsidesi­sm, a prerequisi­te of citizenshi­p in a democratic republic, no matter how unpopular it may seem at the moment. Onesideism, on the other hand, is a formula for stifling speech, not encouragin­g it.

 ?? Getty Images ??
Getty Images

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States