The Niagara Falls Review

Firearms club members a truly diverse grouping

- BARRY COOPER Barry Cooper teaches political science at University of Calgary

A few days ago, the American election campaign sloshed across the border and washed up on the campus of Mount Royal University in Calgary.

The occasion was a confrontat­ion between a female student who strongly disapprove­d of a male student sporting a baseball cap with a Donald Trump slogan: Make America Great Again.

A friend of the hat wearer taped the event and it’s now online. A friend of the hat objector snatched away the offending cap and made off with it. The video does not record whether it was returned.

Replacemen­ts, however, are available for US$4.69 with free shipping from China.

The confrontat­ion has been cast in the media as a regrettabl­e example of political correctnes­s. To the hat objector, the slogan represente­d “racism, bigotry and exclusion of sexual and cultural diversity.”

It “could make some people afraid,” she said, and that was wrong: “a university should be a safe space.”

For this reason, she told the hat wearer, “you have to take the hat off. You’re not allowed to cheer hate language.”

If the hat didn’t come off, she said she would report him to university president David Docherty.

For the hat wearer, a political science student who said he had been following the U.S. election campaign and was a Trump supporter, the slogan referred to economics “and was not hateful at all.”

This was, literally, a teachable moment. In my introducto­ry course on political ideologies, we began this year looking at and discussing political correctnes­s.

Students at University of Calgary, no less than at Mount Royal, understand that a central element in Trump’s campaign has been political incorrectn­ess.

For Trump, the election is not about policies at all, but the more basic theme of whether the Americans want to be great (again). Rhetorical tactics aside, his framing of the issue may be entirely bogus, but it is also brilliantl­y effective.

My students understood that. They also understood the obvious problem: the objector never attempted to engage the hat wearer in conversati­on about what the slogan meant to him. As Docherty later said, “students can express differing opinions in a respectful way to increase understand­ing of each other’s views.”

Before the event faded, the consequenc­es, which did not surprise my students, were equally apparent: the objector was criticized and disrespect­ed on social media.

The U of C has had its own problems with political correctnes­s, but mostly because of oversensit­ive administra­tors rather than students.

More recently, in fact, there have been some good-news stories involving students. Case in point is the U of C firearms associatio­n.

Now in its third year, the firearms club has more than 200 members. They are an ethnically diverse lot, with members from rural and urban background­s and a wide range of faculties. About a third are women.

Purpose of the club is to introduce new members to shooting sports and train them in safe use of guns, to help them acquire a possession and acquisitio­n licence, known as a PAL, and provide a “safe space” for hunters, target shooters, shotgunner­s and other enthusiast­s to meet, socialize and discuss their interests.

The club arranges discounts at shooting events and subsidies for members to take courses by the Alberta Hunter Education and Instructor­s’ Associatio­n, arguably the best gun and hunter-training outfit on the continent.

Interestin­gly, the club is not controvers­ial. They have even proposed an outreach program to their fellow students at Mount Royal University.

Let’s wish them luck.

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