Gulf News

Free speech faces a new dark age

Mainstream voices around the world are now stepping back, leaving discourse dominated by the angriest voices

- By Allister Heath ■ Allister Heath is a British journalist and commentato­r. He is the editor of the Sunday Telegraph.

Never before has it been so easy to communicat­e, to express one’s views, to write, publish, talk or broadcast. Yet, instead of ushering in the golden age for free speech and rational inquiry that so many of us expected, the very technologi­es that were meant to liberate us are being used to stifle expression and stamp out dissent.

“You can’t say that”, “you must say this”: On social media, in universiti­es and increasing­ly in every other institutio­n across the land, a hideous battle is raging, and liberty is losing. The range of views that can be expressed without fear of reprisal has narrowed dramatical­ly, partly because we’ve lost the language and manners required to disagree constructi­vely.

Whoever holds a different opinion — on Brexit, on social issues, on anything — is dismissed as “bonkers”, “mad”, “laugh out loud” stupid, to be chased out of the village. There is no longer any sense of proportion­ality, just an all-or-nothing, snap assessment. Like in the witch-hunts of yore, the burden of proof is reversed: You must prove you are not guilty of offending others’ feelings, which is impossible.

The strategy, for the tens of thousands of activists working in digital packs, is to bully, shame and destroy anybody who doesn’t agree with them, who dares to express a different opinion or who fails to signal their virtue appropriat­ely. Ad hominem attacks were once seen as bad form; today they are rationalis­ed using bogus theories. Reality in the era of fake news no longer matters: If somebody believes that somebody said or meant something, then it must be true. A vague feeling is enough.

Nobody from the sensible Left or sensible Right is immune from this catastroph­ic outbreak of nihilism; everything and everyone is fair game. Take Victoria Atkins, Britain’s Women’s Minister, who said that she is “a little cautious” about the number of teenagers undergoing gender reassignme­nt treatment. She was immediatel­y targeted for annihilati­on. It’s an attempt at imposing digital “speech licences”: Those who do not meet the fashionabl­e orthodoxy of the moment have no right to be heard.

The aim is to encourage self-censorship, policed by an army of vigilantes. It’s working: Nobody ever comes to the defence of those being trashed, and mainstream Britain is quietly withdrawin­g, ensuring that the public discourse is ever more dominated by the angriest voices.

The new moral police is much like the old, or at least that which existed during medieval times; they are seeking to enforce a new religion for western atheists. It is a sickening charade: How can such people not see what they are doing? There is good and evil, sacred texts (the tenets of cultural Marxism, most of the time), supporting documents (dubious “evidence” produced by prejudiced social scientists, much of which cannot be replicated), a priesthood, an original sin (western imperialis­m), excommunic­ations (for those who question the unquestion­able), confession­s (on Twitter, usually), repentance and of course the constant Inquisitio­n and use of the auto-dafe. Irony is well and truly dead.

The reality is that free speech isn’t just about a legal system that allows you, with some restrictio­ns, to say, write or publish what you want. No, free speech describes an entire ethical system that places the utmost value on people’s right to express their beliefs, to dissent, to think for themselves, to debate, to discuss and, yes, to err. It is an integral element of the classical liberal character, and, for a short while, such an approach became the norm in many Western countries.

Weeding out bad ideas

Real freedom of expression implies some measure of openness, of curiosity, the ability to listen, at least occasional­ly, to others and to learn to live with difference. It is an approach, an attitude, not merely a set of laws, a “human right” or a constituti­onal amendment; it is based on a realistic, humble approach to the limits of human knowledge. It is optimistic about the ability of good ideas to weed out bad ones; for most free speech advocates, getting to the truth is an iterative process of trial and error.

True friends of free speech genuinely relish living in an intellectu­ally diverse society, one characteri­sed by a constant clash of visions, where ideas are held up to scrutiny. In her Friends of Voltaire, the British writer Evelyn Beatrice Hall summarised his thoughts aptly: “I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it,” a phrase often wrongly attributed to the French philosophe­r. It used to be cited so often. Today, one rarely hears it.

Technology alone didn’t trigger this revolution: With the decline of Communism, elites have embraced a new form of cultural collectivi­sm. Individual­ism is passe: The validity of an argument is no longer to be assessed directly and objectivel­y, these idiot savants in our universiti­es now believe. Instead, the only thing that matters is the group that the speaker or writer is deemed to belong to. What category of person said something is key; what they said less so.

The decline of free speech is now the greatest threat facing Britain and the West. Without the freedom to think freely, to question, to disagree, we are nothing. When will we finally have the courage to rise up and put the new totalitari­ans back in their box?

 ?? Jose Luis Barros/©Gulf News ??
Jose Luis Barros/©Gulf News

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates