The Scottish Mail on Sunday

Britain is now in the grip of a frightenin­g new kind of religion

It demands moral purity, permits no dissent, seeks to control what you say and think – and if you refuse to convert you’ll be shamed and ruined

- By ANDREW DOYLE

EVERY day there seems to be a new entry into the lexicon of social justice to add to the already burgeoning list that includes ‘noplatform­ing’, ‘trigger warnings’, ‘hate speech’ and ‘cultural appropriat­ion’. One of the latest is the barb directed at author J.K. Rowling, who has been accused of being ‘radicalise­d online’. This alarmist phrase – previously associated with jihadi terrorists – brings to mind all manner of transgress­ions. Had she joined a fanatical death-cult, or endorsed a national policy of eugenics, or embedded subliminal Nazi propaganda into her forthcomin­g new children’s book?

No. Rowling’s so-called ‘radicalisa­tion’ is her belief that there are biological difference­s between men and women.

‘If sex isn’t real,’ she had said, ‘there’s no same-sex attraction. If sex isn’t real, the lived reality of women globally is erased. I know and love trans people, but erasing the concept of sex removes the ability of many to meaningful­ly discuss their lives. It isn’t hate to speak the truth.’

The Harry Potter author has since been targeted with a torrent of vitriol, much of it aggressive­ly misogynist­ic. The ferocity increased after she published a measured and compassion­ate 3,600-word blog in which she fully explained her position. She wrote that her involvemen­t in the trans debate had originated in her experience­s as a victim of domestic abuse and that she was worried about the possibilit­y that single-sex spaces for women might be compromise­d if a man can simply declare himself to be female.

Whether one agrees with her or not – and millions do – it would be myopic not to accept that these are legitimate concerns. At the very least, we should be able to have an adult conversati­on. Unfortunat­ely, prominent social justice activists have decreed that rational debate is a form of violence.

The mantra that ‘trans women are women’ has become a clarion call, echoed most shamefully by the three main stars of the Harry Potter movie franchise: Daniel Radcliffe, Emma Watson and Rupert Grint.

Tragically, this is what happens when slogans are substitute­d for serious thought. For most people, the furore over Rowling’s comments is inexplicab­le. It is only in recent months that the culture war has exploded into the mainstream, and many of us are struggling to keep up.

WHY has declaring the truth become such a subversive act? How have we reached the point where artists and writers, the most outspoken members of society, are so often intimidate­d into silence?

In trying to make sense of the Rowling controvers­y, it is important to realise that this is part of the broader problem of a new and pervasive ideology that promotes ‘social justice’ and which is a direct threat to freedom of speech and liberal values. It is perhaps best understood as a kind of religion. It demands moral purity and brooks no dissent. It seeks to control public discourse by deeming certain words and ideas ‘problemati­c’ or supporting legislatio­n against ‘hate speech’. It advances a modernday equivalent of Original Sin in the form of concepts such as ‘systemic racism’, ‘whiteness’ or ‘unconsciou­s bias’: unproven theories that are nonetheles­s asserted as truth.

Although heretics are unlikely to be burned at the stake, its inquisitor­s are convinced that non-believers must convert for their own good. In other words, it empowers its disciples to feel a sense of righteousn­ess even as they are engaging in the most unempathet­ic and cruel behaviour.

One of its weapons is something known as ‘cancel culture’ – a system of public humiliatio­n which frequently leads to the targets losing their means of income and becoming social pariahs. More often than not, those who are ‘cancelled’ feel obliged to issue a grovelling apology, which rarely succeeds in placating the mob. Once they’ve tasted blood, the appetite is insatiable.

The extent of the rage against Rowling can be partly explained by the fact that the ‘social justice’ bullies have grown accustomed to getting their own way. They cannot comprehend the idea that one of their victims might refuse to apologise or to kowtow to their superior authority, or retreat entirely from public life.

As an author whose novels have sold at least 500million copies worldwide and grossed £6billion, Rowling cannot be cancelled, and so the tactic has limited efficacy.

In truth, many trans people have offered their support to Rowling and are understand­ably anxious about the way in which extremists are claiming to speak on their behalf.

Trans writer and YouTuber Blaire White released a video in which she pointed out that the vast majority of trans individual­s accept that sex difference­s are innate and immutable. ‘Biological sex exists,’ she wrote. ‘Without it, there is no such thing as being trans.’

The 26-year-old American has observed that many of those attacking Rowling are not trans themselves, but are so-called ‘trans allies’.

One of Rowling’s more vociferous critics is the actor George Takei (who played Mr Sulu in Star Trek), who has claimed that ‘When you defend socalled “biological sex” you sound scientific­ally ignorant and you elevate transphobi­a’. It goes without saying that Takei’s denial of reality would see him fail the most rudimentar­y of courses in human anatomy.

Apart from the trans issue, we have recently seen the rule of law flouted by groups who are determined to assert their worldview by force, and sow racial division in the name of anti-racism.

The reluctance of the Government – led by a Prime Minister who has often spoken of the need to ‘uphold the values of liberalism’ – to openly defend those principles tells us all we need to know about the power that such activists now wield. This new

Opponents are ‘cancelled’ – forced out of jobs and made social pariahs

religion has even infected our major cultural institutio­ns. Many of its acolytes occupy leading roles in higher education, the arts, the law, the mainstream media and the managerial classes.

This is why celebritie­s, broadcaste­rs, corporatio­ns, quangos, universiti­es, HR department­s and law enforcemen­t agencies tend to be far more ‘woke’ than the average member of the British public.

This disparity has led to a general mistrust of authority figures and an atmosphere of conformity in which many people feel afraid to challenge the new orthodoxie­s.

With so many losing their jobs, investigat­ed by the police or harassed online for expressing commonly held opinions, it is hardly surprising that most of us are learning to keep quiet.

The policies of our public broadcaste­r are now driven by this mindset. The BBC has recently committed to spending £100 million on improving diversity in television even though, according to the most recent survey from the Creative Diversity Network (of which all UK broadcaste­rs are members), ‘those who identify as female, transgende­r, BAME and lesbian, gay or bisexual (LGB) are all represente­d at levels comparable with (or above) national population estimates’. In other words, the BBC is spending a significan­t amount of licence-payers’ money to resolve an imaginary problem. In addition to this obsession with diversity and representa­tion, broadcaste­rs and publishers are becoming more risk-averse when it comes to the possibilit­y of causing offence.

Many publishing houses have ‘sensitivit­y readers’ to scour books for any signs of material that might be considered offensive to minority groups. In doing so, they are implicitly endorsing the patronisin­g notion that minorities are in need of their protection. No amount of homophobia in a novel is likely to offend me more than the prospect of woke publishers deciding what gay people such as myself should and shouldn’t read.

We have seen further evidence of this suffocatin­g worldview in the recent removal of some comedy shows from streaming services such as Netflix and BBC iPlayer. Episodes of Little Britain, The Mighty Boosh and The League Of Gentlemen have been booted down the memory hole, with more to follow.

Sky Cinema has introduced warning labels to films deemed to have ‘outdated attitudes, language and cultural depictions which may cause offence today’, including Breakfast At Tiffany’s, Gone With

The Wind and, most baffling of all, the sci-fi epic Aliens, because it features a white actress wearing extensive make-up to play a Hispanic character. None of which amounts to a crisis of mass censorship, of course. The true threat to free speech in the arts is the pressure that creatives now feel to self-censor for the sake of their careers.

Rowling is in the privileged position to be able to speak her mind, but only because she is so well establishe­d. That is not to downplay the courage she has shown in the face of such sustained abuse, but there is little these zealots can do to ruin her life and reputation.

Admirably, the publishing house Hachette which is due to release her latest book, The Ickabog, in

November, has faced down internal complaints from members of staff. And after four authors parted ways with Rowling’s literary agency (the Blair Partnershi­p), it put out a statement to assert its belief in ‘freedom of speech for all’. It added that it refuses to acquiesce to the protesting authors’ demands ‘to be re-educated to their point of view’.

One cannot help but wonder whether such a stance would be maintained had Rowling been a less lucrative author.

For some social justice activists, ‘silence is violence’. The answer to social injustice is not merely preventing certain forms of speech, but compelling people to speak up and say what they may not actually believe, which is only ever likely to generate resentment.

As for the arts, I fear the future looks bleak. While too many gatekeeper­s of the creative industries remain frightened of online activists, they will always think twice about offering a platform to those with an unfashiona­ble perspectiv­e. How ironic that their apparent zeal for diversity does not seem to extend to diversity of opinion. Ultimately, this is guaranteed to produce a kind of cultural stagnation, which is surely in no one’s best interests.

Of course, social justice activists should be free to make their appeals as rudely or provocativ­ely as they please, but that does not mean that they are always right. There is the temptation, though, in the short term to capitulate to their demands, but this would simply store up trouble for the future. As Winston Churchill said: ‘Each one hopes that if he feeds the crocodile enough, the crocodile will eat him last.’

We are rapidly approachin­g a very important point at which those of us who still care about liberal values will have to fight for them.

Nobody can flourish in a climate of ideologica­l conformity and this is as true for artists as it is for everyone else. Rowling deserves our support for refusing to genuflect before the high priests of social justice. If we do not learn from her example, it won’t be long before the crocodile turns on us.

J. K. Rowling deserves our support. I fear the future of the arts looks bleak

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 ??  ?? TAKING A STAND: J.K. Rowling has refused to back down to critics
TAKING A STAND: J.K. Rowling has refused to back down to critics

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