.
"Cultural relativism
demands that we erase the notion of “savagery” from our memory banks,
and we are ordered to understand alien cultures on their own terms. One
society is not better than any other: this is what liberals mean by
“diversity.”"
9/30/12, "Thought police on Fox?" ClareSparkBlog
"You can’t say “savage” on Fox News Channel.
This morning, Jamie Colby, a Fox News anchor, explained to the
audience that she could not bring herself to quote the ad, formulated by
Pamela Geller, which, upon a judge’s orders, is now placed on subways
in NYC and other venues. For Ms. Colby, the words (later described as
“fighting words” by her guests) were simply unmentionable in polite
company. I gather from the ad that the word “savage” (along with
“savages”?) takes its place with F-bombs and other evil expletives.
Here is the advertisement, part of which is a quotation from Ayn Rand:
Geller’s ad was responding to anti-Israel ads that had been placed in
New York City subways for several years, and had to sue the MTA to get
it posted. It was not that long ago that a Harvard professor as
prestigious as F. O. Matthiessen could divide up humanity into the
civilized and the savage, seeing this as a core conflict around which
one could write literary history. But that was 1941, in his still read American Renaissance. And Matthiessen was no friend to American expansion. (See http://clarespark.com/2010/12/29/f-o-matthiessen-martyr-to-mccarthyism/).
What is at issue here is the ongoing victory of the forces of political correctness.
The ad in contention nowhere says that all Muslims are enemies of
Israel; rather it singles out jihadists, about whose intentions to wipe
Israel off the map, no one should be in doubt.
I first found out that the adjective or noun “savage” or “savages”
was forbidden to the politically progressive when I read Richard
Slotkin’s book Regeneration Through Violence: The Mythology of the American Frontier, at the recommendation of my friend Michael Rogin, author of Fathers and Children, a controversial book on Andrew Jackson’s policies as genocidal toward native Americans, and that further maintained that all American institutions shared Jackson’s paternalistic and hierarchical military model.
(Rogin told me himself that he was very wounded when his
colleague, political scientist John Schaar, also a famous New Leftist,
had criticized Rogin for placing Indian removal at the heart of American
history; perhaps the anti-expansionist line was too simplistic.)
Professor Slotkin has continued his theme through decades of books and
novels dedicated to his thesis, identical with Rogin’s and with other
celebrities in American Studies. (For a rundown on the anti-American
celebrities in academe see http://clarespark.com/2009/09/06/the-hebraic-american-landscape-sublime-or-despotic/.)
Cultural relativism
demands that we erase the notion of “savagery” from our memory banks,
and we are ordered to understand alien cultures on their own terms. One
society is not better than any other: this is what liberals mean by
“diversity.” (This notion was sharply criticized by Ralph Bunche while
he was assisting Gunnar Myrdal in the preparation of An American Dilemma. What the libertarian-leaning Bunche wanted was an America that would live up to its founding creed.)...
We now should have an idea of what “fair and balanced” means in the
practice of Fox News Channel. As I have argued previously, this cable
news outlet, though it broadcasts some dissenting voices on the
Right, is centrist, moderate, and progressive. Welcome to the world of 1984.
The thought police are everywhere. The founders gave us a republic, and
it is up in the air as to whether or not we can summon the will to keep
it." via Atlas Shrugs
.
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