THE NARRATIVE AND POLITICAL CORRECTNESS


Threats to freedom of speech, writing and action, though often trivial in isolation, are cumulative in their effect and, unless checked, lead to a general disrespect for the rights of the citizen. -George Orwell

Thursday, December 11, 2014

THREE MARTINI LUNCH: DECEMBER 11, 2014

National Review's Jim Geraghty joins host Greg Corombos. Today's topics: Josh Earnest stumbles defending drone strikes, Elizabeth Warren slams the House budget bill, and the president of Smith College apologizes for saying "All Lives Matter."



College president apologizes after offending students by saying "all lives matter"
I'm glad she walked it back. It's a pretty outrageous statement.
Between garbage like this, Star Chamber justice for students accused of crimes, and the cost of tuition, why would any kid go to college anymore? Ah, right: Because we as a society agreed at some point that a B.A. is a prerequisite for any job more exalted than fry cook. If you want to work, you do your time at drunken sleepaway camp.
Carry on, then.
"We are united in our insistence that all lives matter," read the e-mail, in which [Smith College President Kathleen McCartney] made clear she was strongly behind the [Eric Garner/Michael Brown] protests, writing that the grand jury decisions had "led to a shared fury… We gather in vigil, we raise our voices in protest."
But she soon received backlash from students for her phrasing. They were offended that she did not stick with the slogan "black lives matter."…
In response to student backlash, McCartney apologized in another campus-wide email Friday, saying she had made a mistake "despite my best intentions."…
"I regret that I was unaware the phrase/hashtag 'all lives matter' has been used by some to draw attention away from the focus on institutional violence against Black people," she wrote.
Only by reading the two e-mails she sent out can you appreciate how stupidly Orwellian the backlash was. Some critics of the protests had been answering the "black lives matter" slogan with the phrase "all lives matter." McCartney, who was palpably not being critical — she announced a vigil for Garner and Brown in her first e-mail and refers to herself in the second as a "white ally" — unwittingly used the same phrase to make the protesters' point, i.e. that Garner's and Brown's lives shouldn't matter less because they're black. Her sympathy couldn't have been clearer. She got flamed anyway. Says Charles Cooke, "a woman just apologized for having failed to repeat a mantra that she didn't know existed."
I don't know how to explain the impulse to punish someone who's straining to show that she's on your side except as an artifact of petty totalitarianism. It's not enough that one doesn't share the forbidden sentiment; one mustn't speak it aloud either, even inadvertently, for fear that someone who hears it will misunderstand and then they'll share the forbidden sentiment. The virus must be contained...
Also read:

Joe Scarborough: I can't wait for the eventual Senate report on Obama's drone program

When Democrats do it, it's not a government shutdown

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