A Culture War Against
Tolerance
By Lawrence Davidson
Part I –
Tolerance Amid Growing
Intolerance
July 16,
2017 "Information
Clearing House"
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In case you
haven’t noticed, the United States is a country
deeply divided on a large number of basic
issues: racial issues, gender issues, issues of
sexual preference, the role of government in
society, the role of religious views in shaping
laws, and so on. Influential Institutions, such
as media outlets, are being labeled as “left” or
“right” depending on how they report or relate
on these issues. Battles now rage on these
topics in the halls of Congress. Finally, the
Supreme Court’s legal decisions on cases that
reflect these questions have been trending
toward the “conservative” end of the spectrum.
All of this makes it quite difficult to have a
meaningful discussion or debate about such
issues in the public realm. Such attempts have
often led to further divisiveness instead of
reconciliation – reflecting what some might
describe as an ongoing culture war.
The one place where thoughtful
debates are usually encouraged is on the
university and colleges campuses. This is
particularly so in the “humanities” and “social
sciences” classrooms, where you find courses in
history, English, foreign languages, sociology,
anthropology, political science and the like.
Such areas of study draw on diverse source
material and examples. And so, running against
the popular grain, so to speak, divisive issues
often become legitimate aspects of study.
This process of study and
discussion concerning controversial topics has
been going on on U.S. campuses at least since
the end of World War II. By the 1970s clear
preferences as to how these issues should be
thought about appeared. And, they consistently
agreed with a tolerant stand that maximized the
virtues of equality and social justice. It
should come as no surprise that faculty in these
areas are usually left of center on the
political spectrum.
Thus, the campus consensus is
that while an individual can privately feel as
he or she likes about topics such as
homosexuality or racial integration, and can
choose their social circle accordingly, it is
wrong to publicly act in an overtly
discriminatory way. Until recently the courts
have agreed with this position, but now things
appear to be changing. Such a trend in the
direction of public intolerance has begun to
isolate the campus environment while at the same
time denigrating the tolerant position as
“political correctness” – as if being correct
and thus legitimate, appropriate and proper was
a failing.
Part II – A Republican Attack on
the University
This process of isolating one of
the staunchest bastions of active public
tolerance has recently been highlighted by a new
(July 2017) report of the Pew Research Center
entitled Sharp Partisan Divisions In Views of
National Institutions. According to the report,
there has been “a dramatic attitude shift on
higher education among Republicans and people
who lean Republican.” It would seem that
“Republicans have soured on higher education,
with more than half [a reported 58% of them] now
saying that colleges have a negative impact on
the United States.” The more conservative the
Republican respondent described him- or herself,
the more likely they are to have a negative view
of higher educational institutions. This
compares with 72% of Democrats who saw the
contribution of colleges on society as positive.
Of course, Democrats now have problems getting
elected.
There is a link between those who
hold a negative view of institutions of higher
learning and those who confine themselves to
watching or listening to the country’s
right-wing media. As it turns out, “Virtually
every day Fox News, Breitbart and other
conservative outlets run critical articles about
free speech disputes on college campuses,
typically with coverage focused on the perceived
liberal orthodoxy and political correctness in
higher education.” Now consider that Fox News is
the most popular news (or shall we say, alleged
news) show on U.S. television.
The success of right-wing news
and other media is a good example of viewers
practicing, perhaps unconsciously, confirmation
bias. The criterion for the information you seek
out is not accuracy or truth, but rather its
ability to confirm an outlook you already hold.
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Of course, one does not have to
be right-wing to play this particular game but,
ultimately it makes a difference if you are
among the intolerant. Intolerant worldviews are
closed systems. Once you have committed to them
you have put on blinkers and become one of the
faithful – no more debates, no more discussions,
no more broadmindedness, no more tolerance.
People without your blinkers start to appear as
dangerous, heretical, unpatriotic. You are now
bound to a “group think” that is starkly
undemocratic.
Part III – Poisonous Sour Grapes
As intolerance under the
leadership of Republicans and neo-Republicans
(Trump, Bannon, Tea Party types, etc.) becomes
more widespread, those institutions that value
tolerance come under pressure. This sometimes
comes from right-wing media, sometimes from
special interest donors and lobbyists, and
sometimes, in the case of college and
universities, from pockets of students (both
right and left) who have decided that some
outlooks are so unacceptable that they must be
silenced. Whenever reasonable this last action
should be avoided. If you don’t like what campus
speakers stand for or say, one’s default
position should not be to shut them down, but
rather to use their presence as a teaching
moment: here is how not to build a healthy
society. However, in the midst of a culture war,
the tolerant may ultimately find themselves
painted into a corner.
We can legitimately ask how far
the Republican right is willing to push their
campaign of intolerance against tolerant college
campuses. Having lost the open campus debates on
an array of divisive issues, they now react with
a poisonous version of sour grapes.They declare
that “colleges have a negative impact on the
United States.” If they take this charge to
Congress or to the courts, we may come to a
point where tolerance of extreme intolerance is
no longer reasonable. Given that level of threat
we should all be aware of Karl Popper’s
description of the paradox of tolerance:
“unlimited tolerance must lead to the
disappearance of tolerance. If we extend
unlimited tolerance even to those who are
intolerant, if we are not prepared to defend a
tolerant society against the onslaught of the
intolerant, then the tolerant will be destroyed,
and tolerance with them.”
This is the dilemma that is
forced upon us when war – in this case a culture
war – takes over the public mind. The space for
tolerance shrinks and it is the barbarians among
us who start to define the rules of social
interaction.
Lawrence Davidson is a retired professor of
history from West Chester University in West
Chester PA. His academic research focused on the
history of American foreign relations with the
Middle East. He taught courses in Middle East
history, the history of science and modern
European intellectual history.
The
views expressed in this article are solely those
of the author and do not necessarily reflect the
opinions of Information Clearing House.
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