Political correctness or self censoring arises from the same peer pressure.


arthur

-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected]
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Keith Hudson
Sent: Monday, March 04, 2013 10:35 AM
To: RE-DESIGNING WORK, INCOME DISTRIBUTION, EDUCATION
Subject: [Futurework] Crowd Power


Kings and Queens, if they reign long enough, can be both loved and hated at
different junctures in their careers, depending on decisions that were and
were not taken, verbal gaffes that were or were not spoken, the expertise or
shortcomings of the royal spin doctors, etc. At the present time nobody in
the whole of England is more popular than Queen Elizabeth II. This is
because the royal PR department has been working almost every day in
presenting the Queen in a good light ever since the Funeral Service of
Princess Diana in September 1997 when the Queen was almost isolated by
anti-royal sentiment -- and this within Westminster Abbey!

Most people's memory of the 1997 event is either forgotten or has been
changed into something more benign in order to become consistent with the
Queen's present popjularity. Feelings aganist the Queen were very high up
to, and including, the day of Diana's Funeral. Previously, the Queen has
disparaged Diana by not cutting her holiday short, by not flying the flag at
Buckingham Palace at half mast and several other things. It was not, of
course, the Queen who took these decisions but her advisors.

When Earl Spencer, Diana's brother, gave his Tribute in the Service he made
a slightly critical remark about the royal negligence. The congregation of
ordinary people that was gathered outside the Abbey listening to
loudspeakers started applauding. It was so loud, in fact, that the invited
congregation within the Abbey could not only hear the applause through the
closed doors but started taking part in it!  It swept most of the way to the
front where the queen was sitting before it finally petered out.

The congregation within the Abbey were part of the social elite of England. 
They were very much part of what I call the 20-class and were not
antipathetic towards royalty as those  outside the Abbey (typically
80-class) were. Yet they applauded!  The reason is what is called "peer
pressure". The congregation within the Abbey was applauding a strong
anti-royal sentiment because a sufficient number of others (even though
outside the doors) were aplauding.

Peer pressure is so strong that only a very few exceptional individuals can
resist it. It's an instinctive predisposition. It's safe enugh when confined
to small groups and organizations. It's dangerous when it occurs in sizeable
crowds becausee sentiment can then completly overwhelm reason or judgement.
In the 1920s many German iintgellectuals made sure they didn't attend
Hitler's Nuremburg Rallies because they'd seen friends of theirs attend one
as sceptics and retujrn from one as a convinced Nazi.

Keith 

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