Excellent article about free speech. 
 
What is missing is recognition of the fact that if you win a public  
argument,
then public opinion shifts in the direction of your argument.  Margaret 
Thatcher
understood this perfectly. Democrats today  mostly understand this  also.
Republicans, with few exceptions,  remain utterly clueless.
 
My humble opinion
Billy
 
 
 
 
 
Make Way for "Duck Dynasty": Free Speech,  Double Standards, and Cultural 
Taboos
By _Cathy Young_ (http://www.realclearpolitics.com/authors/cathy_young/)  - 
December 23,  2013
http://www.realclearpolitics.com

 
 
There are at least two lessons to be learned from the “Duck Dynasty” 
debacle,  in which reality TV star Phil Robertson got indefinitely suspended 
from 
the  A&E hit show after making anti-gay remarks in a GQ magazine interview. 
One:  on freedom of speech, hypocrisy and double standards are rampant 
across the  political spectrum (the title of 1992 book by the great civil 
libertarian Nat  Hentoff, “_Free  Speech for Me But Not for Thee_ 
(http://www.amazon.com/Free-Speech-Me-But-Not-Thee/dp/006019006X) ,” remains 
ever-relevant). 
Two: while some  speech will always be regarded as beyond the pale in even 
the freest society,  the rapid shifting of those boundaries is sure to 
generate intense cultural  anxiety and conflict. 
The banishment of Robertson, the patriarch of a Louisiana family that grew  
rich selling duck whistles, has become the latest cause of outrage on the 
right.  Sen. Ted Cruz, the Texas Republican and likely presidential 
candidate, wrote on  Facebook, “If you believe in free speech or religious 
liberty, 
you should be  deeply dismayed over the treatment of Phil Robertson.” Sarah 
Palin chimed in  with a tweet about our endangered freedoms. Facebook pages 
and petitions in  support of Robertson have sprung up, along with a 
#StandWithPhil Twitter  movement. Fanning the flames from the left, CNN’s Piers 
Morgan took to Twitter  to _assert_ 
(https://twitter.com/piersmorgan/statuses/413707815488741376)   “the 1st 
Amendment shouldn’t protect vile bigots.”




 
It does, of course. But, as a number of commentators (including 
_conservatives_ (http://nypost.com/2013/12/20/duck-dynasty-unreal-outrage/) )  
have 
pointed out, the First Amendment is irrelevant to the Duck Dynasty  imbroglio 
for a very different reason. While constitutional protections for  speech 
certainly extend to bigots, they protect only against government actions,  not 
sanctions by employers. There is no inalienable right to be on A&E. This  isn
’t even a matter of government pressure on private institutions to punish  
objectionable ideas—as with the 1950s Hollywood blacklists of film industry  
figures with Communist ties, or modern-day college speech codes targeting  
broadly defined “harassment.” 
Still, just because A&E’s actions do not violate First Amendment freedoms  
doesn’t make them right. Free speech advocate Adam Kissel, former vice 
president  of the Foundation for Individual Rights in Education (FIRE)—who has 
criticized  Robertson’s suspension on Twitter—told me, “A&E generally has the 
legal  right to determine the border of its tolerance and intolerance, but 
this does  not end the moral conversation.” Kissel believes that if a 
private employer’s  action “serves to shut out a voice that otherwise would 
have 
been heard, this  choice is morally suspect.” Reason magazine senior editor 
Brian Doherty makes a  similar _argument_ 
(http://reason.com/blog/2013/12/19/of-ducks-and-gays-and-tolerance) :  while 
censuring unpopular speech 
through social ostracism and economic boycott  may not be un-libertarian, it’s 
deeply illiberal and contrary to the spirit of  tolerance that makes society 
flourish. 
Libertarians who make this argument have ideological consistency on their  
side. (FIRE has staunchly opposed all curbs on “offensive” speech on 
college  campuses, whether the offense was to feminist and multicultural 
sensitivit
ies or  Christian and patriotic ones.) Conservatives, on the other hand, 
have their own  long record of trying to silence or punish expression they 
dislike—including  pro-gay expression. 
Take the American Family Association, which _charges_ 
(http://www.masslive.com/entertainment/index.ssf/2013/12/great_duck_dynasty_divide_supp.html)
   
that A&E “believes in freedom of speech…only if it is the speech content  
with which they agree.” But so does the AFA: _boycotts_ 
(https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/American_Family_Association#Boycotts)   directed 
against “immoral”—
and, specifically, gay-friendly—content have been  practically its bread 
and butter. In 1997, the group _fought_ 
(http://www.religioustolerance.org/hom_0004.htm)  to stop ABC  from having the 
lead on “Ellen” come out as a 
lesbian. L. Brent Bozell of the  Media Research Center, another vocal critic of 
the alleged Duck Dynasty  persecution, supported both the “Ellen” boycott 
(the MRC took out a _full-page ad in  Variety_ 
(http://www.religioustolerance.org/hom_0043.htm)  condemning the “blatant 
attempt by Disney, ABC and ‘
Ellen’ to  promote homosexuality to America's families”) and that of “_Nothing 
Sacred_ (http://www.mrc.org/bozells-column/nothing-sacred-end) ,”  a 
1997-1998 ABC show that angered conservative Catholics by portraying a priest  
who 
struggled with his faith and questioned Church teachings on sexuality. 
Backlash from the right has targeted other kinds of speech, too. Ten years  
ago, there was the Dixie Chicks boycott, which more or less destroyed the  
country music band after lead singer Natalie Maine opened a London concert 
by  saying that they opposed the war in Iraq and were “ashamed” to be from 
the same  state as President Bush. (Even sympathetic programmers had to take 
Dixie Chicks  songs off the air, and some boycott-defying _DJs  lost their 
jobs_ 
(http://www.savingcountrymusic.com/destroying-the-dixie-chicks-ten-years-after) 
.) Back then, conservatives—including President Bush—were the  
ones pointing out that while the Dixie Chicks were free to take a stand, so 
were  their detractors. 
And, just last year, Miami Marlins manager Ozzie Guillen got in trouble by  
gushing to Time magazine that he loved and respected Cuba’s retired 
dictator  Fidel Castro for his longevity in the face of so many enemies. 
Anti-Communist  Cuban-American groups threatened a boycott, demanding Guillen’s 
resignation. He  was suspended for five games and made groveling apologies; a 
few 
months later he  was fired, almost certainly _due  in part_ 
(http://espn.go.com/mlb/story/_/id/8543189/ozzie-guillen-fired-manager-miami-marlins)
  to 
the Castro flap. 
To some extent, ostracism, no less than speech, is the exercise of a  
constitutional right: freedom of association. And some opinions are ostracized  
by near-universal agreement. If an entertainer had praised Hitler or Osama 
Bin  Laden, defended pedophilia, or endorsed wife-beating, his career would be 
over  faster than you can say “First Amendment” (and no one would be 
clamoring for his  freedom of speech). Holocaust denial, 9/11 “trutherism,” and 
claims about the  genetic inferiority of some racial and ethnic groups have 
all been effectively  driven to the fringes of the marketplace of ideas—
where most of us would prefer  them to stay. 
The tough question is where to draw the lines when social standards shift. 
In  two generations, near-universal harsh disapproval of homosexuality has 
given way  to harsh disapproval of homophobia. Interestingly, while 
traditional views of  male and female roles are widely regarded as outmoded, 
they are 
generally not  equated with outright bigotry; traditional views of 
homosexuality, however, seem  headed in that direction. 
Granted, Phil Robertson did more than express the biblical view of 
homosexual  conduct as sin: his ramblings seemed to lump together homosexuality 
and  
bestiality (though he put heterosexual promiscuity on the same list) and  
included bizarre anatomically correct remarks about the superior joys of  
heterosexual sex. But, these particulars aside, there is an unmistakable trend  
toward marginalizing all opinion that treats same-sex relationships less  
favorably than male-female unions—whether on religious grounds or because of 
the  latter’s reproductive potential and sexual complementarity—as we have  
marginalized bias against interracial marriage. Will that really benefit 
public  discourse, or worsen cultural tensions because of apparently 
well-founded fears  that gay equality leads to intolerance toward 
traditionalists? 
Those fears are likely to be exacerbated by the fact that societal 
standards  are still in flux. In recent months, for instance, there has been a 
noticeable  _increase_ 
(http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2013/aug/20/polyamorous-shows-no-traditional-way-live)
   in _commentary_ 
(http://www.salon.com/2013/08/05/my_two_husbands/)  _suggesting_ 
(http://www.slate.com/blogs/outward/2013/09/05/why_i_m_still_in_the_polyamory_closet.html)
   that 
acceptance of non-monogamous relationships should be the next social  frontier. 
It 
may not be entirely paranoid for conservatives to wonder if,  eventually, “
enlightened” society will seek to banish anyone voicing an  unflattering 
opinion of polyamory. 
In a decentralized economy with unprecedented media diversity, ostracism by 
 the mainstream is unlikely to silence dissenters or strip them of their  
livelihood. (“Duck Dynasty” has already received _offers_ 
(http://www.foxnews.com/entertainment/2013/12/22/other-networks-eager-to-air-duck-dynasty/)
   
for a show if its relationship with A&E is terminated.) Increased  
fragmentation and polarization in the marketplace of ideas is a far likelier  
consequence—and not a good one. In that sense, Doherty is right to say that the 
 
power of exclusion should be used very sparingly. 
What does this mean for A&E and “Duck Dynasty”? Frankly, I don’t think  
Phil Robertson—whose interview also featured cartoonish reminiscences about  “
godly” blacks singing happy songs in the Jim Crow-era South—is someone  
conservatives should “stand with.” But, like other commentators left and 
right,  I agree that A&E’s response was ludicrously excessive, particularly 
since  Robertson’s remarks fit perfectly with his reality TV image on which the 
network  has capitalized. The smartest thing A&E could do is wait out the 
controversy  and then bring Robertson back once the show resumes filming; of 
course, that may  have been the plan all along. 
By then, the rest of us will have moved on to new paroxysms of outrage at  
offensive speech. Maybe next time, a reality-show gay dad can offend by 
mocking  evangelical Christians as deluded idiots. Then, conservatives can call 
for his  head and denounce anti-Christian bigotry, and liberals can stand up 
for his  right to free  speech. 


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