Knock-knock. It’s the gag police.

Banning homophobic jokes is a dangerous step. We all need to develop thicker skins.

by Mark Steyn on Thursday, April 2, 2009 9:20am - 88 Comments

Knock-knock. It’s the gag police.Did you hear the one about the queer, the Muzzie and the pre-op tranny?

No? Well, you’re unlikely to any time soon. The British government, fresh from recent proscriptions on religious and racial “hatred,” is pushing ahead with legislation that will criminalize homophobic jokes.

I’ve been trying to recall the last time I heard a homophobic joke in a public forum. You have to go back a ways. At Vegas, Dean Martin used to have a bit of business where he’d refill his tumbler and ask Frank, “How do you make a fruit cordial?” And Sinatra would go, “I dunno. How do you make a fruit cordial?” And Dino would say, “Be nice to him.”

But these days, no matter how cordial you are, it’s never enough. On the BBC comedy show Little Britain, a weekly glimpse of the hellhole of Hogarthian depravity that is the United Kingdom, there is a recurring character whose catchphrase is that he’s “the only gay in the village”—a Welsh village, I believe, so his claim would seem to be statistically improbable, if you’ll forgive a bit of Welshophobia—or is it Cymruphobia? Or Cymruhomophobia? Anyway, he doesn’t actually have any gay sex and he gets inordinately jealous if some real live practising gay comes passing through and threatens his unique status. But one could argue that his determination to be “the only gay in the village” testifies to the social cachet homosexuality now enjoys. On the other hand, one could argue something else entirely. On the other other hand, once you’ve attracted the attention of Constable Plod and his crack humorological investigative unit, you’re probably best to cop a plea and settle for misdemeanour hate-mongering and three points on your licence.

Down the leftie end of Fleet Street, various columnists, justifying their support for the legislation, or at least its goals, have tutted their disapproval of gay stereotyping in comedy. Limp wrists. Camp walks. Judy Garland references. I write as the token heterosexual Judy Garland fan (please, no tittering) on the Maclean’s payroll, and as a chap who’s sung with Liza Minnelli on TV (oh, okay, titter mercilessly, but no guffawing), yet I confess to some misgivings about the state demanding upon pain of a seven-year jail sentence that the citizenry pretend there’s nothing the red-blooded knuckle-dragging English soccer yobbo likes better than listening to Judy singing The Man That Got Away before he nuts you in the head, knees you in the bollocks and tosses you through a chip-shop window. To its credit, the House of Lords inserted a so-called “free speech” amendment to the bill, but the justice secretary, Jack Straw, has decided to repeal that, announcing that there are “no circumstances” in which the right to free speech can “justify homophobic behaviour.”

And why stop there? Representatives of the transgendered and the disabled were also invited by the government to grab a piece of the joke-police action. Interestingly enough, last week Barack Obama became the first U.S. president to do a retard gag on national TV. Referring to his bowling score (129) during an appearance on The Tonight Show, the Kibitzer-in-Chief cracked that “it was like the Special Olympics.” Ha-ha! What a wag that Obama is when he unplugs the teleprompter and kicks loose a little. How do you make a fruit cordial? Appoint him your GLBT Outreach Coordinator.

If my past experience of Mr. Obama’s notoriously touchy courtiers is anything to go by, it’s undoubtedly racist to suggest that the President is disablist. Likewise, Gloria Steinem and other feminists argued that Bill Clinton’s support for abortion entitled him to go around dropping his pants to any female subordinates who tickled his fancy (I paraphrase, but not much). But, that said, I do wonder how things might have gone had Obama essayed the same jest on a BBC talk show. Robin Page, the chairman of Britain’s Countryside Restoration Trust and a columnist with the Daily Telegraph, spoke at a rally opposing the government’s anti-hunting laws at a Gloucestershire country fair in 2002. “If you are a black vegetarian Muslim asylum-seeking one-legged lesbian lorry driver,” he began, “I want the same rights as you.” A jocular reference to various approved identity groups by a member of an unfashionable one (country folk). Mr. Page was subsequently arrested and, upon declining to answer questions without the presence of counsel, thrown in a cell. Don’t worry. He eventually cleared his name—after five years.

Her Majesty’s Constabulary: the joke police—in every sense.

That’s the problem. Even if you think it’s a good idea for the state to regulate speech, the only troops available to do it are blundering coppers and hack bureaucrats. Last year, as readers may recall, I had the curious experience of having the “tone” of my jokes examined in a Vancouver courthouse by the geniuses of the British Columbia “Human Rights” Tribunal. Hitherto, such forensic dissection has been limited to the more obscure literary critics. But not anymore. Following their week-long deconstruction of Steyn’s “tone,” the BCHRT announced that for its next show trial it would be turning to the “tone” of Guy Earle, a stand-up comic whose late-night put-downs of some lesbian hecklers were allegedly homophobic.

Maybe it would be easier just to ban all jokes, except for official government-licensed rib-ticklers.

Who was that lady I saw you with last night?

That was no lady, that was my Gloucestershire Comedy Court probation officer.

Knock-knock.

Who’s there?

Hugh.

Hugh who?

Human Rights Tribunal Joke Investigative Unit. Come out with your hands in the air, not fluttering around your hips as if it’s Carmen Miranda night at the Gay Stereotype Lounge.

Why did the chicken cross the road?

To take part in a demonstration against poultrophobic humour.

How do you make a fruit cordial?

Be nice to him. Or else.

Sometimes you have to pick the lesser of two evils, and, if it’s a choice between offensive gags or massive expansion of state power, no self-respecting citizen should find it difficult working out which is the lesser evil and which is the greater threat. You don’t like the President’s pathetic “joke”? Hoot and jeer at him. Obama could use more of that. The best response to his suggestion that his 129 bowling score put him in Special Olympics territory came from the Special Olympics bowler Kolan McConiughey, who pointed out he’s scored a perfect 300 on three occasions, and he’d be happy to take on Mister Hopeychange any time he wants. That aside, I thought it was a revealing remark: as one of my Quebec readers put it, in Leno veritas. Away from the telepromptered hopeychangey touchyfeely mush, this President is not cool so much as cold. The PC niceties are skin deep, and this won’t be the first time he gives us a glimpse of the harder man underneath. Unlike Clinton, he doesn’t feel your pain, and he doesn’t care if you know it.

Still, if Obama really feels the urge to do crip shtick, I wouldn’t criminalize it. In Britain, Canada and Europe, the state advances too easily from regulating behaviour to policing ideas to criminalizing language. It’s almost too cute an irony that one of the United Kingdom’s few remaining principled champions of free speech is the creator of Mr. Bean, a man who barely utters a word. The comedian Rowan Atkinson said he didn’t think he was at risk of prosecution for telling a gay joke “but I dread something almost as bad—a culture of censoriousness, a questioning, negative and leaden attitude that is encouraged by legislation of this nature.”

Ah, but, as the computer wallahs say, that’s not a bug, that’s a feature. If the pen is mightier than the sword, then criminalizing words is a way of disarming potential opposition, of inculcating a reflexive self-censorship in the citizenry. And, after all, self-suppression is the most cost-effective of tyranny. Political correctness isn’t merely the blasphemy law of our time. It makes communication impossible. It renders a people literally illiterate: the conventions of language used by functioning societies throughout human history—irony, indirect quotation, period evocation, and, yes, even comic stereotype—are all suddenly suspect. What a strange fate to embrace. In London, the Lord Chamberlain’s power to censor West End plays was finally abolished in 1968: it was widely accepted by then that there was something absurd in a palace courtier ruling that your script could have three “Bastards!” but not four, and that two specific references to sodomy had to be replaced with one vague allusion to heavy petting. Yet, four decades on, Britons now think it entirely normal for police constables and time-serving bureaucrats to function as literary critics determining the “intent” behind a throwaway jest.

To hell with it, and to hell with “sensitivity training.” The only way a multicultural society can live in freedom is with what the Toronto blogger Kathy Shaidle calls “insensitivity training”: we all need to develop thicker skin and rub along—without government monitoring. “CSI Catskills” is a totalitarian concept, and only a bunch of fairies would fall for it.

And just to clarify: I’m not saying you’re a fairy if you have sex with other men.

I am saying you’re a fairy if you think the state should police our jokes.

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  • http://www.jackmitchell.ca Jack Mitchell

    It doesn’t get more pathetic than this.

    • http://carnewsandviews.com jwl

      “It doesn’t get more pathetic than this.”

      Are you referring to your comment or Steyn’s article?

      I think it’s awfully peculiar how jokes, and other comments, that are off-colour are similar to samizdat now. I don’t know how many times a week someone I am talking to will lower their voice in public to say something because they are worried a political correct wallah might be listening. It’s incredible that we live in a supposed ‘free’ country but people have to look over their shoulder to make sure no one is listening before they tell a joke.

      • http://www.jackmitchell.ca Jack Mitchell

        A phenomenon also known as “good taste.”

        • SukieTawdry

          And “good taste” should be legislated with “bad taste” punishable under the law?

          • Isham

            Erm, Jack, I think you’re missing the point. Steyn is writing about attempts to legislate speech. Good taste is indeed self-regulating, which is precisely why such legislation isn’t needed.

          • Critical Reasoning

            Isham is right. Legislating taste is a very bad idea.

          • http://www.jackmitchell.ca Jack Mitchell

            Erm, Isham, I think you’re missing the point about my point. Steyn’s column is absolutely tasteless and there is no cause on earth for which tastelessness is OK.

            God, it’s the same bait-and-switch thing every time with Steyn, Levant, and their brainless followers. First you state something everybody can agree with: here, that legislating against offensiveness is stupid. We can all get behind that one. Then you proceed to throw fresh meat to your followers in the form of gratuitous attacks on common decency, all in the name of the no-brainer idea you began with. When someone objects to the attacks on common decency, you proceed to whine about how they just don’t get it about the no-brainer idea.

            My question: what is the real purpose of these bait-and-switch schemes? To prove how loyal you are to The Cause, even to the point of shedding your own dignity, or to give the rabid right a good reason to cackle about Muslims / gays / lefties / you name it? I would have thought the answer was too obvious to mention, but apparently some people have the reading comprehension of six-year-olds and honestly don’t notice when they’re being cynically exploited.

          • seaandthemountains

            I think the point is to simultaneously serve both Jack.

      • Bill Simpson

        Yes and no. I have a wide range of people working for me: devout Muslims, ex Russian-Israelis, Indians, Pakistanis and a leavening of Canadians. Religious jokes are out ! Racist jokes are out! I have only once had to caution that a joke they told was probably upsetting (told by an Albanian about jews); they were surprised but then acknowledged that they hadn’t thought it through and would avoid such things in the future.

        It was easy to make jokes about blacks and jews and so on in a pub when there were none of the offended parties around. not so much now.

        Steyn is right that the police and bureaucrats are the worst people to enforce this sort of thing. it is, as Jack says, a matter of “good taste” and courtesy.

    • http://www.jackmitchell.ca Jack Mitchell

      Why, thank you, Michael, I award you the Grand Order of Steyn, First Class, for perfectly expressing the Steynette view.

      • Simon

        What odds that “Michael” is Richard Warman?

        • http://www.jackmitchell.ca Jack Mitchell

          LOL. Pretty high, I gather.

        • Simon

          Will you sue or should I Jack? Then we’ll find out exactly who it is and make them pay! That’s unless it IS Warman of course – because he’d only be doing it to cajole real homophobes into revealing themselves.

          • glak from planet zork

            Please enlighten me to what a “real homophobe” is. Please give me a simple dictionary definition. You can’t, can you. That would take away the bully power needed to quiet the un-pc types.
            I have a some Irish blood coursing through my veins, yet there are few thing in life I enjoy more that an Irish joke.
            Get a life. Get a sense of humor. Relax and stop trying to control every f#@king word spoken by every f#@king person on planet earth.

          • http://MySpace.com/ElectroPig1 ElectroPig™ Von FökkenGrüüven

            “Get a life. Get a sense of humor. Relax and stop trying to control every f#@king word spoken by every f#@king person on planet earth.”

            AGREED!!!

            All this “politically correct” garbage has to stop. We need to go back to SAYING WHAT WE MEAN, rather than “not trying to offend, anyone at any time.”

            Sorry folks, but sooner or later, even with all the politically-corrected pusification of the language, eventually someone WILL say something that right properly pisses you off. It’s called the law of averages…eventually, even with the idiocies that spawned such terms as “battle fatigue” as a completely pussified replacement for “post traumatic stress disorder”, which was made up as a limp-lobed replacement for “shell shock.”

            I’m not at all sorry if I offend anyoe when I say that the fact is that, when you’ve been sitting in a foreign country for 90 days and each day you see, hear and feel BOMS DROPPING ALL AROUND YOU, and watch your friends of family get blown to pieces, that is NOT “battle fatigue”, folks…it’s (*@#ing SHELL SHOCK!!!

            “Battle fatigue” sounds more like “Ohhhhh…he was tired of fighting…so he went home and had a little nap.” Sure…that’s a lot more palatable to the ignorant masses than the thought that these people were being BOMBED ON A DAILY BASIS. or SHOT AT BY PEOPLE THEY NEVER MET because their ignorant governments wanted a war that no civilized or intellligent person would ever want.

            As to the war aspect I seem to have taken a detour with, it’s simple summary is this: If people want peace, they need to stop killing other people. Peace is not the absence of war, anymore than war is the absence of peace. It’s a state of mind where you tolerate other people’s differences and talk things out to your mutual benefit…and noone seems to see the truth for what it is because it’s all hidden in this “flowery language” that doesn’t mean a goddamned thing near to what the speaker had intended to say!

            The pussification of the language is nothing more than a symptom of the antipathy of society as a whole.

        • http://www.jackmitchell.ca Jack Mitchell

          Is Warman being sued, do you know? I haven’t kept up with his case, but I seem to remember that his provocateuring was catching up with him.

      • wayne moores

        Wow, Jack, talk about bait and switch. Find an ignorant nutter like Michael and say “see, that’s Steyn all over”. Well, sorry, it’s not. It’s seems your litmus test is putting anyone remotely right of center in the same catagory as skinheads.(Which good old Michael here would be comfortable with I’m sure). All of this just proved Steyn’s point. Michael has no column or any sort of gravitas because anyone can see him for what he is. Things are pretty self regulating here as they should be. The only people who would pay the slightest attention to him are his fellow travellers from nutterville. In the marketplace of ideas he is quickly dispensed to the trash heap. We don’t need state intervention for that, which is his whole point. Steyn on the other hand presents all kinds of problems to the left and those who wish to re-engineer thought.(By the way, I do not consider everyone on the left to be PC crazy, it just seems a more comfortable neighborhood for the PC loonies). The problem with Steyn is that he simply tells the truth, in a humorous way. But worst of all, Mclean’s and other publications have the adacity to pay him for his thoughts! If you don’t like him, don’t read him. Perhaps it’s more the fact that too many reasonable people agree with him and that’s what sends those on the left into a lather. Instead of accusing Steyn of being just short of a Neo Nazi start your own column,(if someone will pay you), and refute his ideas on their merit. Just a modest proposal. Cheers and have a nice weekend.

  • Dot

    Knock-knock.

    Who’s there?

    Mark.

    Mark who?

    Mark everyone with a big bullseye who is not like Steyn.

  • http://coyne kc

    This might be the only time i agree [somewhat anyway] with Steyn. We don’t need the state policing us, that it should be happening in the home of absurdist and irreverant humour is very sad – tragic actually. I don’t know if Steyn would agree, but people police themselves anyway, times and conventions change. Would anyone argue that making jokes about native as idle, sponging parasites is exceptable today – rather as Shaidle has – or am i wrong about this? It’s admittedly only hearsay on my part ; still it’s amusing that Steyn keeps on going to the well of an alleged bigot to draw his water – no other fresh water around Mark?
    As i say i agree that the state has no place in the bedrooms or the heads of our citizens. That’s not to say you got approve of distasteful humour – just don’t ban it. Who in their right minds would go arond publically promoting anti-semitic humour – you don’t have to ban it, public standards are set by convention. If you want to flout those conventons, be my guest. Just don’t go whining to some HRC when someone throws a beer bottle or their shoes at you

    • Kriuk

      Well, along the same vein, don’t whine, if someone more intelligent and funnier than you cracks a joke. I know you’re capable of taking a joke like a man. All normal people are.

      • http://coyne kc

        Yeah, you’re right, trouble is i’ve yet to fnd anything that i’ve seen from Steyn thats funny. I would hope Is he more intelligent than me? Don’t know, i do know he’s more intelligent than many of those who worship him.

        • eeej

          why do you keep reading him then? are you an employee of one of the hrc’s?

        • http://coyne kc

          Oh yeah, i’m keep’n an eye on yoy too! I read him because not everything he says is tripe, and it’s important to oppose some of his screeds – good enough for you?

        • Gaunilon

          I would hope Is he more intelligent than me?

          Rest assured, you need not fret about this.

        • http://coyne kc

          Irony, frankness, and simply extending any kind of olive branch is utterly wasted with conbots. They simply attempt to bite your arm off as well – guess it’s all just taken as a sign of sissy reasonableness.

    • Bill

      Racist slur? Go back and re-read the piece. Obama made a joke about the Special Olympics on Jay Leno’s show. Just like Jay Leno doesn’t try to be a politician, Obama really shouldn’t try to be a comedian. There should be a law against it! I found it highly offensive!

      When Steyn uses the word “crip”, he is sardonically and satirically referring to the former, politically incorrect use of the word to denote a “cripple”. But fortunately there’s now a law against use of that word, and hopefully the language police will track him down and fine him – and scowl at him most disapprovingly and severely. It’s the scowl that’s the best part.

      • http://coyne kc

        Thankyou. I did ask. For some strange reason i thought he was making some joke about gangs[ crips] My bad. Sorry Mr Steyn, i know you would never make a rascist remark!

        • http://coyne kc

          Hhhmm, guess my comprehension skills are about as good as jwls.

    • http://coyne kc

      jwl
      Good straw man arguement. Yeesh!!!
      I did phrase it as a question, the key is little words like: what, or all those ???
      I see you didn’t bother to explain what he meant. I just left the rascist charge out there…what’s your response? Obama made a bad joke too – didn’t he apologize? I’ll put more ?????? in there for you next time jwl, not that’ll help your reading comprehension, you’ll have fix that on your own i’m afraid.

    • http://coyne kc

      Yeesh Macleans! This is a question. As it turns out a misunderstanding on my part. Someone answered it below [Bill]

  • Mike T.

    I hope Macleans doesn’t actually pay $ to publish this stuff.

    • John.K

      As a subscriber, I very much fear that I am paying to publish this stuff. What a waste of space Steyn is.

      • Steve

        And yet Steyn is a relatively successful, widely published author and commentator. Yet noone ever has heard of John K. Hmm…

        And for all the griping I see about how awful Steyn is, I have yet to see anyone put forth anything remotely resembling a lucid argument as to what is wrong with what he’s saying here or offer up any defense or support of the opposite view.

        • hitnrun

          Don’t hold your breath. Some people would ignore a tank rolling up their street as necessary for community safety.

  • J

    Everybody is offended by something, that is normal, you can criminlize something like this, where does it stop. I am utterly offended by such laws. the courts and goverment offend me when they propose or apply or even worse enforce such items, they should go to their own system and judge themselves.

    • John.K

      Yeah, they should pass a law against laws that offend you.

  • James

    At the rate things are going, Americans will be the only English-speaking country still allowed to run episodes of Are You Being Served. That makes me sad.

    • http://coyne kc

      Good show.

      • Critical Reasoning

        I like that show, too.

  • http://coyne kc

    Speaking of haters! [ funny how the conbots own that word - projecting probably ]

    Salutin is ten times the journalist/pundit Steyn is! And no, that doesn’t mean i always agree with him.

    • http://coyne kc

      C’mon guys, you can’t take this stuff seriously. I like Salutin for crying out loud!

      • NeoCan999

        Yawn…..

      • wayne moores

        Ah, my friend, but do you like Salutin because what he says more agrees with you or because he is more PC…the thought police, really really want to know!!! We have ways to make you talk. We can make you sit in a comfy chair. How would you like that!! (gotta fess up, stolen from a priceless old Monty Python sketch about the inqusition). Hmm, come to think of it I wonder if Monty Python would be allowed to exist in the current humorless wasteland? Geez, I’m sure Stephan Leacock’s “Sunshine sketches of a little town” would have trouble passing muster now. The only thing allowed now and in the future will be “Little Mosque on the Prarie”. Well, gotta go, sinister knock at my door. Yikes!!

      • Brian

        What’s to like about Salutin, a useful idiot if I’ve ever read one.

    • agnostic

      How strongly affected by progressivism one’s brain must be in order not to get it?

      The point is not who is a better journalist, Salutin or Steyn.

      The point is that a rational, reasonably tolerant person shouldn’t expect, or even demand, that exclusively those authors and/or ideas that he or she personally likes, or approves of, should ever be allowed to get printed.

      “I don’t like Salutin so I don’t read him” is a tolerant disapproval.

      “I don’t like Steyn so I don’t want him to be published” is intolerant bigotry.

      • http://coyne kc

        I guess you weren’t to know some comments have been deleted.

  • Bill

    I think there should be a law against stupid commenters on blog sites. What we need is more laws defining what people are allowed to say and what they’re not allowed to say. And we need more government employees out there monitoring what people say, to enforce such “common sense” laws. It is a fundamental, basic human right, based on natural law never to have to be offended by anything another human being might ever say or do, and if another person ever does say or do something that a person *might* in some way find offensive, now matter how unreasonable, out of context or misconstrued, well by god or deity (or non-deity) of your choice, the government rightly has the power and authority to Do Something About It! The right of the people to never be inconvenienced, irked, annoyed, or (heaven forfend) offended shall not be infringed and must, at all costs, damn the consequences, be protected, upheld and enforced by force of law! And this right surely and plainly must outweigh any other perceived or so-called “right” that some might claim to so-called “free speech”, whatever that nebulous concept might mean.

    • Brian

      That pretty much sums up the state of human rights in Canada today.

    • Tom Stills

      I bet Bill carries a gun or is in the Mickey Mouse Club.

  • http://N/A Patty

    Who actually reads this stuff beyond the first couple of paragraphs? After I got that far, it was like, “oh Steyn? Been there done that….moving on”

    • hitnrun

      Yet you spent an entire minute finding and using the comment form to post a non-commentary on the piece you didn’t read.

    • SAB

      So I was aligned with Patty – two paragrahpys, waste of time.

      Then I took your point and kept reading.

      Here’s my take – I agree with Steyn completely on this point. If he wrote a column saying the sky was blue I’d agree with that too. Doesn’t mean it’s worthy of being written about in a national magazine.

      • SAB

        SAB you idiot good spelling of the word ‘paragraphs’

        • glak from planet zork

          So being vigilant is not worthwhile. Then what is?

    • Boris

      U R spot on. Just quickly move to village that lost its idiot.

  • Stef

    Gay jokes are doubleplusungood thoughtcrime. Good thing the Ministry of Truth stepped in to punish the heretics. Long live INGSOC.

  • Just Passin’ Through

    Ha! When I need to know from humour, my go-to-guy is Steyn.

    Here’s one of Mark “Shecky” Steyn’s greatest hits, as featured on the Glen Beck show:

    ” Steyn: Because they know, and our enemies know, that when the United States goes into battle, it fights with one hand tied behind its back. So in your ass-kicking terms, we’re not using the full force of the foot. We’re using the little toe.

    And our enemies realize that. They see the way we go into paroxysms of guilt over Abu Ghraib and Gitmo and all the rest.

    Beck: Well, I mean, Abu Ghraib was … I mean, dontcha think?

    Steyn: Yeah, it was a guy — what, whatever it was, the banana and the Victoria’s Secret panties. Big deal! That’s nothing compared to what goes on in the –

    Beck: Wait a minute, wait a minute. I’ll never get that Victoria’s Secret panties thing out of my head now.”

    Torture at Abu Ghaib nothing but cross-dressing with expensive lingerie? Zany!

  • Daddiode

    Down to making Monty Python skits illegal?

    Somebody needs to give their head a shake.

  • Revnant Dream

    There sure are a lot of Steyn bashers who seem to read him avidly. You have to wonder why?
    Is it masochism, or deep need within there shrunken souls that they may just be on the wrong side of the moral fence. With the Puritans without a god, but themselves. Maybe its the fact he stands up for his beliefs with his own dime & time that attracts them. Honesty is so rare these days, it stand out like halogen lights. Its an age of deceit & lies , laughter is the last refuge from the humorless busybodies. That or madness. Comedy to them, is like Kryptonite to Superman.
    JMO

    • Brian

      “Puritans without a god, but themselves.” That’s a magnificent line. It sums up the universe of political correctness in six words.

  • Simon

    Homophobic jokes are self-regulating in that they’re not funny. Steyn’s just saying that’s the only regulation we need. I don’t understand the outrage.

  • Kaplan

    You’re so…edgy. Unfortunately, Maclean’s already has their predictable, yesterday’s news columnist position filled.

  • Kevin

    What a great article. Steyn does an excellent job at showing what’s happening to Western society that is too weak and too racked with useless guilt. It’s just white guilt taken to an extreme and turned into law by overzealous lefties.

    • Brian

      … and as the critics posting here demonstrate, its perpetrators can’t even recognize themselves when the(ir) voices of white guilt shout out at them from the page.

  • Jenn

    There’s nothing wrong with admitting to singing with Liza Minnelli, but if she’s ever beaten you up, schtum.

  • Observer 99

    An excellent piece. Sadly, the British have totally given up on fighting for their civil liberties and are now a totally cowed nation of oppressed people living under constant state surveillance who are frightened to open their mouths and voice an opinion. No wonder 1000 of them emigrate every day. Congrats to the socialists!

  • Minaka

    So Western society now has to cater to the hyper-sensitivities of the most thin-skinned humorless whining minority in our midst. No more robust marketplace of ideas, no sir. Now it’s helmets and bumper pads of money for hurt feelings while nannies scour out anything that might offend the weeniest of weenies.

    Meanwhile, where are the nannies when Client A has religious leaders in their mosques preach killing of Client B homosexuals? Is thinking one deserves death and approving actual death sentences carried out in sharia abiding jurisdictions not slightly more offensive or “homophobic” than a joke about limp wrists?

    Clearly it’s not about good taste or eliminating real threats to gays. It’s about another excuse being used to advance the radical leftist agenda of control including thought control.

  • Felix

    There is an old classic Dean Martin and “some curlish gunslinger” that may not make it past our nanny-cops:

  • Barry

    This is no joke, it’s one thing to have everyone self censor before one speaks but quite another when governments legislate political correctness or worse in our case where they provide political appointees with powers beyond courts and legal protection such as our HR Tribunals. “America Alone” is not immune either, although they haven’t gone as far as Canada and the UK, the self censoring has become absurd. On a recent 3 hr layover in the Charlotte airport my buddy and I were carded when we order a couple of beers. I am 63 and he is 83. I thought the kid who requested the id was kidding. But no, the bar requires all patrons to provide proof of age so they wouldn’t be accused of being “Ageist”. Is there such a word?

  • http://MySpace.com/ElectroPig1 ElectroPig™ Von FökkenGrüüven

    I think that this entire planet has gone absolutely insane. There is no such thing as common sense, rationality or critical thinking anymore, and for those few who are still able to practise such things, they are considered vices to be banned, blocked, or trodden upon at every opportunity.

    Gay, straight, bi, tri, quadrisexual….I don’t honestly care what you do in your own bedroom…GO FOR IT! Just leave me out of it if it’s not the option that I personally prefer. And as far as jokes go, how many more topics do we have left? How long before all humour or intelligent thought is simply criminalized?

    This world needs an enema and a good swift kick in the collective wilfully-ignorant lard-ass before things get even more ridiculously backwards than they already are!

    We’ve got the cure for cancer, and we’ve had it for decades, yet it is illegal. (http://www.PhoenixTears.ca for more info)

    Our governments all claim to want to protect our health, yet they allow removal of nutrients as though they were equivalent to the radioactive tritium produced in Canada’s nuclear reactors.

    Our nuclear reactors are invariably praised as the best method for “clean, green, inexpensive power” generation, even though we have to store the radioactive waste for 240,000 years before it’s safe to be anywhere near. Yes, 240 MILLENNIA! How is that clean or green or inexpensive, when we need to protect people from it for nearly a quarter of a million years? Who’s going to pay for it? We can’t even buy a shingle that’ll last for 30 years without needing replacement…how do we think we can build safe containment structures to house all this waste to last the needed aeons?

    Our politicians say that the environment is paramount, so they want to remove incandescent light bulbs which work perfectly well, and replace them all with mercury-laden Compact Fluorescent bulbs, with specific rules and disposal regulations…so they can fine EVERYONE, perhaps?

    They weren’t happy with the amount of electronics and battery recycling going on, so they’re currently talking about adding a “disposal fee” (read: TAX) to all that currently do recycle such materials. How EXACTLY is that going to get more people to recycle if it used to be free, but now it’s going to cost them money? I’ll tell you EXACTLY what this sort of “government intelligence” is going to result in: Lower recycling efforts, greater landfill contamination, and cries from the people who wrecked a good thing that worked, that they need more tax money from the people to “find a way to fix the problem.”

    Words can no longer be used freely by anyone without being attacked by some ultra-sensitive moron who takes offense at the fact that someone else simply understands what the word used actually meant and used it.

    Ignorance is the norm. Idiocy is the result. People will honestly be surprised when things get worse over time…even though they were the ones who deliberately allowed such inanity to reign supreme.

    So enjoy, people…pray to your favorite invisible omnipotent deity that things change soon…because this entire planet is going to hell in a handcart in the biggest rush it’s ever been in.

    Intelligent people viewing the world today no longer feel that the extinction of the human species is such a bad thing…bring on the aliens and the cockroaches!

  • Robin

    I am sure Steyn wouldn’t mind anti-Semitic jokes now that gays are fair game in his mind.

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  • James

    I think bzeekilla3000 said it better in his post “here come the homos” in the Lounge section of the PsychoCycle II forum.

    But don’t worry, Mark, one day maybe you’ll be at his level.

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