Don’t joke in Little Stasi-on-Avon

MARK STEYN: Britons have shown a surprising enthusiasm for informing on their fellow citizens

by Mark Steyn on Thursday, April 22, 2010 7:45am - 212 Comments

Getty Images

Not long after the fall of the Iron Curtain, I chanced to be in Hungary making a TV film co-produced by the BBC and MTV. Not the MTV of caterwauling rockers but MTV as in “Magyar Televízió”—their version of the CBC, although obviously nowhere near as monolithically left-wing. We spent the first few days in Budapest meeting our local contacts—producers, fixers, interviewees, all of whom were urbane Mitteleuropean charmers, and delightful company. We’d then go on to the next meeting, at which we’d be assured by György that, while József may seem urbane and charming on the surface, he’d spent the previous 30 years as an informant for the Ministry of the Interior. Moving on to our appointment with Gábor, we’d be told that it was the eminently civilized and amusing György who’d been the state informer for the past several decades. Needless to say, Viktor had much the same to say about Gábor, and Imre about Viktor.

The BBC lads found this most disquieting. They had no objection to commies per se, being mostly the usual bunch of university Trots and Marxists themselves. But they disliked the idea of snitches, of never being able to be sure whether your neighbour or workmate wasn’t sneaking to the authorities on your every casual aside. It offended against their sense of fair play; it wasn’t cricket. I took a more relaxed view, having been on the receiving end of the famous British sense of fair play, not least in my dealings with the duplicitous bastards at the BBC. I figured sure, Gábor and Viktor and József and Imre and György and pretty much everyone else we ran into in that post-Soviet spring doubtless had their dark secrets, but under a totalitarian regime the state can apply all kinds of pressure those of us in free societies can scarce imagine. Who are we to judge?

Less than two decades later, something very odd has happened. The United Kingdom is not (yet) a totalitarian regime, yet huge numbers of Britons have in effect signed on as informers to a politically correct Stasi, and with far greater enthusiasm than Gábor and György ever did. Last year, David Booker was suspended from his job at a hostel for the homeless in Southampton after a late-night chat with a colleague, Fiona Vardy, in which he happened to reveal that he did not believe in same-sex marriage or in vicars being allowed to wed their gay partners. Miss Vardy raised no objection at the time, but the following day mentioned the conversation to her superiors. They immediately suspended Mr. Booker from his job, and then announced that “this action has been taken to safeguard both residents and staff.”

That’s good to know, isn’t it? The hostel is run by the Society of St. James, which comes under the Church of England, which in theory holds exactly the same views on homosexuality as Mr. Booker. But, if in doubt, suspend. Six weeks ago, Roy Amor, a medical technician who made prosthetics for a company called Opcare, glanced out of the window at their offices at Withington Community Hospital, and saw some British immigration officials outside. “You better hide,” he said to his black colleague, a close friend of both Mr. Amor and his wife. Not the greatest joke in the world, but the pal wasn’t offended, laughed it off as a bit of office banter, and they both got on with their work. It was another colleague who overheard the jest and filed a formal complaint reporting Mr. Amor for “racism.” He was suspended from his job. Five days later, he received an email from the company notifying him of the disciplinary investigation and inviting him to expand on the initial statement he had made about the incident. Mr. Amor had worked in the prosthetics unit at Withington for 30 years until he made his career-detonating joke. That afternoon he stepped outside his house and shot himself in the head. The black “victim” of his “racism” attended the funeral, as did other friends. It is not known whether the creep who reported the racist incident did, nor whether the management who opened the (presumably still ongoing) investigation troubled themselves to pay their respects to an employee with three decades of service.

“You better hide, mate.” What can we do to show racists like the late Roy Amor that they won’t be tolerated in our tolerant society? Well, we can take early action. A couple of years back, 14-year-old Codie Stott asked her teacher at Harrop Fold High School if she could sit with another group to do her science project as in hers the other five girls all spoke Urdu and she didn’t understand what they were saying. The teacher called the police, who took her to the station, photographed her, fingerprinted her, took DNA samples, removed her jewellery and shoelaces, put her in a cell for 3½ hours, and questioned her on suspicion of committing a Section Five “racial public order offence.” “An allegation of a serious nature was made concerning a racially motivated remark,” declared the headmaster Antony Edkins. The school would “not stand for racism in any form.” In a statement, Greater Manchester Police said they took “hate crime” very seriously, and their treatment of Miss Stott was in line with “normal procedure.”

So what can we do to show racists like young Miss Codie Stott that racist remarks on the linguistic preferences of members of her school science project will bring the full force of the otherwise somnolent constabulary of Her Majesty’s crime-ridden realm crashing down on her? Well, obviously, we need to start the Racism Watch far earlier. The government-funded National Children’s Bureau has urged nursery teachers and daycare supervisors to record and report every racist utterance of toddlers as young as three.

Like what?

Well, for example, if children “react negatively to a culinary tradition other than their own by saying ‘Yuk,’ ” that could be a clear sign that they’ll grow up to make racist immigration gags like the late Roy Amor’s. If we get all their names in a big government database by pre-kindergarten, it’ll be much easier to keep tabs on them for the four or five decades until we drive them to suicide.

My British friends say of Mr. Amor, “Well, obviously, he was a little disturbed, he overreacted.” No, it’s the system that’s disturbed. Look at it from his point of view: you’ve worked hard, been a model employee, for 30 years—and suddenly it’s all over because of a single joke that didn’t offend your black friend but only the white snitch who decided to get offended on hisbehalf. It wasn’t Roy Amor who overreacted.

“It’s an enormous tragedy and we are all in mourning,” said Opcare’s chief executive. But actually Roy blowing his head off works out pretty well from the company’s point of view. They could have dismissed the racism complaint as a lot of hooey, but then who’s to say the aggrieved complainant might not report them for “creating a racist work environment”? So they suspended Roy, investigated Roy, and probably would have fired Roy. And then he might have sued for wrongful dismissal and, even though no contemporary jurist would find in favour of such an obvious racist, just fighting the suit would rack up a six-figure legal bill. All in all, suicide’s the most cost-effective option. Maybe more racist employees might consider it.

Earlier this month, Matthew Parris, a very squishy Tory gay, was called up by the BBC, Sky News, Channel 4 and many others anxious to send TV and radio crews round to his country place to record his reaction to a front-page lead in the Observer: “Secret Tape Reveals Tory Backing for Ban on Gays.” As it turned out, the “ban on gays” was a bit oversold: the shadow home secretary had been musing on distinctions in public accommodation between running a hotel on the High Street and a B & B out of your own home. Mr. Parris had no particular views on that one way or the other, but the “secret tape” bit prompted the following:

“There was also something unpleasantly Orwellian in the lip-smacking way in which my informants were telling me how Mr. Grayling had been recorded—caught—expressing his opinion. That Nineteen Eighty-Four feeling was reflected, too, in the un-self-aware failure of irony with which an Observer journalist referred to the view that Britain should not ‘tolerate’ (his word) intolerance. Burn the bigots! To the tumbrels with zealots! Crack down on narrow-mindedness! No to the naysayers!”

Droll, and very British—or it used to be. But in Little Stasi-on-Avon, where you can’t make a joke in private conversation or say “Yuk!” in the nursery school lunch hour, the words of the French philosopher Alain Finkielkraut seem more pertinent: “The lofty idea of ‘the war on racism’ is gradually turning into a hideously false ideology,” he said in 2005. “And this anti-racism will be for the 21st century what Communism was for the 20th century: a source of violence.”

I think back to those weeks in Budapest, and similar conversations in Berlin, Prague and Bucharest, and I wonder whatever happened to that British sense of fair play.
But then, I suppose, the very concept is racist.

Bookmark and Share
  • http://entropyhouse.com/blog/ Baillie

    The Shire needs a heavy-duty Scouring.

  • Mike T.

    So in the name of freedom (big william wallace yekp here!) we must now prevent private employers from taking disciplinary actions against employees for unacceptable behaviour. Gotcha, Steyn.

    • Robert

      You don't seem to understand, Mike, that there is no right to be free from discomfort, or hurt feelings; any laws based on such a premise are flawed at best. Putting restrictions on free speech leads to just what we see here: some expressions of thought enjoy protection, and some become illegal, and there is no longer "free speech" but rather "approved speech".

      You appear to be arguing for "approved speech", and by extension, approved thought. Shame on you.

      • Mike T.

        There can be hate speech, whichi s properly acceptable to impose penalties for. But that's not what happened here. Here we had a boss who suspended his employee for unacceptable conduct in the workplace.

        • http://intensedebate.com/people/Viva_Vivian Viva_Vivian

          Explain what was unacceptable in Roy's case.

  • EJC

    The death of England? What knows he of England that only England knows? We survive in you. Well, not you in Canada, obviously, you're as bad as we are with your Human Rights Courts and your Trudeau; but in America and Australia and, perhaps most importantly, in India. England is an idea, not a place, and while this island may sink under the sea from the weight of the sheer number of idiots who now live on it, the idea lives on. I am an Anglo-Irish South African Jew who thought of London as 'home' before ever I came here. Who cares if the tangible England is gone? The intangibles – the Common Law, English literature, representative government, commercial individualism – go on for ever.

    • Mark

      Don't count on it, with The One now ruling the US. Constitution be damned! It's all about feelings now. And the stench of US "Law Enforcement" is even worse than that of the UK.

    • JimD

      Many principles of common law are eroding.

    • Chuckie

      America? No. Australia? Already gone soft. India is probably our best hope, but they have deeply socialistic sensibilities too.

    • http://intensedebate.com/people/Faustino Faustino

      The idea of England was a gift to humanity and it is transferable. I still hate to see the country that produced it self – destruct. I love Anglo culture. But when I think of Prince Charles and his Islamic garden I just shudder with revulsion.

      • http://intensedebate.com/people/Wakefield Wakefield Tolbert

        It was a good show. And it's culture gave me my first name. But I do believe "Hail Britannia" is one of those tunes that if turned to art, would give us the fading hue of the smile of the Cheshire Cat.

    • http://intensedebate.com/people/minaka minaka

      EJC, you are too sanguine about the intangibles "going on forever". What is not assiduously guarded is lost to neglect if not marauders.

  • RM of Ont

    When I read David V's comment I thought of this statement by Pastor Niemoller regarding the silence of German "intellectuals" on the Nazi rise to power.

    THEY CAME FIRST for the Communists,
    and I didn't speak up because I wasn't a Communist.

    THEN THEY CAME for the Jews,
    and I didn't speak up because I wasn't a Jew.

    THEN THEY CAME for the trade unionists,
    and I didn't speak up because I wasn't a trade unionist.

    THEN THEY CAME for me
    and by that time no one was left to speak up."

    • Dave Bart

      So you're comparing the BBC to the Nazis? Really?

      You're suggestiong that the BBC has murdered 6 million people? That they have violated the sovereignty of neighboring states? That they bombed Europe to the point of devastation?

      Really?

      As a Jew, may I suggest that you are minimizingt he horror and loss my people have endured by comparing it to something as mundane as a broadcaster insisting on professional behavior from its employees while on the job.

      The BBC does NOT compare to the Nazis. You are desecrating the memory of my dead family members by trivializing the Holocaust.

      • Davey

        With all due respect Dave, I think you may be missing RM's point- which is NOT to compare the BBC to the Nazis or minimizing the horrors of the Holocaust.

        Instead, if I read it correctly, it has more to do with the fact that the insanity of creeping PC nonsense is with us because few have dared to speak up against it.

        Furthermore, small injustices become huge ones when they are not stopped while they are still small. Few, if anyone, has told these PC multi-culti leftard idiots to shut up for fear of ridicule or, indeed, out of the cowardice that typifies modern life. When confronted with situations and thinking like we have everywhere now, good people put their collective heads down and say , "Ahh forget it. Common sense will prevail. I don't want to fight this. I can't rock the boat". Blah blah blah.

        And it gets worse. And we retreat. And it gets worse again and we retreat further.

        Few horrific injustices- loss of rights, injustices, genocides or Holocausts happen in one fell swoop. Instead, things erode. First in small ways and the wrong- doers take strength in the lack of collective resistance. And it escalates.

        Compare the thinking of say, 1970 with that of today. It didn't happen over night. It eroded. We are allowing it to erode and by censuring anyone who dares compare the creeping "1984-ism" to other historical blights needs to re-think their position, in my opinion. (Hey, I grew up in Quebec and watched the Separatists completely control the agenda with nary a shot fired in the opposite direction…even among the few remaining anglos, there was an unwritten code to shut up because we somehow deserved what we were getting or, more likely, that it really "wasn't that bad". So shut up and put up or move)

        Funny how I see a bit of a parallel here.

        Just my $0.02

        • Dave Bart

          Again, one cannot compare the BBC to the Nazis without desecrating the graves of their victims. It is an insult to hyperbolize everything you dislike or disagree with with the single greatest act of mass murder in human history. It not only discredits you as a person who is prone to over-reaction and panic, it exposes you as someone with no respect at all for what you are comparing your dislike to.

          Listen, life is hard. Its difficult and there are many things that will happen which you do not like or agree with. That's the way it is for everybody. If you were expecting to live in some posh fantasy land where nobody ever took you to task over anything, you're on far better drugs than the rest of us.

          And no, the thousand minor injustices we all face on a day to day basis do NOT compare to the Holocaust. And you cannot in good faith suggest that allowing a company to insist on professional behavior from its employees during work hours is comparable to caving into the invasion of Czechoslovakia. Its mind boggling that you would draw such a comparison.

          I'm sorry that you wanted the entire world to revolve around you, and became disapointed when you found out that it doesn't and it won't. However, thsi epiphany of yours does not justify spitting on the graves of 6 million dead people.

          Grow up. Life is tough. Get used to it, because it's only going to get harder as you age.If you're going to survive till you're old, you're going to need a thicker hide than that.

          • Archie

            You're the one who needs to get a thicker skin, mate!

          • August West

            Why, because I'm suggesting that professionals should be professional, and if you're whining about how unfair that is, you're not really a professional?

          • http://intensedebate.com/people/Viva_Vivian Viva_Vivian

            No, because the only person drawing comparisons to the Holocaust is you.

        • http://intensedebate.com/people/Viva_Vivian Viva_Vivian

          David Bart sees thing that are not there, Davey. He's also higly emotional. Let him get it all out or we'll see him up on a watch tower staring down at us in no time.

    • RM of Ont

      Davey,
      you said it better than I could have. Thank you.

      Dave, its people like you that allow the PC thought police to advance their agenda. One day they will come for you and you'll say, "who will come to my aid?" But there will be no one left.

    • http://intensedebate.com/people/minaka minaka

      Isn't it interesting that the first three groups on the list, communists, as well as the majority of Jews and trade unionists who vote for left wing parties are at the forefront of placing limits on free speech? They are now "coming to get" men, whites, Christians and heterosexuals who are the typical victims of the HRC's…

    • http://www.nemw.net David

      They should have come for the Jews first, then they wouldn't have had to bother with anyone else.

  • Nemo Loris

    Mark Steyn, you are racist scum. You are the scum of the earth. When you publish an article titled 'Belgium without Belgians' you remind us, yet again, that you do not believe that a Muslim born in Belgium is a Belgian. May you rot in hell. You are scum, Steyn.

    • Davey

      I do so love an articulate, erudite, well-read and open minded individual sharing their insights with us all. Thank you, Nemo! You are a credit to the human race and a model of tolerance and civility. Reading your well-reasoned comments I am again reassured that the human race is clearly headed where it truly deserves to go. Indeed, few people could illustrate Mark Steyn's thesis as well as you did- and in five short sentences.

      Bravo!

      • Eva

        Time wasted, Davey. An individual with limited vocabulary such as our friend Nemo is not capable of appreciating sarcasm.

    • JuniperQ

      A Pew Research poll reports that "eight-in-ten (81%) British Muslims think of themselves as Muslims first rather than as British." I doubt Belgian Muslims are much different. A Muslim born in Belgium may be Belgian by birth, but statistically speaking, they'll most likely support Muslim ideology and values over western values (freedom of speech, women's rights, etc.) when it comes right down to it.

    • http://intensedebate.com/people/Wakefield Wakefield Tolbert

      Upon Finding Nemo, it appears we shant need his counsel after all..

    • Michael

      Actually very few people in Belgium think of themselves as Belgian. It is a false country. The people there think of themselves as a)Flemish b)Wallonian c)European or d)Muslim. Actually Muslim may have moved up to c by now.
      That said, Belgium does suffer from the same PC ills that are killing the rest of the West.

    • citizenoftheworld

      Yeah, I think Steyn's entire thesis is based the problems that have arise when (very many) Muslims born in Belgium consider themselves as only nominally Belgian. Same for Britain (plenty of evidence for that when "British" Muslims have been surveyed), Canada etc.

      The point underpins Steyn's whole argument, if you bothered to read and UNDERSTAND it: non-Muslims born in Belgium no longer consider themselves "Belgian" in any meaningful sense either. If citizenship amounts to nothing more than being a passport holder, all sorts of other "allegiances" have the potential to emerge.

      And btw Nemo- you're a total wanker.

    • http://intensedebate.com/people/WarrenZ WarrenZ

      Ah yes the ever tolerant left. Always with an open mind and a willingness to embrace different points of view. Go back to Belgium Nemo.

    • Markasol

      A Muslim born in Belgium is NOT a Belgian – he is a Muslim, a religion – unique among them – that has a political as well as a spiritual side. Instead of spouting hate-filled sh*t why don't you speak to Muslims and see whether they would consider a Muslim born in Belgium to be a Muslim first or a Belgian first?

      Those of us with a brain already know the answer.

  • Dave Bart

    Having served in the military, I was introduced to a concept that may seem novel to you.

    I was told, one day whilst standing in formation prior to being discharged for the weekend, by the sergeant in front of our platoon, that we had to think like soldiers whilst on duty, and not like soldiers whilst off duty. He suggested that we need to be able to 'hit the switch' that allowed us to transform ourselves from ordinary citizens into soldiers the minute it was time to be back on base for duty. He told us we needed to know when it was time to 'soldierize'.

    As I grew older, this became the basis for my concept of professionalism. When you are at work, you represent the company or department or whatever you work for. You are not at liberty to behave as you might while off duty. This covers not just the obvious, such as not getting drunk and using foul language, but also the subtle-as in keeping your opinions to yourself.

    An old adage suggests that three topics have no place in polite company: religion, sex, or politics. This is in perfect alignment with what I just described. Professionalism demands that we behave in a professional manner, that is, a manner representing our profession. I see no reason why topics such as these should come up for discussion in a professional setting, and if they do, they are best avoided.

    You use the term 'politically correct'. I prefer the phrase 'common sense'. Others may even prefer another term:

    'polite'.

    • http://intensedebate.com/people/Faustino Faustino

      That old adage was dreamed up by liberals who know that if their ideas about politics, sex, and religion were talked about openly people would be horrified.

      • August West

        Okay then, tell us all here how you like to fuck your wife. Come on, give us exact details, including the measurements of her vagina, your penis, and give us her and your name so that we can verify everything.

        Too personal? Hmmm.

        Maybe that's because you're secretly a Liberal, and you don't want to talk about religion, sex or politics when it's your own.

    • formerCF

      And as having served in the military, you know that amongst the ranks, there is very little political correctness. People of all looks, backgrounds, races, and religions quickly have to grow a thick skin to survive.

      It seems people now relish in being offended as it enables them to act smug.

      • August West

        I think the term 'politically correct' is nonsense.

        The military is a very professional organization. You do not, for example, drop the f-bomb while scratching your crotch while in the presence of your commanding officer. A private does not belch in the face of a general.

        And this is not because it would be 'politically incorrect'. It is because that is a breach of decorum.

        Decorum is something you experience when you have a job. Once you leave your parents' basement and start supporting yourself, you'll learn what a job is, and what decorum is.

    • Ginzo

      Ah. So humiliating a loyal employee for joking with a close friend, jailing a schoolgirl for 3-1/2 hours for not understanding the language of her classmates, and scaring the bejesus out of a small child for saying "Yuk" at lunch, measure up as "common sense" or, if preferred, "polite". Thanks for clearing that up, Dave. Don't know what society do without the vigilence of standard bearers such as yourself.

  • Kyle

    Its likely that Roy made a smart move in offing himself. I am sure if they PC-police had failed to arrest him he would have done serious time for a firearm offense.

  • Hymie

    1984, Animal Farm and Brave new World and Atlas Shrugged ARE NOT PLAYBOOKS, MOFOS!

    • August West

      Did you know that Alan Greenspan's model of the US economy was based upon the ideas Ayn Rand laid out in Atlas Shrugged?

      He was even a student of hers in college. After the American economy collapsed, he had to apologize tio the entire world, because reality didn't fit the Ayn Rand model.

      And now here you are praising her work.

      • http://intensedebate.com/people/Wakefield Wakefield Tolbert

        I seriously doubt that Ayn Rand, were she alive, and the other contemporary Objectivists would find much ideological and applied consistency in what Greenspan did or believed. He had one or two articles that I'm aware of in one of her many books on capitalism, and that about wraps up his tenure as Mr. Objectivist.

        All throughout his tenure over the economy, however, I note that government interference and the contradiction of the so-called "mixed economy" remained quite firmly in place, just as the world's third largest employer, both governmental and private, the socialistic NHS, survived quite well the "radical" transformative, and Bureacratic "gutting" of Iron Lady and "right winger" Margaret Thatcher.

  • Rick

    We will not tolerate intolerance!!!

    • http://intensedebate.com/people/minaka minaka

      If only. We tolerate intolerance to the max as long as the intolerant one is a Muslim or a rabid left winger.

      ‘Tolerance becomes a crime when applied to evil’. Thomas Mann

  • argon

    Fingerprinted and put in a cell for 3 hours, for not wanting to study with Urdu girls!
    When I was a student in Russia in 1970s under the communist dictatorship, a trifling "offense" like this would have produced only a visit from a junior ideology flunky, student himself, certainly with no powers other than to verbally convey the view of his higher-ups that such actions are not kosher. Elderly stalinists running Russia at the time somehow had the sense of proportion not to involve the uniformed police in matters like these.

    • http://intensedebate.com/people/minaka minaka

      Oh great. So someone with experience in these matters says Soviet Russia's low level flunkies exercised more discretion than our government bureaucrats at swatting flies with sledgehammers.
      We are in a really bad way.

  • Poker Face

    And Godwin's Law wins again…

  • Home412AD

    In fact, birthright citizens of the United Kingom have been emigrating to other countries permanently in record numbers every year for at least the past 10 years. In other words, each year since 1999 the number has been a record greater than the year before it, and the numbers are records greater than has ever been seen in the entire history of the UK, far higher than in any period since at least the 1600s.

    In fact, Mr. Steyn understates the reality in England today. He has excluded the whole subject of gypsies from his column. Gypsies in England are actually Irish gangs of vagabonds, who live solely off government welfare, from generation to generation to generation. They are now officially called 'Travelers', and it is illegal to discriminate against them. A common tactic of the Irish gangs is to arrive in a town or village, pave over a large area of open public land with concrete, usually overnight or over a weekend, and then move in with their caravans. Anyone in the village who complains to the local council is charged with racism.

    • http://intensedebate.com/people/Wakefield Wakefield Tolbert

      We have that in the Southeast USA, brother. More rare, but once in a while a story emerges about the Travelers, whose tactics for survival do include living off the graces of whatever State they're in, but also theft, rackateering, and strong allegations of child prostitution and "beauty" pageants, etc.

    • http://intensedebate.com/people/Viva_Vivian Viva_Vivian

      Wow. The more you learn……

  • PSS

    Similar case recently Down Under. The Police Commisioner expressed regret (kinda) over the suicide of an officer involved:
    http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/world/artic…

    "He confirmed that Sergeant Tony Vangorp, an officer for 30 years who shot himself this week at a Victoria police station, was among the officers identified in a crackdown on the use of computers. ……Mr Overland expressed regret at the death of Mr Vangorp but defended the action he had taken over the officer’s behaviour. “I believed then and I believe now that that was the appropriate thing to do,” he said."

    And, for confirmation of the fact that anti-racism is indeed the new racism:
    http://www.theaustralian.com.au/news/suicide-poli…

    "The Age newspaper reported that one email depicts an ethnic man being tortured. As the image circulated, racist comments were added."

    An "ethnic man" ??? What/ who the hell is an "ethnic man"??

  • Bogdan of Eunuchalia

    Adam you CRETIN! You compare McCarthy to NKVD! You don't know what you are writing about! CzK – NKVD – KGB – FSB is the biggest, most notorious criminal/terrorist organisation of all time, responsible for at leat 20 million deaths.

    How many people has the McCarthy commision killed, you ignorant moron?

    Have you red "Black Book Of Communism", you idiot?

    Have yoy heard about Vasilij Blokhin?

    Go back to shool!

  • Archie

    Not to worry, Mr. Steyn. Those tots pictured are chavs-in-the-making (viz. the shorn heads of the males, clenched fist, etc.) so you can bet your last ten bob that they're getting a completely different world view at home. Much as my child disses her terminally PC Canadian school brainwashing.

  • http://intensedebate.com/people/WarrenZ WarrenZ

    Is it just me or does the kid on the far left of the image make one want to sic a rather large angry hemorrhoidal Rottweiler after him?

  • 2maxpower

    SH!T …I'm done for ..my casual asides as you say are perhaps too PC incorrect. I have signed up for sensitivity training but the list is backlogged.

    anyway Mark if you are in Toronto area give me a shout I will buy you a coffee and get your advise for a good defense lawyer for the inevitable "aside". I'm not the suicidal type ….

  • Mike T.

    And if you think you can't be disciplined at work in the US or Canada for turning to a black guy when you hear sirens and saying "better hide", you and your husband are in for a rude awakening, my dear.

    • http://intensedebate.com/people/Wakefield Wakefield Tolbert

      Possibly, in some areas. But you'll get a stern talking-to at most. The full weight of Nanny is not quite mashing toes here just yet.

    • Paul T

      Does that make it right though, Mike T?

  • http://intensedebate.com/people/Viva_Vivian Viva_Vivian

    So now you can be secondhand offended?

    • http://intensedebate.com/people/minaka minaka

      There was the rather notorious case of Reverend Steve Boisson writing a salty letter about gay activism in schools gaining access to very young minds. A non-gay prof at U of Calgary Darren Lund designated himself to be offended on behalf of gays and made a pretty penny off it too thanks to the Alberta HRC. Meanwhile, EGALE to their credit did not join in his witch hunt. Both Ezra Levant and Mark Steyn have written on this specific case.

      Recently, the decision against Boisson was voided in a real court of law, but the gay empathetic professor is appealing, natch. He truly feels the gay pain that gays themselves are not feeling.

    • http://intensedebate.com/people/Wakefield Wakefield Tolbert

      Yes, here in the States we call that kind of thing (for whatever the perceived ill-treatment, and only tangientially related to real harm) a "Class Action Lawsuit."

      lol

  • perfidious

    There are some common themes emerging throughout the western world. The greatest weapon we have in the fight against the insidious hand of political correctness is humour. Indeed, when I moved from the UK to Canada almost a decade ago, I found that one of the more depressing aspects of life over here is the fact that the dead hand of political correctness has eradicated the irreverant office humour that made office life in London more bearable than it would otherwise have been. I don't suppose it should therefore be any surprise that the PC Stasi in both Canada and the UK are now openly persecuting people for politically incorrect quips. It can only be a matter of time before we have re-education camps.

    • http://intensedebate.com/people/Wakefield Wakefield Tolbert

      Well said.

  • http://intensedebate.com/people/minaka minaka

    Queens University in Ontario actually started a program to pay students to act as Stasi agents, eavesdropping on other students' conversations and interrupting them to impose politically correct views in which they'd received intensive training. The administration had to back off when this overstepping was uncharacteristically honestly reported in the media and resulted in a firestorm of protest including alumni threatening to cut off donations.

    Now the snitches-in-training have to wait until they graduate to make a living in the HRC's policing other people's words and thoughts. There are always smarmy holier-than-thou people like this eager to do the state's bidding, more's the pity.

  • http://intensedebate.com/people/minaka minaka

    Unrealistic. If America goes down, we go down.

    India is a mere pipe dream at this stage. It has a giant fifth column of Muslims and a shared border with a nuclear armed basket case.

  • Jan Burton

    Political correctness: the new, friendlier, fascism.

  • Paul Monroe

    Now I finally got it: the reason why the government, the powers that be are now on a quest to monitor and punish any ill-defined wayward behavior is that they want to kill the desire for dissent even before it is even formed in someone's mind. Be obedient to the rules, fear thinking outside of the box, so that THEY can come up with any rules THEY want. Let me be a little out of line myself : THIS IS SCARY SH@T.

  • ROB-RAGE

    Gays and countries that defend their right to Dirty, abnormal, perverted male Anal sex….The primary method of spreading AIDs….That has caused millions of deaths…. need to focus their warped , nanny State attention on countires like Iran…that execute Homo's and the Cannibal tribes in Africa that find Gays very tasty..! Mark Styen is the Rock star of Conservative commentators…Why doesn't Fox give him his own show..?

From Macleans