{"id":174585,"date":"2016-12-04T23:25:49","date_gmt":"2016-12-05T04:25:49","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/political-correctness-how-the-right-invented-a-phantom\/"},"modified":"2016-12-04T23:25:49","modified_gmt":"2016-12-05T04:25:49","slug":"political-correctness-how-the-right-invented-a-phantom","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/political-correctness\/political-correctness-how-the-right-invented-a-phantom\/","title":{"rendered":"Political correctness: how the right invented a phantom &#8230;"},"content":{"rendered":"<p><p>    Three weeks ago, around a    quarter of the American population elected a demagogue with no    prior experience in public service to the presidency. In the    eyes of many of his supporters, this lack of preparation was    not a liability, but a strength. Donald Trump had run    as a candidate whose primary qualification was that he was not    a politician. Depicting yourself as a maverick or an    outsider crusading against a corrupt Washington establishment    is the oldest trick in American politics  but Trump took    things further. He broke countless unspoken rules regarding    what public figures can or cannot do and say.  <\/p>\n<p>    Every demagogue needs an enemy. Trumps was the ruling elite,    and his charge was that they were not only failing to solve the    greatest problems facing Americans, they were trying to stop    anyone from even talking about those problems. The special    interests, the arrogant media, and the political insiders,    dont want me to talk about the crime that is happening in our    country, Trump said in one late September    speech. They want me to just go along with the same failed    policies that have caused so much needless suffering.  <\/p>\n<p>    Trump claimed that Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton were    willing to let ordinary Americans suffer because their first    priority was political correctness. They have put political    correctness above common sense, above your safety, and above    all else, Trump declared after a Muslim gunman killed 49    people at a gay nightclub in Orlando. I refuse to be    politically correct. What liberals might have seen as language    changing to reflect an increasingly diverse society  in which    citizens attempt to avoid giving needless offence to one    another  Trump saw a conspiracy.  <\/p>\n<p>    Throughout an erratic campaign, Trump consistently blasted    political correctness, blaming it for an extraordinary range of    ills and using the phrase to deflect any and every criticism.    During the first debate of the Republican primaries, Fox News    host Megyn Kelly asked Trump how he would answer the charge    that he was part of the war on women.  <\/p>\n<p>    Youve called women you dont like fat pigs, dogs,    slobs, and disgusting animals, Kelly pointed out. You    once told a contestant on Celebrity Apprentice it would be a    pretty picture to see her on her knees   <\/p>\n<p>    I think the big problem this country has is being politically    correct, Trump answered, to audience applause. Ive been    challenged by so many people, I dont frankly have time for    total political correctness. And to be honest with you, this    country doesnt have time either.  <\/p>\n<p>    Trump used the same defence when critics raised questions about    his statements on immigration. In June 2015, after Trump    referred to Mexicans as rapists, NBC, the network that aired    his reality show The Apprentice, announced that it was ending its relationship    with him. Trumps team retorted that, NBC is weak, and    like everybody else is trying to be politically correct.  <\/p>\n<p>    In August 2016, after saying that the US district judge Gonzalo    Curiel of San Diego was unfit to preside over the    lawsuit against Trump Universities because he was Mexican    American and therefore likely to be biased against him,    Trump told CBS News    that this was common sense. He continued: We have to stop    being so politically correct in this country. During the    second presidential debate, Trump answered a question about his    proposed ban on Muslims by stating: We could be very    politically correct, but whether we like it or not, there    is a problem.  <\/p>\n<p>      Trump and his followers never defined 'political      correctness, or specified who was enforcing it. They did not      have to    <\/p>\n<p>    Every time Trump said something outrageous commentators    suggested he had finally crossed a line and that his campaign    was now doomed. But time and again, Trump supporters made it    clear that they liked him because he wasnt afraid to say what    he thought. Fans praised the way Trump talked much    more often than they mentioned his policy proposals. He tells    it like it is, they said. He speaks his mind. He is not    politically correct.  <\/p>\n<p>    Trump and his followers never defined political correctness,    or specified who was enforcing it. They did not have to. The    phrase conjured powerful forces determined to suppress    inconvenient truths by policing language.  <\/p>\n<p>    There is an obvious contradiction involved in complaining at    length, to an audience of hundreds of millions of people, that    you are being silenced. But this idea  that there is a set of    powerful, unnamed actors, who are trying to control everything    you do, right down to the words you use  is trending globally    right now. Britains rightwing tabloids issue frequent    denunciations of political correctness gone mad and rail    against the smug hypocrisy of the metropolitan elite. In    Germany, conservative journalists and politicians are making    similar complaints: after the assaults on women in Cologne last    New Years Eve, for instance, the chief of police Rainer Wendt    said that leftists pressuring officers to be politisch    korrekt had prevented them from doing their jobs. In    France, Marine Le Pen of the Front National has condemned more    traditional conservatives as paralysed by their fear    of confronting political correctness.  <\/p>\n<p>    Trumps incessant repetition of the phrase has led many writers    since the election to argue that the secret to his victory was    a backlash against excessive political correctness. Some have    argued that Hillary Clinton failed because she was too invested    in that close relative of political correctness, identity    politics. But upon closer examination, political correctness    becomes an impossibly slippery concept. The term is what    Ancient Greek rhetoricians would have called an exonym: a    term for another group, which signals that the speaker does not    belong to it. Nobody ever describes themselves as politically    correct. The phrase is only ever an accusation.  <\/p>\n<p>    If you say that something is technically correct, you    are suggesting that it is wrong  the adverb before correct    implies a but. However, to say that a statement is    politically correct hints at something more insidious.    Namely, that the speaker is acting in bad faith. He or she has    ulterior motives, and is hiding the truth in order to advance    an agenda or to signal moral superiority. To say that someone    is being politically correct discredits them twice. First,    they are wrong. Second, and more damningly, they know it.  <\/p>\n<p>    If you go looking for the origins of the phrase, it becomes    clear that there is no neat history of political correctness.    There have only been campaigns against something    called political correctness. For 25 years, invoking this    vague and ever-shifting enemy has been a favourite tactic of    the right. Opposition to political correctness has proved    itself a highly effective form of crypto-politics. It    transforms the political landscape by acting as if it is not    political at all. Trump is the deftest practitioner of this    strategy yet.  <\/p>\n<p>    Most Americans had never heard    the phrase politically correct before 1990, when a wave of    stories began to appear in newspapers and magazines. One of the    first and most influential was published in October 1990 by the    New York Times reporter Richard Bernstein, who warned  under    the headline The Rising Hegemony of    the Politically Correct  that the countrys universities    were threatened by a growing intolerance, a closing of debate,    a pressure to conform.  <\/p>\n<p>    Bernstein had recently returned from Berkeley, where he had    been reporting on student activism. He wrote that there was an    unofficial ideology of the university, according to which a    cluster of opinions about race, ecology, feminism, culture and    foreign policy defines a kind of correct attitude toward the    problems of the world. For instance, Biodegradable garbage    bags get the PC seal of approval. Exxon does not.  <\/p>\n<p>    Bernsteins alarming dispatch in Americas paper of record set    off a chain reaction, as one mainstream publication after    another rushed to denounce this new trend. The following month,    the Wall Street Journal columnist Dorothy Rabinowitz decried    the brave new world of ideological zealotry at American    universities. In December, the cover of Newsweek  with a    circulation of more than 3 million  featured the headline    THOUGHT POLICE and yet another ominous warning: Theres a    politically correct way to talk about race, sex and ideas. Is    this the New Enlightenment  or the New McCarthyism? A similar    story graced the cover of New York magazine in    January 1991  inside, the magazine proclaimed that The    New Fascists were taking over universities. In April, Time    magazine reported on a new intolerance that was on the rise    across campuses nationwide.  <\/p>\n<p>    If you search ProQuest, a digital database of US magazines and    newspapers, you find that the phrase politically correct    rarely appeared before 1990. That year, it turned up more than    700 times. In 1991, there are more than 2,500 instances. In    1992, it appeared more than 2,800 times. Like Indiana Jones    movies, these pieces called up enemies from a melange of old    wars: they compared the thought police spreading terror on    university campuses to fascists, Stalinists, McCarthyites,    Hitler Youth, Christian fundamentalists, Maoists and    Marxists.  <\/p>\n<p>    Many of these articles recycled the same stories of campus    controversies from a handful of elite universities, often    exaggerated or stripped of context. The New York magazine cover    story opened with an account of a Harvard history professor,    Stephan Thernstrom, being attacked by overzealous students who    felt he had been racially insensitive: Whenever he walked    through the campus that spring, down Harvards brick paths,    under the arched gates, past the fluttering elms, he found it    hard not to imagine the pointing fingers, the whispers. Racist.    There goes the racist. It was hellish, this    persecution.  <\/p>\n<p>    In an interview that appeared soon afterwards in The Nation,    Thernstrom said the harassment described in the New York    article had never happened. There had been one editorial in the    Harvard Crimson student newspaper criticising his decision to    read extensively from the diaries of plantation owners in his    lectures. But the description of his harried state was pure    artistic licence. No matter: the image of college students    conducting witch hunts stuck. When Richard Bernstein published    a book based on his New York Times reporting on political    correctness, he called it Dictatorship of Virtue:    Multiculturalism and the Battle for Americas Future  a title    alluding to the Jacobins of the French Revolution. In the book    he compared American college campuses to France during the    Reign of Terror, during which tens of thousands of people were    executed within months.  <\/p>\n<p>    None of the stories that    introduced the menace of political correctness could pinpoint    where or when it had begun. Nor were they very precise when    they explained the origins of the phrase itself. Journalists    frequently mentioned the Soviets  Bernstein observed that the    phrase smacks of Stalinist orthodoxy but there is no exact    equivalent in Russian. (The closest would be    ideinost, which translates as ideological    correctness. But that word has nothing to do with    disadvantaged people or minorities.) The intellectual historian    LD Burnett has found scattered examples of doctrines or people    being described as politically correct in American communist    publications from the 1930s  usually, she says, in a tone of    mockery.  <\/p>\n<p>    The phrase came into more widespread use in American leftist    circles in the 1960s and 1970s  most likely as an ironic    borrowing from Mao, who delivered a famous speech in 1957 that    was translated into English with the title On the Correct    Handling of Contradictions Among the People.  <\/p>\n<p>      Until the late 1980s, 'political correctness' was used      exclusively within the left, and almost always ironically    <\/p>\n<p>    Ruth Perry, a literature professor at MIT who was active in the    feminist and civil rights movements, says that many radicals    were reading the Little Red Book in the late 1960s and 1970s,    and surmises that her friends may have picked up the adjective    correct there. But they didnt use it in the way Mao did.    Politically correct became a kind of in-joke among American    leftists  something you called a fellow leftist when you    thought he or she was being self-righteous. The term was    always used ironically, Perry says, always calling attention    to possible dogmatism.  <\/p>\n<p>    In 1970, the African-American author and activist Toni Cade    Bambara, used the phrase in an essay about strains on gender    relations within her community. No matter how politically    correct her male friends thought they were being, she wrote    many of them were failing to recognise the plight of black    women.  <\/p>\n<p>    Until the late 1980s, political correctness was used    exclusively within the left, and almost always ironically as a    critique of excessive orthodoxy. In fact, some of the first    people to organise against political correctness were a group    of feminists who called themselves the Lesbian Sex Mafia. In    1982, they held a Speakout on Politically Incorrect Sex at a    theatre in New Yorks East Village  a rally against fellow    feminists who had condemned pornography and BDSM. Over 400    women attended, many of them wearing leather and collars,    brandishing nipple clamps and dildos. The writer and activist    Mirtha Quintanales summed up the mood when she told the    audience, We need to have dialogues about S&M issues, not    about what is politically correct, politically incorrect.  <\/p>\n<p>    By the end of the 1980s, Jeff Chang, the journalist and hip-hop    critic, who has written extensively on race and social justice,    recalls that the activists he knew then in the Bay Area used    the phrase in a jokey way  a way for one sectarian to dismiss    another sectarians line.  <\/p>\n<p>    But soon enough, the term was rebranded by the right, who    turned its meaning inside out. All of a sudden, instead of    being a phrase that leftists used to check dogmatic tendencies    within their movement, political correctness became a talking    point for neoconservatives. They said that PC constituted a    leftwing political programme that was seizing control of    American universities and cultural institutions  and they were    determined to stop it.  <\/p>\n<p>    The right had been waging a    campaign against liberal academics for more than a decade.    Starting in the mid-1970s, a handful of conservative donors had    funded the creation of dozens of new thinktanks and training    institutes offering programmes in everything from leadership    to broadcast journalism to direct-mail fundraising. They had    endowed fellowships for conservative graduate students,    postdoctoral positions and professorships at prestigious    universities. Their stated goal was to challenge what they saw    as the dominance of liberalism and attack left-leaning    tendencies within the academy.  <\/p>\n<p>    Starting in the late 1980s, this well-funded conservative    movement entered the mainstream with a series of improbable    bestsellers that took aim at American higher education. The    first, by the University of Chicago philosophy professor Allan    Bloom, came out in 1987. For hundreds of pages, The Closing of    the American Mind argued that colleges were embracing a shallow    cultural relativism and abandoning long-established    disciplines and standards in an attempt to appear liberal and    to pander to their students. It sold more than 500,000 copies    and inspired numerous imitations.  <\/p>\n<p>    In April 1990, Roger Kimball, an editor at the conservative    journal, The New Criterion, published Tenured Radicals: How    Politics Has Corrupted our Higher Education. Like Bloom,    Kimball argued that an assault on the canon was taking place    and that a politics of victimhood had paralysed universities.    As evidence, he cited the existence of departments such as    African American studies and womens studies. He scornfully    quoted the titles of papers he had heard at academic    conferences, such as Jane Austen and the Masturbating Girl or    The Lesbian Phallus: Does Heterosexuality Exist?  <\/p>\n<p>    In June 1991, the young Dinesh DSouza followed Bloom and    Kimball with Illiberal Education: the Politics of Race and Sex    on Campus. Whereas Bloom had bemoaned the rise of relativism    and Kimball had attacked what he called liberal fascism, and    what he considered frivolous lines of scholarly inquiry,    DSouza argued that admissions policies that took race into    consideration were producing a new segregation on campus and    an attack on academic standards. The Atlantic printed a    12,000 word excerpt as its June cover story. To coincide with    the release, Forbes ran another article by DSouza with the    title: Visigoths in Tweed.  <\/p>\n<p>    These books did not emphasise the phrase political    correctness, and only DSouza used the phrase directly. But    all three came to be regularly cited in the flood of anti-PC    articles that appeared in venues such as the New York Times and    Newsweek. When they did, the authors were cited as neutral    authorities. Countless articles uncritically repeated their    arguments.  <\/p>\n<p>    In some respects, these books and articles were responding to    genuine changes taking place within academia. It is true that    scholars had become increasingly sceptical about whether it was    possible to talk about timeless, universal truths that lay    beyond language and representation. European theorists who    became influential in US humanities departments during the    1970s and 1980s argued that individual experience was shaped by    systems of which the individual might not be aware  and    particularly by language. Michel Foucault, for instance, argued    that all knowledge expressed historically specific forms of    power. Jacques Derrida, a frequent target of conservative    critics, practised what he called deconstruction, rereading    the classics of philosophy in order to show that even the most    seemingly innocent and straightforward categories were riven    with internal contradictions. The value of ideals such as    humanity or liberty could not be taken for granted.  <\/p>\n<p>    It was also true that many universities were creating new    studies departments, which interrogated the experiences, and    emphasised the cultural contributions of groups that had    previously been excluded from the academy and from the canon:    queer people, people of colour and women. This was not so    strange. These departments reflected new social realities. The    demographics of college students were changing, because the    demographics of the United States were changing. By 1990, only    two-thirds of Americans under 18 were white. In California, the    freshman classes at many public universities were majority    minority, or more than 50% non-white. Changes to undergraduate    curriculums reflected changes in the student population.  <\/p>\n<p>    The responses that the conservative bestsellers offered to the    changes they described were disproportionate and often    misleading. For instance, Bloom complained at length about the    militancy of African American students at Cornell University,    where he had taught in the 1960s. He never mentioned what    students demanding the creation of African American studies    were responding to: the biggest protest at Cornell took place    in 1969 after a cross burning on    campus, an open KKK threat. (An arsonist burned down the    Africana Studies Center, founded in response to these protests,    in 1970.)  <\/p>\n<p>    More than any particular obfuscation or omission, the most    misleading aspect of these books was the way they claimed that    only their adversaries were political. Bloom, Kimball, and    DSouza claimed that they wanted to preserve the humanistic    tradition, as if their academic foes were vandalising a canon    that had been enshrined since time immemorial. But canons and    curriculums have always been in flux; even in white    Anglo-America there has never been any one stable tradition.    Moby Dick was dismissed as Herman Melvilles worst book until    the mid-1920s. Many universities had only begun offering    literature courses in living languages a decade or so before    that.  <\/p>\n<p>    In truth, these crusaders against political correctness were    every bit as political as their opponents. As Jane Mayer    documents in her book, Dark Money: the Hidden History of the    Billionaires Behind the Rise of the Radical Right, Bloom and    DSouza were funded by networks of conservative donors     particularly the Koch, Olin and Scaife families  who had spent    the 1980s building programmes that they hoped would create a    new counter-intelligentsia. (The New Criterion, where Kimball    worked, was also funded by the Olin and Scaife Foundations.) In    his 1978 book A Time for Truth, William Simon, the president of    the Olin Foundation, had called on conservatives to fund    intellectuals who shared their views: They must be given    grants, grants, and more grants in exchange for books, books,    and more books.  <\/p>\n<p>    These skirmishes over syllabuses were part of a broader    political programme  and they became instrumental to forging a    new alliance for conservative politics in America, between    white working-class voters and small business owners, and    politicians with corporate agendas that held very little    benefit for those people.  <\/p>\n<p>    By making fun of professors who spoke in language that most    people considered incomprehensible (The Lesbian Phallus),    wealthy Ivy League graduates could pose as anti-elite. By    mocking courses on writers such as Alice Walker and Toni    Morrison, they made a racial appeal to white people who felt as    if they were losing their country. As the 1990s wore on,    because multiculturalism was associated with globalisation     the force that was taking away so many jobs traditionally held    by white working-class people  attacking it allowed    conservatives to displace responsibility for the hardship that    many of their constituents were facing. It was not the slashing    of social services, lowered taxes, union busting or outsourcing    that was the cause of their problems. It was those foreign    others.  <\/p>\n<p>    PC was a useful invention for the Republican right because it    helped the movement to drive a wedge between working-class    people and the Democrats who claimed to speak for them.    Political correctness became a term used to drum into the    public imagination the idea that there was a deep divide    between the ordinary people and the liberal elite, who    sought to control the speech and thoughts of regular folk.    Opposition to political correctness also became a way to    rebrand racism in ways that were politically acceptable in the    post-civil-rights era.  <\/p>\n<p>    Soon, Republican politicians were echoing on the national stage    the message that had been product-tested in the academy. In May    1991, President George HW Bush gave a commencement speech at    the University of Michigan. In it, he identified political    correctness as a major danger to America. Ironically, on the    200th anniversary of our Bill of Rights, we find free speech    under assault throughout the United States, Bush said. The    notion of political correctness has ignited controversy across    the land, but, he warned, In their own Orwellian way,    crusades that demand correct behaviour crush diversity in the    name of diversity.  <\/p>\n<p>    After 2001, debates about    political correctness faded from public view, replaced by    arguments about Islam and terrorism. But in the final years of    the Obama presidency, political correctness made a comeback. Or    rather, anti-political-correctness did.  <\/p>\n<p>    As Black Lives Matter and movements against sexual violence    gained strength, a spate of thinkpieces attacked the    participants in these movements, criticising and trivialising    them by saying that they were obsessed with policing speech.    Once again, the conversation initially focused on universities,    but the buzzwords were new. Rather than difference and    multiculturalism, Americans in 2012 and 2013 started hearing    about trigger warnings, safe spaces, microaggressions,    privilege and cultural appropriation.  <\/p>\n<p>    This time, students received more scorn than professors. If the    first round of anti-political-correctness evoked the spectres    of totalitarian regimes, the more recent revival has appealed    to the commonplace that millennials are spoiled narcissists,    who want to prevent anyone expressing opinions that they happen    to find offensive.  <\/p>\n<p>    In January 2015, the writer Jonathan Chait published one of the    first new, high-profile anti-PC thinkpieces in New York    magazine. Not a Very PC Thing to    Say followed the blueprint provided by the anti-PC    thinkpieces that the New York Times, Newsweek, and indeed New    York magazine had published in the early 1990s. Like the New    York article from 1991, it began with an anecdote set on campus    that supposedly demonstrated that political correctness had run    amok, and then extrapolated from this incident to a broad    generalisation. In 1991, John Taylor wrote: The new    fundamentalism has concocted a rationale for dismissing all    dissent. In 2015, Jonathan Chait claimed that there were once    again angry mobs out to crush opposing ideas.  <\/p>\n<p>    Chait warned that the dangers of PC had become greater than    ever before. Political correctness was no longer confined to    universities  now, he argued, it had taken over social media    and thus attained an influence over mainstream journalism and    commentary beyond that of the old. (As evidence of the    hegemonic influence enjoyed by unnamed actors on the left,    Chait cited two female journalists saying that they had been    criticised by leftists on Twitter.)  <\/p>\n<p>    Chaits article launched a spate of replies about campus and    social media cry bullies. On the cover of their September    2015 issue, the Atlantic published an article by Jonathan Haidt    and Greg Lukianoff. The title, The Coddling Of the    American Mind, nodded to the godfather of anti-PC, Allan    Bloom. (Lukianoff is the head of the Foundation for Individual    Rights in Education, another organisation funded by the Olin    and Scaife families.) In the name of emotional wellbeing,    college students are increasingly demanding protection from    words and ideas they dont like, the article announced. It was    shared over 500,000 times.  <\/p>\n<p>      The climate of digital journalism and social media sharing      enabled the anti-political-correctness stories to spread    <\/p>\n<p>    These pieces committed many of the same fallacies that their    predecessors from the 1990s had. They cherry-picked anecdotes    and caricatured the subjects of their criticism. They    complained that other people were creating and enforcing speech    codes, while at the same time attempting to enforce their own    speech codes. Their writers designated themselves the arbiters    of what conversations or political demands deserved to be taken    seriously, and which did not. They contradicted themselves in    the same way: their authors continually complained, in highly    visible publications, that they were being silenced.  <\/p>\n<p>    The climate of digital journalism and social media sharing    enabled the anti-political-correctness (and anti-anti-political    correctness) stories to spread even further and faster than    they had in the 1990s. Anti-PC and anti-anti-PC stories come    cheap: because they concern identity, they are something that    any writer can have a take on, based on his or her experiences,    whether or not he or she has the time or resources to report.    They are also perfect clickbait. They inspire outrage, or    outrage at the outrage of others.  <\/p>\n<p>    Meanwhile, a strange convergence was taking place. While Chait    and his fellow liberals decried political correctness, Donald    Trump and his followers were doing the same thing. Chait said    that leftists were perverting liberalism and appointed    himself the defender of a liberal centre; Trump said that    liberal media had the system rigged.  <\/p>\n<p>    The anti-PC liberals were so focused on leftists on Twitter    that for months they gravely underestimated the seriousness of    the real threat to liberal discourse. It was not coming from    women, people of colour, or queer people organising for their    civil rights, on campus or elsewhere. It was coming from    @realdonaldtrump, neo-Nazis, and far-right websites such as    Breitbart.  <\/p>\n<p>    The original critics of PC were    academics or shadow-academics, Ivy League graduates who went    around in bow ties quoting Plato and Matthew Arnold. It is hard    to imagine Trump quoting Plato or Matthew Arnold, much less    carping about the titles of conference papers by literature    academics. During his campaign, the network of donors who    funded decades of anti-PC activity  the Kochs, the Olins, the    Scaifes  shunned Trump, citing concerns about the populist    promises he was making. Trump came from a different milieu: not    Yale or the University of Chicago, but reality television. And    he was picking different fights, targeting the media and    political establishment, rather than academia.  <\/p>\n<p>    As a candidate, Trump inaugurated a new phase of    anti-political-correctness. What was remarkable was just how    many different ways Trump deployed this tactic to his    advantage, both exploiting the tried-and-tested methods of the    early 1990s and adding his own innovations.  <\/p>\n<p>    First, by talking incessantly about political correctness,    Trump established the myth that he had dishonest and powerful    enemies who wanted to prevent him from taking on the difficult    challenges facing the nation. By claiming that he was being    silenced, he created a drama in which he could play the hero.    The notion that Trump was both persecuted and heroic    was crucial to his emotional appeal. It allowed people who were    struggling economically or angry about the way society was    changing to see themselves in him, battling against a rigged    system that made them feel powerless and devalued. At the same    time, Trumps swagger promised that they were strong and    entitled to glory. They were great and would be great again.  <\/p>\n<p>    Second, Trump did not simply criticise the idea of political    correctness  he actually said and did the kind of outrageous    things that PC culture supposedly prohibited. The first wave of    conservative critics of political correctness claimed they were    defending the status quo, but Trumps mission was to destroy    it. In 1991, when George HW Bush warned that political    correctness was a threat to free speech, he did not choose to    exercise his free speech rights by publicly mocking a man with    a disability or characterising Mexican immigrants as rapists.    Trump did. Having elevated the powers of PC to mythic status,    the draft-dodging billionaire, son of a slumlord, taunted the    parents of a fallen soldier and claimed that his cruelty and    malice was, in fact, courage.  <\/p>\n<p>    This willingness to be more outrageous than any previous    candidate ensured non-stop media coverage, which in turn helped    Trump attract supporters who agreed with what he was saying. We    should not underestimate how many Trump supporters held views    that were sexist, racist, xenophobic and Islamophobic, and were    thrilled to feel that he had given them permission to say so.    Its an old trick: the powerful encourage the less powerful to    vent their rage against those who might have been their allies,    and to delude themselves into thinking that they have been    liberated. It costs the powerful nothing; it pays frightful    dividends.  <\/p>\n<p>    Trump drew upon a classic element of anti-political-correctness    by implying that while his opponents were operating according    to a political agenda, he simply wanted to do what was    sensible. He made numerous controversial policy proposals:    deporting millions of undocumented immigrants, banning Muslims    from entering the US, introducing stop-and-frisk policies that    have been ruled unconstitutional. But by responding to critics    with the accusation that they were simply being politically    correct, Trump attempted to place these proposals beyond the    realm of politics altogether. Something political is something    that reasonable people might disagree about. By using the    adjective as a put-down, Trump pretended that he was acting on    truths so obvious that they lay beyond dispute. Thats just    common sense.  <\/p>\n<p>    The most alarming part of this approach is what it implies    about Trumps attitude to politics more broadly. His contempt    for political correctness looks a lot like contempt for    politics itself. He does not talk about diplomacy; he talks    about deals. Debate and disagreement are central to politics,    yet Trump has made clear that he has no time for these    distractions. To play the anti-political-correctness card in    response to a legitimate question about policy is to shut down    discussion in much the same way that opponents of political    correctness have long accused liberals and leftists of doing.    It is a way of sidestepping debate by declaring that the topic    is so trivial or so contrary to common sense that it is    pointless to discuss it. The impulse is authoritarian. And by    presenting himself as the champion of common sense, Trump gives    himself permission to bypass politics altogether.  <\/p>\n<p>    Now that he is president-elect, it is unclear whether Trump    meant many of the things he said during his campaign. But, so    far, he is fulfilling his pledge to fight political    correctness. Last week, he told the New York Times that he was    trying to build an administration filled with the best    people, though Not necessarily people that will be the most    politically correct people, because that hasnt been working.  <\/p>\n<p>    Trump has also continued to cry PC in response to criticism.    When an interviewer from Politico asked a    Trump transition team member why Trump was appointing so many    lobbyists and political insiders, despite having pledged to    drain the swamp of them, the source said that one of the    most refreshing parts of  the whole Trump style is that he    does not care about political correctness. Apparently it would    have been politically correct to hold him to his campaign    promises.  <\/p>\n<p>    As Trump prepares to enter the White House, many pundits have    concluded that political correctness fuelled the populist    backlash sweeping Europe and the US. The leaders of that    backlash may say so. But the truth is the opposite: those    leaders understood the power that anti-political-correctness    has to rally a class of voters, largely white, who are    disaffected with the status quo and resentful of shifting    cultural and social norms. They were not reacting to the    tyranny of political correctness, nor were they returning    America to a previous phase of its history. They were not    taking anything back. They were wielding    anti-political-correctness as a weapon, using it to forge a new    political landscape and a frightening future.  <\/p>\n<p>    The opponents of political correctness always said they were    crusaders against authoritarianism. In fact, anti-PC has paved    the way for the populist authoritarianism now spreading    everywhere. Trump is anti-political correctness gone mad.  <\/p>\n<p>    Follow the Long Read on Twitter at @gdnlongread, or sign    up to the long read weekly email here.  <\/p>\n<p><!-- Auto Generated --><\/p>\n<p>Visit link:<\/p>\n<p><a target=\"_blank\" rel=\"nofollow\" href=\"https:\/\/www.theguardian.com\/us-news\/2016\/nov\/30\/political-correctness-how-the-right-invented-phantom-enemy-donald-trump\" title=\"Political correctness: how the right invented a phantom ...\">Political correctness: how the right invented a phantom ...<\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p> Three weeks ago, around a quarter of the American population elected a demagogue with no prior experience in public service to the presidency. In the eyes of many of his supporters, this lack of preparation was not a liability, but a strength.  <a href=\"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/political-correctness\/political-correctness-how-the-right-invented-a-phantom\/\">Continue reading <span class=\"meta-nav\">&rarr;<\/span><\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[187751],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-174585","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-political-correctness"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/174585"}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=174585"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/174585\/revisions"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=174585"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=174585"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=174585"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}