This Saturday morning, as I and some other symposium attendees made our way down the sidewalk to the law school to attend the first panel discussion of the day, we spotted about 15 people picketing in front of the school with signs in their hand. They were shouting a chant about demanding equality and affirmative action for school admission. It turned out that one of the speakers on the opening panel was Ward Connerly.

The protesters were invited inside to attend the panel discussion – this turned out to be a mistake. First, it should be noted that the panel topic was “Kelo, Grutter, and Popular Responses to Unpopular Decisions” and the discussion was not supposed to be specifically about the rightness or wrongness of affirmative action. Rather the panel members were speaking more broadly on the topic of what happens when the people respond – often in the form of a ballot initiative – to Supreme Court decisions they don’t like. Kelo referred to the notorious eminent domain case in which the high Court found that a city could force property holders to sell their property in order to transfer it to developers. Grutter was the case that upheld the constitutionality of the University of Michigan’s admission policy of giving racial minorities preferential treatment. Both decisions faced widespread popular criticism and both have resulted in laws being passed in multiple states that attempt to address the widely perceived deficiencies of those cases.
As I saw the protesters being led into the room, I naively thought to myself, “This is good. They will have a chance to see the kind of open minded debate we promote at the Federalist Society.” (Contrary to what most people think, the Federalist Society is quite good about getting a diversity of opinions represented at its events. More than anything else, the Federalist Society is motivated by the desire to foster good debate.) I couldn’t have been more wrong. Within minutes of Ward Connerly’s opening remarks members of the protest group began shouting out remarks and rhetorical questions. The panel moderator was Justice Robert Young, Jr of the Michigan Supreme Court. Justice Young is also a black conservative and he began admonishing the unruly protesters telling them (and I’m paraphrasing), “You must allow Mr. Connerly a chance to speak. Then we will have a time of questions and answers in which you may participate. That’s how civilized people discuss things.”

I am certainly not the first to bemoan the decline of civil debate. The emergence of Bush Derangement Syndrome and its rhetorical excesses have been widely discussed. But at a personal level this event was particularly distressing. Seeing so up close and personal that the possibility of persuasion was entirely non-existent with these people was incredibly frustrating.
It seems that discussion in contemporary society takes the form of one of two extremes: either it embraces a soft relativism in which no one is wrong, everyone’s right and we don’t want to offend anyone by declaring an opinion too boldly. And at the other end is the irrational and disrespectful shouting of the kind engaged in by BAMN where you automatically assume bad faith on the part of anyone that disagrees with you. I can’t quite flesh it out the way I’d like but I can’t help but wonder if these aren’t two sides of the same coin. Modern relativism has made it impossible for two people to vigorously disagree with each other and try to make strong cases for their position. At the same time, when disagreements do occur they do not take the form of rational arguments but rather are loud shouting matches in which you assume the worst in you opponent . It is no coincidence that the rowdy group called themselves “By Any Means Necessary” – in other words reason and persuasion are not the tools they use for bringing change. Brute force is.
Remember when Cardinal Ratzinger talked about the dictatorship of relativism? Maybe he was on to something . . .
Well, I could go on and on about this subject. And maybe I will sometime. But just a few observations for now.
ReplyDeleteThe utter moral exhaustion of arguments for leftist policies would seem to be what leads to their rhetorical worthlessness. All that's left is to throw the kitchen sink and engage in shock stunts and intimidation.
Craftier ones will employ a sort of judo tactic whereby they will hurl epithets at a high volume and when the sensible debater raises his voice a notch they will say to him "Now, don't get angry. I can see this is upsetting you." A close relative started a huge argument with me once and employed this tactic. It was maddening.
I've seen this up close twice and the effect is jarring. One was when Grove City College invited Robert Bork to speak, the other was when my band played at Pitt University with several other bands and some black students protested because we were all white. As Mark learned, proximity amplifies the sheer frustration felt and the bull-headedness of the agenda.
But if you haven't had the "privilege" of seeing it up close, Zombietime has done yeoman's work covering insane leftist protests for years. It's not all PG-rated, but that's not his fault.
I saw Ward Connerly speak when he came to my college (Emory), and the students shouted him down. The worst offender was this rather old man - a self professed socialist - and he just would not stop shouting. When people tired to get him to hush, others pointed out his age, as though old age allows one to act like a jerk without consequences.
ReplyDeleteI totally recommend the book "A Bee in the Mouth," by Peter Woods, which is an excellent examination of the growing incivility in our political discourse.
Oh, yeah, I heard Woods on Medved's show -- he was REALLY good, very insightful. I want to get that book sometime.
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