Orwell, c. 1940 Colourised by Cassowary Colurization |
A truly free and democratic society must be based on fundamental
rights and freedoms that individuals may enjoy and that are restricted rarely
and only to the extent necessary to protect other rights.
In Canada, 38 years after the proclamation of the
Charter of Rights and Freedoms, this should be well understood.
But in Newfoundland and Labrador, these rights are foreign
ideas not well understood or generally accepted.
The latest example of how easily fundamental rights
can be denied with popular support is the decision, supposedly taken by Brian
Jones alone, to stop writing a column for his employer The Telegram.
He did so in the midst of a controversy over a column that
appeared on May 20. There was nothing remarkable
about this column compared to the thousands of others he has written in his
long career as a journalist and editor, except that this time, Jones aimed his characteristically
malodorous vowel movements at public sector workers.
Is it fair, he wondered, that they are sitting home, doing nothing, collecting full pay, and fattening their pension while private sector workers in the tens of thousands are out of work and living on one form or another of federal hand-out?
The merits or demerits of the column do not
matter.
What does matter is the attitude toward freedom of expression by the
folks who wanted Jones fired or his ability to write a column taken away for nothing
more than expressing an opinion with which they disagreed or saying some things that upset them.
That’s
really all Jones did. His critics
accused him of a great many things, but aside from writing claims based on stuff
he made up, Jones was guilty of none of them.
The question Jones raised is worth discussing if only to run through the list of reasons why it makes no sense to lay off thousands of people who are actually at work providing essential services. Raising the question did no harm to the community as a whole nor did it threaten anybody in particular. Had people debated and discussed different answers to Jones' question, much good could have come of achieving a general agreement on the answer based on facts. That is how democratic societies are supposed to work.
The question Jones raised is worth discussing if only to run through the list of reasons why it makes no sense to lay off thousands of people who are actually at work providing essential services. Raising the question did no harm to the community as a whole nor did it threaten anybody in particular. Had people debated and discussed different answers to Jones' question, much good could have come of achieving a general agreement on the answer based on facts. That is how democratic societies are supposed to work.
That isn’t what
happened in this case. The mob howled and the Telegram
editors cowered.
One of the
most common arguments used by people happy that Jones wouldn’t be writing any
more is that free speech is not free of consequences. Not surprisingly, proponents
of this view are taking cues from the use of that idea in the increasingly
polarized American political scene. On
the political right, some politicians and commentators want to stifle the
political left by claiming their rights are infringed if the left takes up a
contrary position. In the Trumpian
world, the mere act of asking questions of or commenting negatively on Trump’s
views is wrong. And on the left, the
reply is that freedom of speech is not freedom from consequences.
In the
United States, they are speaking of reaction. But in Newfoundland and Labrador,
and very obviously in this example, consequences takes on a more sinister
meaning. Proponents of the idea defend themselves
by saying that Jones still has a job and can still express his opinion in other
ways.
All of that
is irrelevant. Under pressure, the Telegram and Jones took away his
public platform for no reason other than some people didn’t like what he said or how he said it.
Once we
allow people to suffer retribution for merely voicing an
opinion, once we allow people who
disagree with an opinion to punish someone for the act of writing a column or a
letter to the editor or a blog, we cannot have free speech and a democratic
society worthy of the name.
This time, it
was merely taking away Jones' ability to write a column. Change the context. Make Jones someone with dark skin or an
accent or simply someone not originally from Newfoundland. Make the issue about something people might
take more seriously, something with significant financial implications for the whole province.
There is no limit on what may happen the next time, in a different context. All you have to do is accept the simple rationalization that it is only fair that opinions come with consequences.
There is no limit on what may happen the next time, in a different context. All you have to do is accept the simple rationalization that it is only fair that opinions come with consequences.
The
fundamental rights in the Charter – religious expression, assembly, mobility, speech
and the others – are not merely limited to protection from the actions by
government. They are fundamental rights that
should be free of infringement by our fellow citizens.
Except that
they aren’t really.
George Orwell understood that a great many injustices may occur
in small ways, excused or rationalized by the majority utterly unaware that each of the people who now make up a majority may find
themselves in another context in the minority.
As Orwell
wrote in Freedom
of the Park, “the relative freedom
which we enjoy depends on public opinion.”
Governments make laws, but whether they are carried out, and how the police behave, depends on the general temper in the country. If large numbers of people are interested in freedom of speech, there will be freedom of speech, even if the law forbids it; if public opinion is sluggish, inconvenient minorities will be persecuted, even if laws exist to protect them.
Persecuted by authorities or by people acting on their own.
In a nation where Newfoundlanders and Labradorians are a minority, they should be far more concerned than they are about what happens when minorities become inconvenient to the majority.
In a nation where Newfoundlanders and Labradorians are a minority, they should be far more concerned than they are about what happens when minorities become inconvenient to the majority.
The answer is in front of their nose.
-srbp-
[Edited for typos 30 Oct 20]