It's interesting how many people are - by default - translating the idea of excessive political correctness into a left-right issue. I realise there are some lazy tropes and cliches with which to caricature both sides of the debate, but the documentary in question was considerably less binary and more nuanced.
For example prohibiting an artist from exhibiting a series of photos that capture an aspect of a culture or religion in case it offends that culture or religion is not liberal in any way, and neither is prohibiting a magazine from depicting a religious figure that may offend some. But opposing this may have you branded a reactionary dinosaur and racist.
Germaine Greer and Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie have both recently been pilloried as bigots and transphobes for daring to raise some issues that are worthy of a serious discussion and not just reactive social-media abuse for daring to transgress a PC divide. This seems to reflect the tendency for extreme PC behaviour to stifle debate and create self-defeating division rather than open discussion and consensus.
For me this is more about how people (of any political persuasion) have a depressingly predictable capacity to blindly follow whatever doctrine is in fashion and take it to an extreme, in the process constructing opponent tribes - 'others' - against whom they may define themselves. You're either with us, or against us - and people on the 'left' and 'right' are both guilty of this.
For example prohibiting an artist from exhibiting a series of photos that capture an aspect of a culture or religion in case it offends that culture or religion is not liberal in any way, and neither is prohibiting a magazine from depicting a religious figure that may offend some. But opposing this may have you branded a reactionary dinosaur and racist.
Germaine Greer and Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie have both recently been pilloried as bigots and transphobes for daring to raise some issues that are worthy of a serious discussion and not just reactive social-media abuse for daring to transgress a PC divide. This seems to reflect the tendency for extreme PC behaviour to stifle debate and create self-defeating division rather than open discussion and consensus.
For me this is more about how people (of any political persuasion) have a depressingly predictable capacity to blindly follow whatever doctrine is in fashion and take it to an extreme, in the process constructing opponent tribes - 'others' - against whom they may define themselves. You're either with us, or against us - and people on the 'left' and 'right' are both guilty of this.