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Political Correctness and the policing of Freedom of Speech Ain’t Progressive — It’s the Total Opposite

There’s a strange contradiction at the heart of modern “progressive” culture: endless talk about freedom, justice, and liberation paired with an ever‑shrinking space for free speech, dissent, humor, and heresy. That contradiction isn’t accidental — and it isn’t progressive. In fact, it’s the exact opposite.

If we’re serious about progress, we have to say this plainly: political correctness is not progressive. It isn’t radical. It isn’t left‑wing in any meaningful historical sense. If anything, it’s deeply conservative — culturally, psychologically, and socially.

Freedom of Speech Was Never Optional

One of the most uncomfortable truths for today’s speech‑policing left is that Martin Luther King Jr. believed in freedom of speech for all — including people he deeply disagreed with. King understood something fundamental: you cannot build a just society by controlling thought and language. You don’t liberate people by silencing them. You persuade, organize, confront, and outgrow bad ideas — you don’t pretend they disappear because you banned the words.

The civil rights movement didn’t win by asking politely or staying within approved language. It won by disrupting norms, by speaking uncomfortable truths, and by refusing to be quiet in the face of power. That spirit requires speech — messy, human, sometimes offensive speech.

A world without free expression isn’t safer. It’s brittle.

Political Correctness Isn’t Left‑Wing — It’s Conservative

Historically, the left challenged tradition, hierarchy, and enforced moral codes. It mocked authority. It questioned dogma. It embraced art, rebellion, satire, and contradiction. Political correctness does the opposite.

Political correctness enforces:

Approved language

Approved beliefs

Approved attitudes

Approved villains and heroes

That’s not radical. That’s moral conservatism with new branding.

Old conservatives once demanded you watch your mouth, respect authority, don’t offend the church, don’t question the nation, don’t upset social order. Today’s PC culture demands the same thing — just with different taboos and different sacred cows.

If you’re punished socially, professionally, or culturally for saying the wrong thing — even when your intent is honest or exploratory — you’re not living in a progressive culture. You’re living in a regulated one.

The Left Became Culturally Conservative

This is the part many people don’t want to admit: the modern left has become culturally conservative.

It resists humor. It distrusts artistic risk. It treats language as fragile. It values purity over curiosity. It polices behavior instead of challenging power.

That’s not how cultural progress happens. Progress comes from friction. From argument. From bad ideas being aired and dismantled, not hidden. From art that offends before it enlightens. From people being allowed to think out loud without fear of exile.

When a movement becomes more concerned with enforcing manners than expanding freedom, it has lost its radical edge.

You Don’t Get a Progressive World Without Free Speech

A truly progressive society depends on free expression — not just polite expression, not just correct expression, but real expression. That includes speech we hate, speech that’s wrong, speech that’s clumsy, speech that hasn’t caught up yet.

The alternative is stagnation.

You can’t engineer social evolution by censoring thought. You can’t build solidarity by fear. You can’t claim liberation while acting as language police.

Progress requires trust — trust that people can hear bad ideas without becoming them, trust that truth can survive open debate, trust that growth comes from exposure, not insulation.

Conclusion: Liberation Isn’t Sanitized

Political correctness promises safety but delivers conformity. It claims to protect the vulnerable while quietly empowering social enforcers. It borrows the language of progress while practicing the habits of conservatism.

If the left wants to rediscover its soul, it has to rediscover its courage — the courage to tolerate speech, to invite dissent, to laugh, to offend, and to argue in public.

Because without freedom of speech, “progressive” is just a word.

And progress itself stops moving.
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dancingtongue · 80-89, M
You raise valid points. So does @ViciDraco. So much depends upon intent, nuance, situation and today's society seems to only be capable of dealing with bipolar extremes: black and white, good and evil.

I came of age in an era when the Lenny Bruce's of the world got arrested for using foul and derogatory language in their comedy sketches. Obviously used for humor, and obviously overkill. And I agree that some of the so-called DEI restrictions were equally ham-fisted and counter-productive.

However a society in which continual potty-mouth usage in polite, civilized social events doesn't result in ostracism, would certainly coarsen it. And a society that permits slurs and racial/ethnic/religious discriminatory tropes to be used as weapons in the workplace, marketplace, housing location is a return to a Jim Crow America which, for those of us who lived in it, was not Great.

Language is powerful, particularly when it is wielded as a weapon. But sometimes it needs to be wielded as a weapon. Finding the appropriate balance of circumstances, situations, and responses is difficult -- particularly in a digital age that has no room for context and nuance.
weirdbeatnik · 26-30, M
@dancingtongue I totally get what you're saying but I will challenge you on just one thing words with power words only have power if we give them power if you ever watched that bit with George Carlin where is the n word is only a word it's only if you give it power is which that word is dangerous don't get me wrong I would never actually say that word cuz I know it's ugly and I don't like it myself but I do think he makes a really good point [media=https://youtu.be/mUvdXxhLPa8]
Since you talk about freedom of speech specifically I am going to assume you are American.

The 1st Amendment just means the government cannot persecute you for what you say.

Unlike what many (mostly right wingers) believe it is not blanket pass on any and all consequences for your words. That doesn't exist and never has.



And as a concept the broader issue of freedom of speech is also not realistic.

The Nazis and the KKK didn't all independently come to exactly the same trash ideas on their own.

In fact a German psychologist who later joined the NSDAP wrote in the 1920s about the paradox of the far right weaponizing liberal values and laws to take power than take those same privileges from the people who disagree with them.

Your logic here also falls into the fallacy of assuming progress is inherently good and that introducing new ways of thought is a positive influence by default.

Eugenics is a great example of the flaws in those assumptions.
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weirdbeatnik · 26-30, M
@GuiltyBiStander correct I agree and to be fair the only reason why I pick on progressives a lot more is because I happen to be a progressive or at least I am centered Progressive now I just do not think a lot of progressives are standing up for their values and to be fair I honestly think a lot of it is because of political correctness but yes the right has it too
GuiltyBiStander · 31-35, F
@weirdbeatnik

You're not wrong ✌
ViciDraco · 41-45, M
To you I would ask: who is doing this policing presently?

Let's say someone gets upon a soapbox and says "Cringelstanis are poisoning the blood of our country! Send them all back to the north pole!"

It's definitely policing if he arrested for it.

Is it policing if his boss, as a free citizen himself, overhears this and fires him because he does not want his business associated with that speech?

Is it policing if the nearby bar owner refuses to serve him?

Is it policing if people begin to socially ostracize the man in general?
weirdbeatnik · 26-30, M
@ViciDraco good question let me preference this there's a big difference of what I'm talking about which is controlling freedom of speech and oppressing it and what your talking about which is a consequence freedom of speech is the most important thing to our kind if we don't have it we don't know who or who not to talk too for a sample I have autism okay ? I understand that yes there's some evil people in the world who want to kill me just because I have autism but with that said I think that speech should be allowed because if it's not I don't know who I'm talking to like I have always said before it's more creepy if you don't know the person's ideals the people who don't talk their ideas or their opinions are the people you need to watch out
ViciDraco · 41-45, M
@weirdbeatnik I do not disagree with you there. But I disagree that this is a problem inherent to the left. I don't know a lot of leftists or progressives that claim it should be illegal to say the above example. I know a lot more right wingers who want to make flag burning illegal.

Progressives and leftists are guilty of expecting platforms to engage in determining acceptable speech. Which becomes a very different and nuanced conversation.

If a store puts a swastika on their front door, it is well within the rights of a person to decide not to shop at a store that expresses that ideology.

But let's make it more nuanced. This store carries and sells craft beers from ten breweries in town. One of the breweries releases a product named Rightful Place and depicts minorities in positions of enslavement upon their cans.

The store wants people to continue shopping there. But people will stop if it looks like they are pro-slavery.

The store will lose a lot of business if they carry the new product.
The store will lose a little business if they don't carry the new product but continue to sell other products from the same brewery.
The store will lose the least business if they stop carrying that brewery's products altogether.

Which route should the store take?
trollslayer · 46-50, M
Interesting post…

Love the avatar.
Let's look at the actual Constitutional Amendment establishing free speech.

Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government for a redress of grievances.

Look at that, it's a restriction on the US Congress and nothing else!!

Everything else you've said about "freedom of speech" is a collection of emotional attacks and special pleadings against your political enemies.
weirdbeatnik · 26-30, M
@ElwoodBlues I don't see the world in that way I don't have enemies sure some people may not like me or see me as a enemy but that's only because they fear that they don't understand [media=https://youtu.be/Gc11mJGre10]
@weirdbeatnik says
I don't have enemies
Yes, you do; you just can't admit that sad fact to yourself.

Meanwhile, you bring up "political correctness" while tRump, thru ICE, is busily denying rights of freedom of speech, freedom of assembly, due process, and the 2nd Amendment. Seems you're more worried about posting on Facebook than THOSE freedoms🤣😂
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weirdbeatnik · 26-30, M
@LordShadowfire am bisexual for one for two if somebody does call you that at least you know to stay away from them I mean that's why we have freedom of speech at least that's part of it
weirdbeatnik · 26-30, M
@LordShadowfire and what do you mean by my kind??
LordShadowfire · 46-50, M
@weirdbeatnik
am bisexual for one...
Did not know that, and I apologize for assuming.
...for two if somebody does call you that at least you know to stay away from them...
Well, I disagree with their right to do that, but it is still currently legal, and nobody has made it otherwise, at least not in my country. But there are social consequences for using it. As there should be.
and what do you mean by my kind??
Free speech absolutists. The vast majority turn out to be some type of bigots who are angry because there are consequences for using their favorite slurs.

 
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