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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]