Tuesday, May 17, 2011

Tolerance

I've been thinking a lot about tolerance this week. I'm not sure that I've come to any conclusions, but it's the thought that counts.

There are two people in my life that frequently make, in one case, racist and, in the other case, homophobic comments. Now, in the '90s it seemed like everyone just pretended that people's differences didn't exsist, whereas now it's alright (to a certain extent) to poke fun at natural variation as long as all variations are mocked equally. So, at first I assumed the candidness of their words to be this natural progression between extremes.

I was wrong. I've now come to realize that they're just racist and homophobic. The thing is that I still don't think they are bad people. I disagree with what they say, of course, and their words make me very uncomfortable, but I've come to know them before I learned of their beliefs. In my mind they are just ignorant and perhaps I can help them overcome this, but in the interm what do I do?

When I commented to a mutual friend that the homophobe's comments were upsetting me, she said that they should be more careful voicing their opinions in such a public environment, but that they had the right to these opinions none-the-less. I suppose that's what really got me thinking becuase my immediate reaction was that they don't have the right to these opinions. But that's just me being intolerant of their intolerancem and doesn't that make me a hypocrite.

I suppose this is the exact debate surrounding free speech. It is free up until a certain point. Up until people get hurt. But people are so diverse in their opinions that someone's bound to get hurt at nearly every point. So, where do you draw the line? Or should there even be a line at all? Instinct tells me there should be a line, but those are the instincts of someone firmly on the socially acceptable side of that line...

I talked about this with another friend and she said that it doesn't really matter if there are the so called "backwards" thinkers in our society because they will become less backward as the whole society progresses. Theoretically, I can see how that would be the case, but in practice it feels as though we've reached a divergent point. We may have all progressed together up until a certain state and now we're dividing into different groups of extremists with no hope of a middle ground. I suppose that this is an impossible claim for me to make since I never lived at a time where women were burned at the stake for strange behaviour.

In conclusion, there is none. Maybe I should be open minded to people's intolerances or maybe I should call them on it and have them question their beliefs. Either way I feel as though my natural instinct to shun their behaviour or angrily retort solves nothing and just portrays my own bias and intolerance...

2 comments:

  1. I don't think it's intolerant to call people out for making sexist/homophobic/racist remarks. They are entitled to their opinion but it doesn't mean I have to be silent in response to their opinion. I'm not saying you have to be rude or degrading. I think it's important to challenge those people because that's how they will learn to examine the true reasons for their opinion. I understand you don't want to be "intolerant" of their racism, but really you are not being intolerant. You are not saying you can no longer associate with them or you hate them. You are simply stating that your opinion is different. AND you're standing up for what you think is right. It's only natural to want to shun their behaviour because such opinions illuminate the core of the person. That is, who they accept and the boundaries of their acceptance and love for other people in society.
    I have heard so many ignorant comments in the past month alone. One girl said female masturbation was unnatural and dildos made her depressed because women should find real men to sleep with. Another guy said oral sex was wholly unnatural and disgusting. Another guy said Aboriginal people were lazy and uneducated and there was not one Aboriginal person at our university.
    When most of these statements were said it was in a group environment and I did not want to attack or challenge them because it would upset the person. And I genuinely like all of these people. I simply looked at them like they were crazy and made an uncomfortable laugh. I'm pretty sure everyone was thinking the same thing.
    I agree with your friend society is progressing and the bigots are being left behind. I don't think society is fragmenting into extremist groups. The majority of people have moderate opinions.

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  2. I guess what I meant was that they do have the right to their own opinion even if I and most of society disagrees with it. We preach tolerance of other people's opinions in the case of politics or sexual habits or career choices, but that tolerance ends when the opinion becomes taboo in our society. Now it is taboo to make racist/sexist/homophobic remarks, whereas before it was taboo to have weird kinks or be outwardly homosexual. Is it not just another phase that society is going through? Now, keep in mind that this is more of a metaphorical debate and I'm not sure if I agree with what I'm saying. It's just something that I've been thinking about. If I truely believe that everyone has a right to their own opinion, I shouldn't be offended when they express one that disagrees with my own...

    not to say that I can't express my opinion back to them, but I perhaps shouldn't express it as the offended retort that comes naturally.

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