Last month the journalist Toby Young founded the Free Speech Union. Its mission is to “stand up for the right of its members to tell the truth in all circumstances, even if that means causing offence to some”.
Young himself has had to resign from a plethora of positions in the face of a huge social media backlash for some of his previous puerile comments. He is now fighting back against the ‘tyranny of opinion’ warned against by John Stuart Mill.
Anyone can defend opinions they agree with. It takes a true liberal to stick up for those with whose opinions we find incredibly irritating or fundamentally disagree with. As a liberal, I shudder at the way today’s liberalism has mutated into the epitome of illiberal.
I joined the Liberals when I was 16; not as a cunning career move, but because I believe in the equal worth and value of every person. I believe that every person should be free to live as they see fit, to hold their beliefs and to express them as they wish. I reject forced conformity, whether from the law or from social pressure.
Today’s liberalism does not uphold these liberal values.
Eyebrows were first raised when thinkers such as Germaine Greer and Peter Tatchell were no-platformed for their views in the name of liberalism. Then, last year, when the police turned up at the workplace of Harry Miller to ‘check [his] thinking’ because of some of his tweets, it began to look like we were heading full tilt into Orwellian territory. These days, it is perfectly normal for so-called liberals to condemn the views — and even the thoughts — of those who do not sign up to all their beliefs; even those who once would have been part of the same ‘tribe’. Liberalism has lost itself.
So I applaud the intent of the Free Speech Union in pushing back against some of these expressions of ‘liberalism’. But I think it should work both ways.
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