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In Fairytale of New York the word “faggot” had been replaced with “haggard” for some radio versions for many years. Why it’s a story now I have no idea..
Completely agree BST regarding "faggots" and "nigger" in historic culture being fine with me in my position as a white middle aged bloke. That is certainly not lost on me. And I also agree it should be for the minorities in question to be the arbiter of what is and isn't offensive and/or acceptable. It's probably a gross generalisation, but to my eyes the perpetually offended instead seems to be the Tarquins and the Ophelias of this world who make it their mission in life to get offended on everyone else's behalf!
Know a lot of them, do you AL?
When discussing "cancel-culture" I appreciate the fact that the personalities on one side of this particular argument (the likes of Fox, Farage, Starkey, Delingpole, Hopkins, Liddle, Hitchens etc) are so unpalatable and offensive to those on the other side of the argument, that it makes it easy to resort to playing the man rather than the ball as per the original poster. Is that not however something of a lazy argument that fails to address the central issue? "Oh Lawrence Fox has said it so it must be right wing bullshit" etc. I'm not entirely sure I agree with that as a starting point no matter how much I may disagree with the majority of what those individuals write. Surely any dispassionate and non-partisan reflection on the current trend for "cancel-culture" must raise some concerns to any rational observer? I appreciate that issues such as changing the name of the dog in the Dambusters, no-platforming speakers in Universities if their views aren't "woke" enough, ripping down statues that relate to events that happened hundreds of years ago in totally different times, is often hijacked by right wing journos engaging in dog-whistle politics. That does nothing to inform the debate on this. and simply debases it. If we actually look at the underlying issue, in my view surely we shouldn't be going down a route of effectively erasing parts of our history because the cultures of that period no longer fit with the cultures and sensitivities of today. As a lover of history I always think that we can't possibly begin to understand ourselves and decide where we want to get to socially and culturally, if we don't have a full understanding of where we have come from and what has made us the people we are today. I take no issue with that word being present in a song from 30 years ago and I see it as an example of language that used to be acceptable but no longer is. The same goes for the name of the Dambusters dog. The same goes for Fawlty Towers The Germans. The same goes for Del Boy saying "a tenner to the black bloke" or the rantings of Alf Garnett (which we know Warren Mitchell and the writers were using to take the piss out of bigotts anyway!). It is all "of its time" and informs our understanding of particular periods in our history. Surely it's better to leave these words in our popular culture as examples of how far we have come rather than to simply erase them? The same goes is true for the legacy of our slave traders, military leaders and monarchs in centuries gone by. Erasing history is in my view nothing short of fascism. And anyone who thinks fascism is purely the preserve of the right wing of politics needs to read a bit about Stalin or the Khmer Rouge. They liked to erase history too.