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Dr Muriel Newman
Contact Muriel:
Email: muriel@nzcpr.com
Phone 09 4343 836
or 021 800 111
PO Box 984, Whangarei
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20
July 2008
Moral
Neutrality
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Earlier this month Britain’s culture of “moral
neutrality” came under attack. In a speech in Glasgow,
Conservative Party Leader Rt Hon David Cameron said that the
obese, drug addicts and the poor have no-one to blame but
themselves.
He defined moral
neutrality as the refusal to make judgements about what is
good or bad, right or wrong: “We as a society have been far
too sensitive. In order to avoid injury to people's feelings,
in order to avoid appearing judgemental, we have failed to say
what needs to be said. Instead we prefer moral neutrality, a refusal to make judgments about what is good and
bad behaviour, right and wrong behaviour. Bad. Good. Right.
Wrong. These are words that our political system and our
public sector scarcely dare use any more. Refusing to use
these words - right and wrong - means a denial of personal
responsibility and the concept of a moral choice”.
He went on to say, "We talk about people being "at
risk of obesity" instead of talking about people who eat
too much and take too little exercise. We talk about people
being at risk of poverty, or social exclusion: it's as if
these things - obesity, alcohol abuse, drug addiction - are
purely external events like a plague or bad weather. Of course, circumstances - where you are born, your
neighbourhood, your school, and the choices your parents make
- have a huge impact. But social problems are often the
consequence of the choices that people make”.
David Cameron believes that there is now a very real danger of
Britain becoming “a de-moralised society, where nobody will
tell the truth anymore about what is good and bad, right and
wrong. That is why children are growing up without boundaries,
thinking they can do as they please, and why no adult will
intervene to stop them - including, often, their parents. If
we are going to get any where near solving some of these
problems, that has to stop”. To read click
>>>
The parallels with New Zealand are surely plain for all
to see. We have now become so non-judgemental that speaking
the truth and calling a spade a spade, all too often leads to
complaints to the Human Rights Commission - not to mention the
Press Council, the Advertising Standards Authority, and all of
the other organisations that sit in judgement on such matters.
The danger is that human rights laws, which were
originally introduced under the guise of protecting
individuals from discrimination, impinge on the most basic
human right of all - individual freedom. Under the Labour
government, human rights arguments have been used to impose
the political agendas of favoured minority groups onto the
public at large to the extent that, for example, Maori
cultural beliefs now dominate the New Zealand education
curriculum1 and sexual orientation has ceased to be a private matter but - with a
question on sexual orientation being planned for the census -
one in which the state has a particular interest.2
According to the prevailing culture of political
correctness that has developed during Labour’s regime,
nothing is anyone’s fault anymore. If you are too lazy to
work, the government will pay you to stay at home; if you are
one of the 5,279 drunks and druggies drawing a benefit, the
government will contribute $1 million a week to keep your
habit going
3; if you are a teenage girl with little education and
no career prospects, the government will pay you to bear and
raise the next generation of children; if you are grossly
obese, the government will pay $25,000 to have your
stomach-stapled.4
Yet individuals make myriads of choices almost every
moment of every day, and learning to live with the
consequences of those choices is an important part of life.
That’s how society operates. It is surely not the role of
the state to interfere in the free choices that people make
(so long as they do not harm others), nor to
shield people from the consequences. To do so creates a
‘victim’ culture whereby the state rewards those who make
poor choices with ever-more generous taxpayer-funded
compassion.
As John Stuart Mill said so eloquently
-
- in On
Liberty in 1859, “… the only purpose for which
power can be rightfully exercised over any member of a
civilized community, against his will, is to prevent harm to
others. His own good, either physical or moral, is not a
sufficient warrant. He cannot rightfully be compelled to do or
forbear because it will be better for him to do so, because it
will make him happier, because, in the opinions of others, to
do so would be wise or even right. These are good reasons for
remonstrating with him, or reasoning with him, or persuading
him, or entreating him, but not for compelling him or visiting
him with any evil in case he do otherwise… In the part which
merely concerns himself, his independence is, of right,
absolute.”
Society’s primary role of moral teacher –
instilling in children what is good or bad, right or wrong -
has traditionally been the family. Children
who are given strong boundaries of what is and is not
appropriate behaviour, and are imbued with a clear
understanding of the consequences of the moral choices they
make, generally become responsible members of society. But when
parents fail to properly bring up their children, the results
can be disastrous.
Just last month the Christchurch Press told the
story of a recovering drug addict: John’s drug use started at home with parents who smoked cannabis and took pills.
By age nine he was drinking alcohol, and by age 11
smoking cannabis. At age 14 he started using intravenous
opiate. It was all downhill after that.
John admitted that he had committed over 500
burglaries, robberies and dishonesty offences to fund his drug
habit:
“I committed a lot of crime. I committed crime I've never
been caught for over the years. I'd go out and commit
burglaries four, five or six burglaries a night. Every night.
Every day. Even while I was at work I'd go away at lunch time
and commit a crime to support my habit that night. I was using
anywhere up to $2000 daily…”
John has five children, all girls; two of the older
ones, aged 17 and 18, use drugs: "I
definitely don't want them to have the same life as I've had.
I had a choice to say no. It's not a sickness it's a personal
choice. For these younger generations I pray for them not to
get into it." 5
When the Labour Government introduced the
anti-smacking law last year, the vast majority of New
Zealanders opposed it. Not because they condoned violence
against children – no-one condones that. They opposed the
smacking ban because they understand that the dynamics of
family life are delicately balanced. Anyone who has raised
children knows that there is a fine line between good outcomes
and the abyss. And the last thing that a family needs is the
heavy hand of the state interfering in private matters.
By banning smacking, the state has now intruded
deep into the heart of family life. A predictable
wedge has been driven between parents and children. It has
created a situation where many parents, now fearful of
prosecution, are afraid to set proper boundaries for their
children in case the children object and complain to the
authorities. This is now inhibiting the way that parents raise
their children to the point where, when the going gets tough,
many parents are now throwing in the towel and passing the
problem of their unruly children onto the wider community.
In his speech, David Cameron acknowledges that the
social breakdown seen in Britain is caused by family
breakdown, welfare dependency, debt, drugs, poverty, poor
policing, inadequate housing, and failing schools, and he
warns that society, “is in danger of losing its sense of
personal responsibility, social responsibility, common decency
and even public morality”.
The fractures that we now see in New Zealand families
and communities have deepened over the last nine years. The
bonds that link our society have become weaker. The people
most at risk are the vulnerable – those without an
education, without a good job, without strong family supports.
These are the very people that a Labour Government should have
been protecting through sweeping social reforms to ensure that
every child succeeds at school, that no-one is left to
languish on welfare, and that family life is encouraged and
supported. By failing to make the necessary reforms, Labour
has entrenched disadvantage for far too many New Zealanders.
David Cameron claims that in Britain there has
been a relentless erosion of responsibility, social virtue,
self-discipline, and a respect for others. He believes that the only way to turn it around is to encourage
personal responsibility as a cornerstone social value.
Encouraging personal responsibility as a
cornerstone social value – as well as throwing off the
stultifying political correctness that has weighed this
country down for far too long – would undoubtedly be a step
in the right direction for New Zealand too.
This
week’s poll
asks: Do you think that a culture of “moral
neutrality” has developed in New Zealand. ?
Go
to Poll >>>
FOOTNOTES
1
Muriel Newman, Selling
Our kids Short
2
Dominion, As
you like it: A sexy census
3
Waikato Times, The
benefit and the doubt
4
Dominion Post, Hundreds
to get taxpayer-funded stomach stapling
5 Christchurch Press, P
makes addicts human crime waves
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