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Fight for the right to be ‘wrong’

George Orwell famously wrote in the preface to Animal Farm, ‘if liberty means anything at all it means the right to tell people what they do not want to hear.’ What is not well known is that this preface was never published. It was suppressed by the publishers in 1945 as part of the extraordinary government-driven toadying to the Soviet Union when they were our wartime allies.

Once again, in 2023, we live in interesting times…

Freedom of speech has all but disappeared in a tide of righteous indignation and cancellation. But being nice to Russia is not the reason this time. Putin’s invasion of Ukraine and the brutal war it has engendered ensures that the exact opposite is true. Let’s attempt a short list of today’s shibboleths:

June’s theme asks a key question about fighting

Have we lost the guts to stand our ground? And if you, I or anyone else does stand their ground, and dare to challenge any aspect of the new orthodoxy, is it worth the opprobrium that may follow?

As the title of my piece indicates, I believe that being wrong is as much an inalienable privilege, as being right. After all, it is hard to know whether what is held to be ‘right’ in the summer of 2023 is still going to be acceptable / the best course of action / the fairest solution etc in five or ten years time. Equally any current ‘truth’ may turn out to be incorrect. There’s always a short-term view, a medium-term view, and one for the long term. There are very few absolutes. Here are three scenarios:

And if most people can accept that absolutes are unlikely to be the best way to look at things, why can’t we fight for the right to suggest intelligent compromises?

Featured image: Markus Spiske / Pexels

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