Nicholas
Reid reflects in essay form on general matters and ideas related to
literature, history, popular culture and the arts, or just life in general. You are free to agree
or disagree with him.
“BOTH / AND” NOT “EITHER / OR”
There’s
a type of argument that I have become tired of hearing, especially on radio but
also in certain quarters of the internet.
It’s
the type of argument that assumes things are mutually exclusive when they are
in fact complementary.
I
give two examples.
I
tune in to a speech on prisons and incarceration. The speaker is earnestly
arguing that we should not have prisons as places of punishment, but that we
should have better education to prevent criminality and better rehabilitation
schemes.
Of
course I applaud fully education and rehabilitation schemes and I would oppose
no plans to extend them. But this is the fatal either/or dichotomy. While we
are rehabilitating young criminals, or educating young people who are in danger
of becoming criminals, what do we do about the hardened criminals and multiple
offenders who are already at odds with society? Unpleasant though it may be to
contemplate, there are people who are beyond rehabilitation. The reality is
that there will still have to be some punitive incarceration (unless you want
to bring back capital punishment). It is a case of both/and, not either/or.
Second
example.
In
the wake of the Harvey Weinstein affair, I read on line a polemic about how we should
deal with the sexual predation of women. The woman who writes it says that what
is needed is a massive re-education of men and boys. En route to making her
case, she ridicules programmes that aim to make girls and women safe by teaching
them self-defence, caution in their behaviour and care around the men they
associate with. This, she says, is laying the onus on women while restricting
their freedom. Since males are the offenders, males alone should have their
behaviour modified and limited.
And
again I hear that dire either/or thinking rather than both/and.
Sure,
educate men and boys to behave with respect around women (you might fruitfully
begin by removing all the pornography available on line). But if you are a
young woman, is it not prudent to know how to look after yourself, be aware of
(sexual) dangers you might face and know how to avoid them? Yep – not dressing
like a hooker and not getting drunk around men you hardly know might be good
advice too. Or is such common sense an example of oppressive patriarchal
stereotyping?
I
could extend my both/and argument by referring to the matter of government
welfare and private charity, but I have already made my case that these are
complementary, in my post The Guv’mentOrda.
Beware
the unbalanced argument that needlessly speaks in terms of mutual exclusivity.
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