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What are you not allowed to say?

By Finlo Rohrer BBC News Magazine

Howard Flight and Lord Young have joined a long list of people who have

realised that there are some things you can't say. So when and why is an

utterance likely to get you in trouble?

We have come to learn as either public or private individuals that there are

certain situations that mean careful self-censorship is required.

For all the talk of freedom of speech in liberal democracies, poorly chosen

comments can end careers, lead to arrest, or just cause offence and

embarrassment. So what are the unwritten rules and regulations of speech?

EUGENICS

Howard Flight got into trouble for talking about "breeding".

"We're going to have a system where the middle classes are discouraged from

breeding because it's jolly expensive, but for those on benefit there is every

incentive. Well that's not very sensible," he said in a newspaper interview.

The balance of our population, our human stock is threatened.

A recent article in Poverty, published by the Child Poverty Action Group,

showed that a high and rising proportion of children are being born to mothers

least fitted to bring children into the world and bring them up.

They are born to mothers who were first pregnant in adolescence in social

classes 4 and 5.

Many of these girls are unmarried, many are deserted or divorced or soon will

be.

Some are of low intelligence, most of low educational attainment. They are

unlikely to be able to give children the stable emotional background, the

consistent combination of love and firmness which are more important than

riches.

They are producing problem children, the future unmarried mothers, delinquents,

denizens of our borstals, sub-normal educational establishments, prisons,

hostels for drifters.

Yet these mothers, the under 20s in many cases, single parents, from classes 4

and 5, are now producing a third of all births.

A high proportion of these births are a tragedy for the mother, the child and

for us.

You probably wouldn't have to stop too many people in the street before you

found somebody who agreed with that sentiment, but critics have said Mr

Flight's remarks smack of "eugenics".

And eugenics is a bad thing in the popular mind, at least in part due to its

association with the Nazis. But there's more to the story than that.

If you had given a speech about eugenics in the latter part of the 19th

Century, it would have been a fairly unremarkable position to take. Eugenics'

pioneer, Francis Galton, was a respected scientist and his theories continued

to have currency well into the 20th Century.

The University of London - as its own history notes - had a department with

"eugenics" in the title until 1963.

Galton was one of the first people to suggest the heritability of human traits

and he openly advocated encouraging talented people to have more children. But

once the Nazis took eugenics to a horrible conclusion by exterminating

"undesirables", the subject and the word itself was soon highly negative.

Mr Flight's critics compared his remarks to a speech given by Keith Joseph in

Edgbaston in 1974. The speech dealt with Mr Joseph's analysis of the problem of

large numbers of children being born to young mothers who were incapable of

properly raising them.

But to some his language - "our human stock is threatened" and "social classes

4 and 5" - was a nod to eugenics and therefore enough to stop any aspirations

to be Conservative party leader.

Howard Flight Howard Flight didn't technically advocate eugenics

In Mr Flight's case it's not easy to even argue he was advocating eugenics. A

eugenics supporter might advocate encouraging "superior" people to have more

children and "inferior" people fewer.

What Mr Flight actually said was it was wrong to effectively encourage one set

of people over another. The critics were instead seizing on an implication. But

the lesson is that a term - or even an implication of that term - can become

unsayable within a couple of generations.

Conclusion: Eugenics has gone from a serious scientific discipline to a basic

pejorative term. Avoid.

WHO YOU ARE

If you are the kind of public person whose pronouncements are parsed to an

almost pedantic degree, you must exercise extra caution.

Faith and reason speech

Pope Benedict XVI Regensburg, 2006

[Byzantine Emperor Manuel II] addresses his interlocutor with a startling

brusqueness, a brusqueness that we find unacceptable, on the central question

about the relationship between religion and violence in general, saying:

'Show me just what Mohammed brought that was new, and there you will find

things only evil and inhuman, such as his command to spread by the sword the

faith he preached.'

The current Pope found that out in 2006 when, during a lecture tackling the

relationship between faith and reason, he quoted a reasonably obscure

historical dialogue between the Byzantine Emperor Manuel II and a Persian.

In that dialogue, the emperor said: "Show me just what Mohammed brought that

was new, and there you will find things only evil and inhuman, such as his

command to spread by the sword the faith he preached."

Nobody reading the whole speech by the Pope could have thought he was endorsing

this quote. But the reporting of the speech generated a wave of protests in

Muslim countries, and was even linked to the death of a nun in Somalia.

If he had been an ordinary person, or even a politician without an

international profile, his words would have been unlikely to have spread so far

so fast, and those encountering it would have been more likely to have read the

context before passing judgement.

Conclusion: Very often what you can't say is about who you are.

WHERE YOU ARE - DON'T SAY 'BOMB'

Of course, that's not to say ordinary people can't get themselves into a whole

lot of trouble by saying something wrong.

Paul Chambers found out via a criminal conviction and a 1,000 fine that it's

unwise to even jest about threats to airports.

His case represents the zenith of stringent post-9/11 air security law

enforcement. In January, Mr Chambers wrote on Twitter: "Crap! Robin Hood

airport is closed. You've got a week and a bit to get your [expletive] together

otherwise I'm blowing the airport sky high."

He was subsequently convicted of having sent a "menacing" message and fined.

Critics have claimed it is a miscarriage of justice and he has become a bit of

a cause celebre, with Twitter notables like Stephen Fry backing him and

numerous people tweeting the same message with the hashtag "iamspartacus".

But he's not the first person to suffer as a result of an air security related

joke.

The cases of a British student arrested in the US for joking about a bomb and

an Iraqi sea captain who said he had two bombs in his briefcase show how the

authorities are rarely amused.

The ordinary person knows that terrorists are not usually inclined to winkingly

announce the presence of a bomb in their luggage as a daring double-bluff to

airline staff.

But the airport security operative is obliged to be stony-faced and

literal-minded, because while the chances are negligible that the joker

actually is a terrorist, the stakes are rather high.

Conclusion: You can't say bomb in an airport. Not even if you immediately say

you were joking. Probably best not to even say it about an airport.

ROLE MODELS

Being a role model, who's expected to be an inspiration to ordinary people,

rather constrains what you can say.

Glenn Hoddle Ruminations on karma and disabled people might be kept to oneself

Footballer Glenn Hoddle found this out the hard way. His ruminations on karma

in a Times interview in 1999 were enough to get him the sack as England

manager.

"You and I have been physically given two hands and two legs and a half-decent

brain. Some people have not been born like that for a reason."

The point was made at the time that the England manager is inevitably going to

have contact with disabled footballers.

And there were some who wondered whether he might not have been a bit more

fireproof if he hadn't just had three poor qualifying games - a defeat against

Sweden, a home draw against Bulgaria and a laboured win against minnows

Luxembourg.

Tiger Woods also got in trouble - although not nearly the same level of trouble

- when in an offhand moment he suggested that he had played like a "spaz"

during a difficult tournament.

Conclusion: Watch what you say if you are a sporting role model, and be

particularly sensitive in your comments about disabled people.

BAD JOKES

Labour MP Tony Banks got into hot water when he called William Hague a "foetus"

in 1997 and suggested Conservative politicians might want to rethink their

views on abortion.

And the Labour deputy leader Harriet Harman had to apologise last month for

calling Lib Dem Danny Alexander a "ginger rodent".

Tony Banks Tony Banks pushed the envelope when it came to public speaking

Both remarks took place at party conferences, where it is understandable that

comments will be widely publicised.

Former Conservative MP Ann Winterton got herself sacked as a shadow minister

after making a joke about Pakistanis, at a rugby club dinner in 2001. She was

then effectively suspended from the Conservative party in 2004 after making a

joke about the 23 Chinese cockle pickers drowned in Morecambe Bay at a dinner.

In both cases, comments filtered out and were widely publicised because they

were made by an MP - and an MP with a track record at that.

But comedians also suffer after going too far. Billy Connolly was lambasted

after joking about the kidnapping in Iraq of the Briton Ken Bigley by Islamist

militants. "Don't you just wish they would just get on with it?" he said.

Even in a small comedy club gig that line would have had an audience wincing,

but at a theatre venue it was inevitable the "gag" would leak out and draw

negative coverage.

And comedians have failed to get away with a host of off-colour jokes. Jimmy

Carr got into trouble for joking about gypsies on BBC radio. Alan Carr had to

apologise for a quip about child kidnapper Karen Matthews.

Conclusion: Even ordinary people might do well to avoid potentially offensive

jokes.

GEOGRAPHICAL SENSITIVITY

You would also do well to watch which country you're in.

Some might find it ironic that the Islamic Solidarity Games should be cancelled

because of a battle over the correct appellation for a body of water. And yet

that is exactly what happened in January.

Iran insists on calling it the Persian Gulf, but there are some countries on

the opposite side of the water that prefer Arabian Gulf. Trouble soon flared

over logos and medals.

The Iranian authorities have made clear that any airline flying into the

country must use Persian Gulf on its in-flight monitors. Any visitor would be

wise to bear this in mind.

A similarly bit of nominal geographical controversy can be found in the

Balkans. Use the term Macedonia in Greece, particularly in north-western

Greece, to refer to the Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia and you may be

the recipient of more than a raised eyebrow. They might even call it "Skopia",

something that would no doubt irk Macedonians.

Conclusion: Keep up to speed with territorial issues that might make you want

to curb your speech.

PRIVATE MADE PUBLIC

Many of the most career-mauling comments ever made have been decidedly private

ones that somehow squirmed out into the public arena.

When Labour government spin doctor Jo Moore notoriously described 9/11 as a

"good day to bury bad news" she would have been horrified at the thought the

comment would be made public.

So too Gordon Brown must have felt his heart sink when he realised his

description of a voter he had encountered as a "bigot" had been broadcast on

television via an unnoticed radio microphone.

John Major's famous off-camera "bastards" remark fits neatly in the same

category.

They all offer a stark lesson on watching what you say.

What is unsayable? Send us your rules using the comments form below. A

selection will be published

I think you're reading the issue over Flight's comments in the wrong way. I

don't think it's a connection to eugenics, but the use of the term "breeding",

which is more usual used in relation to animal husbandry than to humans. It was

even more offensive, in that it seemed to imply that the results of "lower

class breeding" are less desirable somehow than those of "higher classes".

That's what got to me about it, not directly any argument for/against eugenics

held to be implicit in what he said.

Jim Farrell, Liverpool

I don't believe in anything being 'unsayable' as long as it is factual. The

fact that some members of the public attach their own prejudices to things

other people say shouldn't stop people from speaking the truth. If anyone

remotely mentions "overpopulation" these days some very strange people make a

great leap to "eugenics", even if the original comment has clearly been against

eugenics. Too often nowadays people do not hear what has actually been said but

rather what they assume the person is going to say. Either that or they attach

emotions to a noun so that it takes on a whole host of other meanings. If

people actually engaged their brain and listened then there wouldn't be a

problem. The speakers often aren't the problem, the listeners are.

Lorna Hamilton, Glasgow

Context is always important (something the press often like to manipulate as

many a public figure has learned), and I think intent is too. I doubt Paul

Chambers actually planned to blow up and airport, or to cause distress to

airport workers that there might be a threat (how many workers from said

airport had seen his comment prior to the authorities/press getting hold of

it?). I often like to tease people who I know to be particularly wary of being

non-PC - for a long time I had my mother convinced that it was racist to say

the word black in any context. Similarly, all this molly-coddling of people

when it comes to describing their job - why can't bin men just be bin men and

dinner ladies just that?! Ricky Gervais' 'Politics' stand up show goes a long

way to highlighting some of the idiocies associated with political correctness

and the dangers of limiting free speech.

Duncan Paine, Cheshire

Never, ever, comment upon the relative intelligence of different ethnic groups.

A few years ago, James Watson, one of the world's most famous scientists, was

crucified in the American press.

Daniel Flehmen, San Francisco, US

Interestingly, I suspect many would argue that Howard Flight, and Keith Joseph

for that matter, were only saying what many people think but won't say. Which

neatly shows that saying 'it's what most people think, even if they won't say

it' is not a very good thing to say. Rather, it just digs you a deeper hole.

Chris, London

The main thing that is unsayable in public life now, is the truth - whenever it

could be considered to be even marginally unpalatable to even a very small

number of people who can be identified as a "group" (whether by religion, race,

sex or sexual proclivity, class, wealth or any other percieved commonality). As

a result the public is fed a highly sanitised version of the views of important

people, designed to be so anoydyne as to be unable to attract the attention of

our feral and deliberately destructive media.

Simon, Salisbury

You judge yourself on your motivation, good friends judge you on your

motivation too. People who know you less judge you on your action or their

perception of your action. We live in a world where 'benefit of the doubt' is

replaced with simply, doubt. I hope that one day the pendulum will swing back,

but I feel there is too much money to be made on 'taking offence' (NB. not

giving it).

Nick, East Grinstead