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Series Read: The Vorkosigan Saga
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Falling Free
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I think that is the most troubling part to me-I could totally see the administration 'passing the buck' on various issues until a species is simply exterminated.




Thanks Rion. I'd heard of the awards but did not know the basis on which they are given, so googled the it. In case anyone else has an interest, here's a link to the group that gives the award -- http://lfs.org/index.shtml.


However, one thing we are not past, and this saddens me, is that when a famous author is outed for having views that are not politically correct (and I have no idea if this even applies to Bujold), similarly narrow minds to those of yesteryear reject the author without any regard to the quality of his or her work. In science fiction it has happened to Heinlein, van Vogt, Dick, and to some extent Orson Scott Card, among others.
My hope is that one day, just as people have learned to tolerate gay entertainment artists, we will also learn toleration for authors who are not compliant with politically correct Nazis, that we instead judge authors purely on the basis of their product, their writing.
Why is it that people only want to read news that parrots their views, conservatives watching Fox News, liberals watching MSNBC, both chastising CNN for being too far from their slanted world view? How does listening or watching only what we already agree with grow us as persons? Do we really want to read authors that simply affirm our preconceptions, and never ones that might challenge them?
I personally have no burning fondness for the second amendment, but that doesn't stop me from appreciating van Vogt's work. I also don't particularly care for other author's political views. Usually they don't appear in their works, like Card's do not. But even if they did, as Heinlein's love of libertarianism, Dick's distrust of government, Lewis's advocacy of Christianity arguably do, what's so bad about having one's world view challenged? Are our individual world views really so fragile they can't withstand the slightest examination or consideration from an opposing view?


None-the-less, because we are reading (mostly) for entertainment, we have every right to pick and choose among the vast numbers of books on offer those that we think might offer us the most entertainment. As someone with “no burning fondness for the second amendment,” would you really choose to curl up on a lazy weekend with a book that had been praised as a fervid defense of the right to bear arms? There are times when we want entertainment, and there are times when we want intellectual challenge and the two don’t always have to mix. For someone who absolutely loved Ender's Game, and then found themselves profoundly disturbed by the author’s political views, to choose to no longer offer that author their financial support, is that such a crime? For someone reading Heinlein who simply finds his portrayals of women to be so objectionable that they can no longer stand to finish the book, is that not within our rights as readers? How we choose our entertainment reading is not at all equivalent to how we choose our method of being informed about world events. None-the-less I completely applaud your last sentence – here’s to hoping that none of us have world views so fragile that they can’t withstand examination and consideration from opposing views.


Sorry, but no, I don't think I cherry-picked anything; the phrase "politically correct Nazis" jumped up and smacked me over the head. It doesn't particularly offend women, it offends anyone who has ever tried to get someone to realize that their words are deeply offensive, or callous, or ignorant, and are instead told that they have no right to complain. No, instead they are told that their complaints are equivalent to one of the most extreme forms of permanent silencing ever practiced by mankind.

The phrase "not compliant with the establishment" and "not compliant with the Jewish establishment" mean totally different things. Adding the word Jewish in that case would not merely be offensive but would implicitely affirm a hateful and destructive conspiracy theory.
I happen to have a serious problem with how often phrases such as "politically correct Nazis" are used, in no small part because they foster an atmosphere in which talking about such matters is unnecessarily difficult.
Full disclosure: I'm generally sympathetic to people who promote freedom and I have no idea what makes this particular award problematic.

So I googled "Political Correctness Nazi" and saw that Bill Maher appears to have been one of the people propagating this particular usage of the phrase. This is not a surprise. He had a show called politically incorrect. So him taking the stance that there are people who take political correctness too far seems natural. I generally just see Bill Maher as an informed skeptical thinker. Does he have a particular slant. Oh course he does. But there is a point to be made that in any type of belief structure, there is room for abuse. Does political correctness have it's place in our society? Anyone else see the inherent danger in thought control? Bujold addresses the inherent danger with taking this line of thinking too far with her criticism towards Beta's over zealous psychiatric institutionalism.
Attempting to bring this discussion back to Falling Free. I'm very curious why a libertarian group would give this particular title an award. It's sort of funny, because while reading Bujold's other works, it never seemed like she committed to any one political view point. We have the anarchists in Jackson hole, The institutional Liberal Society based on Beta, Military Monarchies on Barrayar and Cetaganda, communalism in quaddie inhabited space, theocracy in Athos, and now libertarian in Falling Free?
In retrospect, Bujold's characters strengths have always been their unwavering individuality and lack of allegiance to any type of authority unless it is in their explicit interest. So yes, if she is a libertarian, it makes sense.


That said, I can certainly admit that many folks use the phrase casually, with no intent to provoke the harm that I see in it. However, once it is made clear how deeply insulting it can feel to hear it, should not all of us who care about free and open discussion cease using it?
I feel sorry that an excellent author has been dragged into this discussion through no actions of her own. My first reaction to the news was to wonder how she herself felt about it. On reflection I would imagine she is honored by the award, as any author would be to know that her work is appreciated, and finds the political viewpoints of the organization itself rather unimportant. I would think most of us are quite willing to accept compliments on our hard work from anyone on the political spectrum, without seeing any need to let their appreciation be colored by their politics.


(view spoiler)

Having an anti-semitic background and having met some anti-semites with a different background, I don't think it's uncommon. Still, I very much doubt most of the authors who receive that prize are anti-semitic.
Not only do "we" tolerate authors who're into stuff most people (not some shadowy politically correct media elite!) would find objectionable such as child molestation and Holocaust denial, we're supposed to abide by some kind of code of silence in the name of preventing bad feelings or selling products. So I don't think one should assume everyone knows who they're associating with.

The main difference I see between the Nazi and the politically correct is one of capability, not intent. Both intend to do their utmost to harm those they disagree with politically and socially. If you have problems with this comparison, I see that as a positive sign. I think you should, and I challenge you to differentiate your intolerance and desire to harm from a Nazi's in a more meaningful way than I have yet read. Simply saying your desire to harm is of a different degree of magnitude seems insufficient. Why seek to harm others at all on this basis?
My main point was to state a hope that some day we could and would evaluate a work on its own merit rather than extrinsic, irrelevant characteristics of its author, such as whether an author does or does not sympathize with libertarian political views. What does it really matter? Does the work itself present libertarian views and resonate? If so, maybe that is a sign it is time to examine again libertarianism, or at least some aspects of it.
Even on those infrequent occasions when an author's viewpoint enters into a work, for example, A. E. van Vogt's advocacy of the second amendment is all over The Weapon Shops of Isher, I can still appreciate van Vogt and this work despite not agreeing with him really on this political point. In fact, I very much do. I also appreciate Margaret Atwood's The Handmaid's Tale in much the same way, however much I may doubt the premise of what I believe is her political statement in writing it. Namely, I don't believe all (or a majority of) men are as interested in controlling women's reproduction as Atwood assumes.
My point is that yes, you can say you won't read Card no matter how worthily he writes because you disagree with his politics even though they don't factor into his work because you wish to harm him by withholding your patronage. But I will think you're making a poor choice in denying yourself entertaining reading for such a silly reason, and I will even go so far as to say I think you're doing something immoral in desiring to harm a person for holding a political or social view simply because it differs from and thus challenges yours.
You can complain about my word choices and try to play semantic games to try to silence me by falsely saying I am minimizing the Holocaust (even though I don't) all you want. It doesn't alter the validity of my point. I also think this discussion is a bit of a digression and have doubts regarding its value. I will therefore let my point stand or fall without further input from me. After all, my post was really more a statement of hope that toleration could one day make a sad situation other than it currently is. I see that day is clearly not yet arrived.

this one is set approximately 200 years before Miles' birth. which makes me a bit nervous. Falling Free also won the Nebula for Best Novel in 1988. which makes me less nervous!