If You Meet a Censor, Ask Them This One Question

Via @glynmoody – an extract:

Via Twitter, Andrew Grossman brought to my attention this terrifically interesting interview with a Kuwaiti censor that appeared in the Kuwait Times (“Read No Evil – Senior Censor Defends Work, Denies Playing Big Brother“). In the interview, the censor, Dalal Al-Mutairi, head of the Foreign Books Department at the Ministry of Information, speaks in a remarkably candid fashion and casual tone about the job she and other Kuwaiti censors do every day. My favorite line comes when Dalal tells the reporter how working as a censor is so very interesting and enlightening: “I like this work. It gives us experience, information and we always learn something new.”  I bet!  But what a shame that others in her society will be denied the same pleasure of always learning something new. Of course, like all censors, Dalal probably believes that she is doing a great public service by screening all culture and content to make sure the masses do not consume offensive, objectionable, or harmful content.

But here’s where the reporter missed a golden opportunity to ask Dalal the one question that you must always ask a censor if you get to meet one: If the content you are censoring is so destructive to the human soul or psyche, how then is it that you are such a well-adjusted person?  And Dalal certainly seems like a well-adjusted person. Although the reporter doesn’t tell us much about her personal life or circumstances, Dalal volunteers this much about herself and her fellow censors: “Many people consider the censor to be a fanatic and uneducated person, but this isn’t true. We are the most literate people as we have read much, almost every day. We receive a lot of information from different fields. We read books for children, religious books, political, philosophical, scientific ones and many others.” Well of course you do… because you are lucky enough to have access to all that content! But you are also taking steps to make sure the rest of your society doesn’t consume it on the theory that it would harm them or harm public morals in some fashion.  But, again, how is it that you have not been utterly corrupted by it all, Ms. Dalal? After all, you get to consume all that impure, sacrilegious, and salacious stuff! Shouldn’t you be some kind of monster by now?

How can this inconsistency be explained? The answer to this riddle can be found in the “Third-Person Effect Hypothesis.” First formulated by psychologist W. Phillips Davison in 1983, “this hypothesis predicts that people will tend to overestimate the influence that mass communications have on the attitudes and behavior of others. More specifically, individuals who are members of an audience that is exposed to a persuasive communication (whether or not this communication is intended to be persuasive) will expect the communication to have a greater effect on others than on themselves.” While originally formulated as an explanation for how people convinced themselves “media bias” existed where none was present, the third-person-effect hypothesis has provided an explanation for other phenomenon and forms of regulation, especially content censorship. Indeed, one of the most intriguing aspects about censorship efforts historically is that it is apparent that many censorship advocates desire regulation to protect others, not themselves, from what they perceive to be persuasive or harmful content. That is, many people imagine themselves immune from the supposedly ill effects of “objectionable” material, or even just persuasive communications or viewpoints they do not agree with, but they claim it will have a corrupting influence on others.

via If You Meet a Censor, Ask Them This One Question.

Comments

3 responses to “If You Meet a Censor, Ask Them This One Question”

  1. Simon

    I agree with the _position_ of the author, but isn’t this a rather thin argument?

    In the UK, you might easily (google it) ask a specialist law enforcement official involved in the processing of images of child pornography or extreme violence how they manage to be such well adjusted people.

    You might typically get an answer along the lines of “It does affect me, actually, but my work provides me with high quality professional support and counselling, there’s a strict psychological vetting process to ensure only people with the right make-up are asked to do this sort of work, and postings are typically only for a short period of time.”

    I’m not for one moment suggesting that child pornography is equivalent to the sort of material routinely censored in Kuwait (harm-from-production vs harm-from-consumption and so on), but to suggest that a simple who-guards-the-guards question somehow undermines the principal of censorship is a bit junior debating society, isn’t it?

    1. Fair point, agreed; that said some of the stuff that get censored “for the good of the {people, king, government, public morality}” in (say) Thailand or Singapore would not raise the eyebrow of any Met officer that I know – especially some of the more lefty ones.

      Funny how it’s exactly the same sentiment as deployed in the UK/EU, though.

  2. Dave Walker

    Hear, hear – and a pity the reporter missed the opportunity.

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