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Charlton Heston
Speech For 50 years, the Harvard Law
School Forum has been sponsoring speeches by luminaries
ranging from Fidel Castro to Gerald Ford to Dr. Ruth.
Sometimes the speeches have generated a bit of media
coverage, sometimes not, But one given last February by
Charlton Heston has taken on a life of its own. Heston,
the actor and conservative activist, delivered a
stem-winder to about 200 listeners about "a cultural
war that's about to hijack your birthright to think and
say what resides in your heart."
"He knew he was coming to a liberal environment, and
clearly a group of his listeners was conservative and
another was more liberal," said David
Christopherson, president of the forum. "About half
respectfully challenged him during the questions. It
generated a lot of debate around the campus. But what
happened [next] caught us off-guard." What happened
was Rush Limbaugh's radio talk show. On March 15,
Limbaugh read the entire speech on the air, only to find
himself bombarded with thousands of requests for a copy
of it. The same thing happened at Harvard Law. "We
couldn't keep up with all the requests," said Mike
Chmura at Harvard. "It really didn't have legs and
might have been forgotten if Mr. Limbaugh hadn't decided
to deliver
it."
"Winning the Cultural War" Charlton Heston's
Speech to the Harvard Law School Forum, Feb 16, 1999 I
remember my son when he was five, explaining to his
kindergarten class what his father did for a living.
"My Daddy," he said, "pretends to be
people." There have been quite a few of them.
Prophets from the Old and New Testaments, a couple of
Christian saints, generals of various nationalities and
different centuries, several kings, three American
presidents, a French cardinal and two geniuses, including
Michelangelo. If you want the ceiling repainted I'll do
my best. There always seem to be a lot of different
fellows up here. I'm never sure which one of them gets to
talk. Right now, I guess I'm the guy. As I pondered our
visit tonight it struck me: If my Creator gave me the
gift to connect you with the hearts and minds of those
great men, then I want to use that same gift now to
reconnect you with your own sense of liberty of your own
freedom of thought ..., your own compass for what is
right. Dedicating the memorial at Gettysburg, Abraham
Lincoln said of America, "We are now engaged in a
great Civil War, testing whether this nation or any
nation so conceived and so dedicated can long
endure." Those words are true again. I believe that
we are again engaged in a great civil war, a cultural war
that's about to hijack your birthright to think and say
what resides in your heart. I fear you no longer trust
the pulsing lifeblood of liberty inside you ..., the
stuff that made this country rise from wilderness into
the miracle that it is.
Let me back up. About a year ago I became president of
the National Rifle Association, which protects the right
to keep and bear arms. I ran for office, I was elected,
and now I serve ... I serve as a moving target for
the media who've called me everything from
ridiculous" and "duped" to a
"brain-injured, senile, crazy old man." I know
I'm pretty old ..., but I sure, Lord, ain't senile."
As I have stood in the crosshairs of those who target
Second Amendment freedoms, I've realized that firearms
are not the only issue. No, it's much, much bigger than
that. I've come to understand that a cultural war is
raging across our land, in which, with Orwellian fervor,
certain acceptable thoughts and speech are mandated. For
example, I marched for civil rights with Dr. King in 1963
- long before Hollywood found it fashionable, But when I
told an audience last year that white pride is just as
valid as black pride or red pride or anyone else's pride,
they called me a racist. I've worked with brilliantly
talented homosexuals all my life. But when I told an
audience that gay rights should extend no further than
your rights or my rights, I was called a homophobe. I
served in World War II against the Axis powers. But
during a speech, when I drew an analogy between singling
out innocent Jews and singling out innocent gun owners, I
was called an anti-Semite. Everyone I know knows I would
never raise a closed fist against my country. But when I
asked an audience to oppose this cultural persecution, I
was compared to Timothy McVeigh. From Time magazine to
friends and colleagues, they're essentially saying,
"Chuck, how dare you speak your mind. You are using
language not authorized for public.consumption!" But
I am not afraid. If Americans believed in political
correctness, we'd still be King George's boys - subjects
bound to the British crown. In his book, "The End of
Sanity," Martin Gross writes that "blatantly
irrational behavior is rapidly being established as the
norm in almost every area of human endeavor. There seem
to be new customs, new rules, new anti-intellectual
theories regularly foisted on us from every direction.
Underneath, the nation is roiling. Americans know
something without a name is undermining the nation,
turning the mind mushy when it comes to separating truth
from falsehood and right from wrong. And they don't like
it." Let me read a few examples. At Antioch college
in Ohio, young men seeking intimacy with a coed must get
verbal permission at each step of the process from
kissing to petting to final copulation ... all clearly
spelled out in a printed college directive. In New
Jersey, despite the death of several patients nationwide
who had been infected by dentists who had concealed their
AIDs --- the state commissioner announced that health
providers who are HIV-positive need not ...., need not
....! tell their patients that they are infected. At
William and Mary, students tried to change the name of
the school team, "The Tribe", because it was
supposedly insulting to local Indians, only to learn that
authentic Virginiachiefs truly like the name. In San
Francisco, city fathers passed an ordinance protecting
the rights of transvestites to cross-dress on the job and
for transsexuals to have separate toilet facilities while
undergoing sex change surgery. In New York City, kids who
don't speak a word of Spanish have been placed in
bilingual classes to learn their three R's in Spanish
solely because their last names sound Hispanic. At the
University of Pennsylvania, in a state where thousands
died at Gettysburg opposing slavery, the president of
that college officially set up segregated dormitory space
for black students. Yeah, I know ...that's out of bounds
now. Dr. King said, "Negroes." Jimmy Baldwin
and most of us on the March said "black." But
it's a no-no now. For me, hyphenated identities are
awkward ..., particularly "Native-American."
I'm a Native American, for God's sake. I also happen to
be a blood-initiated brother of the Miniconjou Sioux. On
my wife's side, my grandson is a thirteenth generation
native American ..., with a capital letter on
"American." Finally, just last month.... David
Howard, head of the Washington, DC Office of Public
Advocate, used the word "niggardly" while
talking to colleagues about budgetary matters. Of course,
"niggardly" means stingy or scanty. But within
days Howard was forced to publicly apologize and resign.
As columnist Tony Snow wrote: "David Howard got
fired because some people in public employ were morons
who (a) didn't know the meaning of niggardly, (b) didn't
know how to use a dictionary to discover the meaning, and
(c) actually demanded that he apologize for their
ignorance." What does all of this mean? It means
that telling us what to think has evolved into telling us
what to say, so telling us what to do can't be far
behind. Before you claim to be a champion of free
thought, tell me:
Why did political correctness originate on America's
campuses? And why do you continue to tolerate it? Why do
you, who're supposed to debate ideas, surrender to their
suppression? Let's be honest. Who here thinks your
professors can say what they really believe? It scares me
to death, and should scare you too, that the superstition
of political correctness rules the halls of reason. You
are the best and the brightest. You, here in the fertile
cradle of American academia, here in the castle of
learning on the Charles River, you are the cream, But I
submit that you, and your counterparts across the land,
are he most socially conformed and politically silenced
generation since Concord Bridge. And as long as you
validate that ... and abide it..., you are, by your
grandfathers' standards, cowards. Here's another example.
Right now at more than one major university, Second
Amendment scholars and researchers are being told to shut
up about their findings or they'll lose their jobs. Why?
Because their research findings would undermine big-city
mayor's pending lawsuits that seek to extort hundreds of
millions of dollars from firearm manufacturers. I don't
care what you think about guns. But if you are not
shocked at that, I am shocked at you. Who will guard the
raw material of unfettered ideas, if not you? Who will
defend the core value of academia, if you supposed
soldiers of free thought and expression lay down your
arms and plead, "Don't shoot me." If you talk
about race, it does not make you a racist. If you see
distinctions between the genders, it does not make you a
sexist. If you think critically about a denomination, it
does not make you anti-religion.
If you accept but don't celebrate homosexuality, it does
not make you a homophobe. Don't let America's
universities continue to serve as incubators for this
rampant epidemic of new McCarthyism. But what can you do?
How can anyone prevail against such pervasive social
subjugation? The answer's been here all along. I learned
it 36 years ago, on the steps of the Lincoln Memorial in
Washington, DC, standing with Dr. Martin Luther King and
two hundred thousand people. You simply ..., disobey.
Peaceably, yes. Respectfully, of course. Nonviolently,
absolutely.
But when told how to think or what to say or how to
behave, we don't. We disobey social protocol that stifles
and stigmatizes personal freedom. I learned the awesome
power of disobedience from Dr. King ..., who learned it
from Gandhi, and Thoreau, and Jesus, and every other
great man who led those in the right against those with
the might. Disobedience is in our DNA. We feel innate
kinship with that disobedient spirit that tossed tea into
Boston Harbor, that sent Thoreau to jail, that refused to
sit in the back of the bus, that protested a war in Viet
Nam.
In that same spirit, I am asking you to disavow cultural
correctness with massive disobedience of rogue authority,
social directives and onerous laws that weaken personal
freedom. But be careful ..., it hurts. Disobedience
demands that you put yourself at risk. Dr. King stood on
lots of balconies. You must be willing to be humiliated
..., to endure the modern-day equivalent of the police
dogs at Montgomery and the water cannons at Selma. You
must be willing to experience discomfort. I'm not
complaining, but my own decades of social activism have
taken their toll on me. Let me tell you a story. A few
years back I heard about a rapper named Ice-T who was
selling a CD called, "Cop Killer", celebrating
ambushing and murdering police officers. It was being
marketed by none other than Time/Warner, the biggest
entertainment conglomerate in the world. Police across
the country were outraged. Rightfully so-at least one had
been murdered. But Time/Warner was stonewalling because
the CD was a cash cow for them, and the media were
tiptoeing around it because the rapper was black. I heard
Time/Warner had a stockholders meeting scheduled in
Beverly Hills. I owned some shares at the time, so I
decided to attend. What I did there was against the
advice of my family and colleagues. I asked for the
floor. To a hushed room of a thousand average American
stockholders, I simply read the full lyrics of "Cop
Killer"- every vicious, vulgar, instructional word.
"I GOT MY 12 GAUGE SAWED OFF. I GOT MY HEADLIGHTS
TURNED OFF. I'M ABOUT TO BUST SOME SHOTS OFF. I'M ABOUT
TO DUST SOME COPS OFF..." It got worse, a lot worse.
I won't read the rest of it to you. But trust me, the
room was a sea of shocked, frozen, blanched faces. The
Time/Warner executives squirmed in their chairs and
stared at their shoes. They hated me for that. Then I
delivered another volley of sick lyric brimming with
racist filth, where Ice-T fantasizes about sodomizing two
12-year old nieces of Al and Tipper Gore.
"SHE PUSHED HER BUTT AGAINST MY ...." Well, I
won't do to you here what I did to them. Let's just say I
left the room in echoing silence. When I read the lyrics
to the waiting press corps, one of them said, "We
can't print that." "I know," I replied,
"but Time/Warner's selling it." Two months
later, Time/Warner terminated Ice-T's contract. I'll
never be offered another film by Warner's, or get a good
review from Time magazine. But disobedience means you
must be willing to act, not just talk. When a mugger sues
his elderly victim for defending herself ..., jam the
switchboard of the district attorney's office. When your
university is pressured to lower standards until 80% of
the students graduate with honors ..., choke the halls of
the board of regents. When an 8-year-old boy pecks a
girl's cheek on the playground and gets hauled into court
for sexual harassment ..., march on that school and block
its doorways. When someone you elected is seduced by
political power and betrays you..., petition them, oust
them, banish them. When Time magazine's cover portrays
millennium nuts as deranged, crazy Christians holding a
cross as it did last month ..., boycott their magazine
and the products it advertises. So that this nation may
long endure, I urge you to follow in the hallowed
footsteps of the great disobedience's of history that
freed exiles, founded religions, defeated tyrants, and
yes, in the hands of an aroused rabble in arms and a few
great men, by God's grace, built this country. If Dr.
King were here, I think he would agree.
Thank you.
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