Former University Professor Warns of ‘Incremental Creep’ on Changing Word Definitions

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OTTAWA—A former university professor turned author has warned that freedom of speech is under threat in Canada, and claimed there has been an “incremental creep” in regards to the changing definitions of words.

“What is it saying about our culture, that we’re so interested in doing this or that we’re so willing to accept these rapidly evolving definitions?” Julie Ponesse said during a panel discussion on free speech and ethics in Ottawa on April 28.

“I think one thing we’re seeing now is that there is a kind of what we call incremental creep going on all over the place.”

Ms. Ponesse was placed on leave and banned from campus at Huron University College in 2021 after not complying with its COVID-19 vaccine mandate, which she argued was coercive and ethically wrong.

Ms. Ponesse, who holds a doctorate in philosophy, said introducing radically different ideas to people often resulted in them “slamming the door in your face.” But she said gradually introducing fear-based rhetoric could make ideas easier to accept.

Ms. Ponesse raised the example of Adolf Hitler’s genocide against Jews, and said the concept was not outright proposed to the German population. “That’s not how it happened. It was very slow. It was insidious. There was a lot of language about fear, about how we’re protecting you, about how we are eliminating the threats to your livelihood,” she said.

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She raised concerns that words like “gender,” which had a long-established meaning, were being changed in Canada. “Even a term, something like gender ideology, when you hear it, it suggests to you that such a thing exists. But I would encourage you to pause for a minute: ‘Well, does that exist, or does only gender exist?’” she said.

The professor also warned that in Canada certain words and ideas were being shut down altogether. “If we just start systematically shutting down certain ideas and certain ways of expressing certain ideas, ... it’s kind of like shutting the door on truth. And you may never be able to open it again,” she said.

“They’re just words. They don’t amount to physical harm ... they’re ideas. And what are humans if nothing but thinkers and questioners?”

Free Speech

During the panel, True North journalist Andrew Lawton suggested to the crowd that the largest threat to free speech was not one individual, but “everyone in this room as an individual.” He said while government censorship can be the most “evil” way of silencing people, self-censorship is often the most effective.

“If you do not say the thing, firstly, you’ve self-censored, you’ve actually kept that idea locked up and confined in your head. It will never be uttered to the point where someone else can say ‘you know, that actually makes sense,’” he said.

“We need to have this cultural sensibility that encourages debate and discourse, because when you self-censor, you are preemptively giving in.”

Mr. Lawton also said while Canada has legal protection for free speech, it lacks a “cultural” support for free speech. He spoke of the example of speakers being “de-platformed” from events, and said if a venue did not want to host certain speakers, they would have no “legal arguement” to argue they should be included.

“But we can say there’s a cultural argument. ... Why don’t we want people to have different beliefs? Why don’t we want to have different perspectives entertained in one discussion, in one place?” he said.

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