The city of San Diego is being charged with taking political correctness to a whole new extreme by banishing the phrase Founding Fathers from the vocabulary of city employees. This brings it to a new level, without question, said Brad Dacus, the chief of Pacific Justice Institute, which raised questions about the issue with the city and is challenging its censorship.
When you cant utter the phrase Founding Fathers without possibly losing your job and you work for government, that is a sad day for free speech, he told WND.
In a letter to San Diego Mayor Kevin Faulconer, PJI Senior Staff Attorney Matthew B. McReynolds explained the citys new Visual and Correspondence Style Guidelines held a number of novel demands for city employees.
Including the banishment of a number of words and phrases widely accepted in the English language.
Get in touch with the real sentiments of the Founding Fathers, through The Jefferson Lies by author David Barton.
Many Americans, including city employees, will no doubt be surprised to learn that the city considers them biased for merely mentioning ordinary words and phrases like the common man, mankind, manmade and man up, to name a few of the manuals parade of horribles, McReynolds wrote.
Even more concerning is the manuals promotion of style over substance, to the point that employees are encouraged to omit or alter relevant research, based on subjective interpretations as to whether it includes biased or non-inclusive language.
He continued, Most alarming, though, is the guidelines directive, on page 76, that city employees should refrain from mentioning those to whom we owe our most fundamental freedoms, the Founding Fathers. The manuals inane attempt to recast the fathers as simply the Founders reaches a level of political correctness, censorship and insensitivity toward time-honored American values that is indefensible.
He said his organization has found no less than 1,500 separate instances in which the Supreme Court and lower courts have invoked the Founding Fathers.'
Their contributions are undeniable, and their voice indispensable to understanding good government, he wrote.
Dacus told WND, The city of San Diego has taken the PC movement to a whole new extreme, and it demonstrates how dangerous that kind of dogma can be to the First Amendment.
The city did not respond to WND requests, through telephone messages and email, for a comment.
But PJI noted in a section on Bias-Free Language, the city tells workers to eliminate from their vocabulary a number of words and phrases considered gender biased.
Noting that Presidents Day soon in approaching, Dacus,said, At a time set aside to honor American icons to whom we owe our constitutional freedoms, it is offensive and indefensible that the city of San Diego is directing employees not to even mention the Founding Fathers. We are calling on the mayor to immediately retract these guidelines and reassure city employees that they will not be punished for being patriotic. We cannot allow this type of censorship and PC insanity to destroy our free speech.
He told WND his organization is promising to represent, without charge, any city employees who are punished for their patriotic expression.
McReynolds letter offered an extended list of formal references to the Founding Fathers, and said a more complete list would take hundreds of pages.
We trust you will act swiftly to correct the appalling notion that city personnel should not quote the foregoing authoritites or otherwise refer to the Founding Fathers, he wrote.
Please notify us by the end of this week as to the steps you are taking to ensure that employees speech rights are protected and the city of San Diego does not persist in discouraging patriotic expression, the letter said.