The Morality of Hypocrisy
Moral Maze
BBC
4.4 • 623 Ratings
🗓️ 13 June 2019
⏱️ 43 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
Summary
Discussion of the Tory leadership race has shifted from questions of policy to issues of personal morality. Given that most of the candidates have admitted – to a greater or lesser extent – snorting, smoking or supping illegal substances at some point in the past, how thunderously should they be condemned? Shouldn’t people running for high office be blasted for their past ‘indiscretions’? Isn’t it right that any person in a position of privilege and authority who has shown a contempt for the law should suffer the consequences? Or should we worry that our 21st century witch-finders have developed an unhealthy obsession with ‘offence archaeology’ – the diligent digging-up of an historic misdemeanour and using it as a basis upon which to judge a person’s entire character? It’s been asserted that even worse than the crime itself is the sin of hypocrisy. An article from 1999 has been republished in which Michael Gove criticised "middle class professionals" who took drugs, at the same time that he himself was taking cocaine. He has defended himself against headlines calling him a hypocrite, saying: “If any of us lapse sometimes from standards that we uphold, that is human.” Hypocrisy is an easy accusation to hurl but a tricky sin to understand - La Rochefoucauld famously called it “a tribute vice pays to virtue". Our own moral boundaries are so often flexible, yet psychologists suggest we’re less inclined to give others the ethical wiggle room we might afford ourselves. So should we have more humility to look inward before judging others? Or is it a moral cop-out simply to say, “Let the person who is without sin cast the first stone”?
Producer: Dan Tierney
Transcript
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| 0:00.0 | You're listening to a programme from BBC Radio 4. |
| 0:04.7 | Good evening. Graham Logan has come a long way since he was put into care shortly after he was born. |
| 0:10.4 | He was adopted by the owners of a family fish business, renamed Michael Gove, won a scholarship to one of Scotland's best schools, Oxford, stellar career in the media, including a lengthy spell as a panelist |
| 0:21.2 | here on the moral maze, politics, the cabinet, touching distance of becoming Prime Minister, |
| 0:26.4 | and now it seems it all might end with a sniff. The disclosure that he snorted cocaine, quote, |
| 0:31.9 | on several occasions, unquote, 20 and more years ago, divides opinion. Those who don't care think that youthful-ish, in his case, he was around 30. |
| 0:41.3 | Youthful indiscretion should not be held against the mature individual who regrets them. |
| 0:45.9 | As a Christian, as well as an ambitious politician, he believes in redemption. |
| 0:49.7 | We're all sinners in a fallen world, he says. |
| 0:52.4 | Yes, his critics reply, but we're not all vying to be the |
| 0:55.1 | country's leader. Taking cocaine, a class A drug was and is illegal. Those who do so fund a chain |
| 1:02.0 | of vicious criminality that undermines societies across half the world. There are many who say the |
| 1:07.5 | real sin is hypocrisy. This seems to have become more and more the case |
| 1:10.9 | as we become less certain as a society |
| 1:12.9 | about what is actually right and wrong. |
| 1:15.7 | Gove wrote an article |
| 1:16.8 | criticising middle-class professionals |
| 1:19.1 | for taking drugs while being one |
| 1:21.4 | and doing so himself. |
| 1:23.6 | Lapsing sometimes from the standards we uphold |
| 1:25.9 | is human, he says. |
| 1:28.0 | Should something like this disqualify you from high office, if so, because of what you did, |
... |
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