This guy here pretty much summarises my views on political correctness. I think he takes it a little far near the end of the clip but I think he was getting a little carried away with his passion for the argument. I think on the whole he makes a really good point though.
I think it's an astonishingly good argument. What he's saying, IMO, is,
You get caught calling someone a "N" or the like, don't turn around and say you're some kind of victim of PC.
Stewart is speaking of taking responsibility for ones own beliefs, I think.
Personally, if it comes down to extremes, I would rather be tagged a sniveling, twittering PC droid, than be in the same room with a fellow middle-age, white educated male who talks -- often in hushed tones and carefully chosen words -- about how tough it's gotten for "us." If I am PC, it is by choice, not by indoctrination or some conspiracy against my intellect.
I am not a self-loathing white. I don't believe that I have stolen anything from my fellows, but I am the recipient of stolen goods. Regardless of what laws are enacted in the name of equity or affirmative action, my privilege remains intact. It doesn't rub off. In my country, I am not questioned when I identify as "Canadian." Nobody says, "Yeah, but what are you really?" There is no intense curiosity as to my ethnic origins.
Nobody raises their eyebrows when I say I have two university degrees. There is no, "Good for you," in condescending tones. Successes I've achieved in life, while they may be associated with that privilege, have never been misconstrued as being the result of someone else's largesse over my incompetence or disadvantage.
Certain terminology -- let's take "N" -- got tossed on the scrapheap of vile, cruel incivility before the term "political correctness" reached mainstream consciousness. I chose -- as a sentient human with a fully-functioning heart -- to put other words, like "fag" and "Paki," which were staples of my adolescence, on there as well. Nobody had to tell me to do this -- there was no Grand Poobah of PC who told me that certain words and ideas are despicable. I learned that from the pain in other people's faces. I learned it from the anger of those who said those things. And I learned from the guilt I heard in my own voice when I repeated them aloud.
My beliefs -- PC or not -- were not the result of some trivial list. They're very much informed by people who had an impact on me, like my parents, who -- though far from perfect -- in their small way, identified injustices and tried to point them out to me. Similarly, the lives of people like Dr King had a transforming affect on my youth.
I sense the anger in my own post here, so I will end soon. That little YouTube clip by Stewart really encapsulates the frustration I feel when having my choice of language castigated by others. I suspect PC and PIC are mutually censoring of oneanother and, in the extreme, suggest that the two arguing don't have the stones to debate what eachother is saying, so criticizing how they say it will have to suffice.