May 2, 2024

The Cancel Culture Is Illiberal

The recent resignation of The New York Times Editorial Page editor was one of the events that triggered a discussion of free expression and allowing conflicting ideas to compete in an open marketplace of ideas. 

Opposition to the concept of a free-flowing marketplace of ideas tend to come from a vocal cadre of mostly left-leaning and mostly young (under 50) people who seem to want to censor, shut down or cancel what they considered to be hate speech (articles or social media posts), speech they consider racist, speech that promotes right-wing conspiracy theories or speech that favors the use of violence, such as The New York Times Op-Ed piece titled “Tom Cotton: Send in the Troops.”

At a time in our country’s history when people are typically sequestered at home and lonely, a time when a majority of Americans (especially sports fans) support the Black Lives Matter movement against police violence against Black people, a time when outrageous misinformation and hateful opinions are shared on social media and a time when our country’s leadership has failed to lead during a lethal pandemic, it is understandable that people are frustrated and enraged and want to cancel conflicting conversations and diss dissenting dialogues. 

When enraged, people often  abandon rationality and yearn to purge from sight and consciousness any contrary opinions or ideas, particularly if those ideas are complex, as explained by George Will of the Washington Post in his column titled “Authoritarianism and the politics of emotion.”  Also, on social media, where a majority of Americans get their news, confirmation bias and the titillation of the simplistic and outrageous allows people not only to ignore or cancel opposing views but also to actively promote positions they support, no matter how irrational.

On the other hand, although it is extremely difficult to discard emotion in a time of great national stress, if we are able to approach the issue of freedom of expression rationally, it is my view that we have to adhere to the liberal principle of encouraging dialogue, debate and discussion of opposing views, as articulated by John Stuart Mill in On Liberty, in which he argues that opinions should never be suppressed.

I first encountered Mills’ ideas on liberty when I earned my master’s degree in Journalism, and also was able to debate these ideas with thoughtful students when I taught a graduate class on Media Ethics at The New School.  What I learned was that suppressing or canceling a dialogue about important issues often comes from a defensive sense of insecurity or, even more likely, from a personalization of the issues.  The faulty, emotion-driven, personalizing thinking seems to be “I hate this awful person; therefore, I have to hate all of their ideas.”

If you support, as I do, the notion that there should be a free and open exchange of opposing views in the marketplace of ideas, does this mean the free, open exchange of all ideas?  Are there some ideas or positions that should be excluded?  My answer is “yes.”

OK, the logical next question is what ideas should be excluded.  I don’t think you can produce a list of ideas that should be excluded because any such specific list would be so contentious that the argument over each item on the list would be interminable and, thus, unresolvable.  Instead of a list of ideas that should be excluded from a free-expression dialogue, I believe a broad concept should be applied – decency.

Decent people respect others’ viewpoints, decent people listen to their opponents and are open to ideas and to learning, decent people are not bullies, decent people are not racist, decent people are not going to shout “fire” in a crowded theater and decent people will try to follow Congressman and civil rights leader, John Lewis’ advice as expressed in The New York Times Op-Ed piece he wrote to be published on the day of his funeral: “So I say to you, walk with the wind, brothers and sisters, and let the spirit of peace and the power of everlasting love be your guide.”

The Letter

When I first read about “The Letter,” I thought of the 1967 hit by the Box Tops.  The chorus goes like this:

Gimme a ticket for an aeroplane
Ain’t got time to take a fast train
Lonely days are gone
I’m a-goin’ home
My baby just a-wrote me a letter

But in 2020 “The Letter” refers to “A Letter on Justice and Open Debate” published in the July issue of Harpers Magazinethat was signed by 153 artists, writers and intellectuals.  The letter repudiates the cancel culture and calls for:

The free exchange of information and ideas, the lifeblood of a liberal society, is becoming more constricted.  While we have come to expect this on the radical right, censoriousness is also spreading more widely in our culture: an intolerance for opposing views, a vogue for public shaming and ostracism, and the tendency to dissolve complex policy issues in a blinding moral certainty.  We uphold the values of robust and even caustic counter-speech from all quarters.

The letter ends by stating, in part:

The way to defeat bad ideas is by exposure, argument, and persuasion, not by trying to silence or wish them away.  We refuse any false choice between justice and freedom, which cannot exist without each other.  As writers we need a culture that leaves us room for experimentation, risk taking, and even mistakes.  We need to preserve the possibility of good-faith disagreement without dire professional consequences.

Among the 153 people who signed the letter were five columnists from The New York Times: three liberals (Roger Cohen, Michelle Goldberg and Jennifer Senior) and two conservatives (David Brooks and Bari Weiss).  Interestingly, a week after the letter was published signatory Bari Weiss resigned from the Times in a fiery letter that accused the Times’s editorial decisions to be driven by a woke, cancel culture designed to appeal to a narrow slice of its readers, as determined by Twitter.

Twitter is not on the masthead of The New York Times.  But Twitter has become its ultimate editor.  As the ethics and mores of that platform have become those of the paper, the paper itself has increasingly become a kind of performance space.  Stories are chosen and told in a way to satisfy the narrowest of audiences, rather than to allow a curious public to read about the world and then draw their own conclusions.  I was always taught that journalists were charged with writing the first rough draft of history.  Now, history itself is one more ephemeral thing molded to fit the needs of a predetermined narrative.

The Times ran letters that both supported Weiss and that did not support her.  However, the two letters, the one Weiss signed and the one she wrote, bring up an interesting question:  Has the switch from an advertising-driven business model to a subscription-driven business model changed the editorial/opinion decisions of the Times?

Many journalism historians and theorists have written that the switch in newspapers’ business model from dependency on government, church or political party revenue to a dependency on advertising revenue made most newspapers less partisan and more objective.  Thus, the principle of journalistic objectivity was primarily an economic decision, not a journalistic one.  This principle of objectivity – news down the middle – was adopted by radio news and later by television news.  In local television station news and in network news, this down-the-middle approach reigned supreme, and by being non-partisan Walter Cronkite became “the most trusted man in America.”  Not pissing off either side of the political spectrum was profitable.

The notion that dependency on advertising made news producers and publishers freer and less partisan may have had some credibility when applied to the political spectrum, but not to those on the economic spectrum.  The New York Times was founded on the value proposition of appealing to the business class, to the upper-middle and upper class as defined by economics.  The Times was consistent in its approach to appealing to an economically high-end audience (which also means an educated audience). 

In contrast Rupert Murdoch’s New York Post’s appeal is to working class readers.  There is a story, probably apocryphal, that at a social event Murdoch asked the CEO of Bloomingdale’s why the tony department store didn’t advertise in the NY Post.  The Bloomingdale’s executive’s apparent answer was, “Because your readers are our shoplifters.”

This elitist (and probably racist) viewpoint tends to permeate advertising-revenue driven publications that produce content that appeals to consumers who have money and who advertisers want to reach.  But where is the content bias of publications that have a subscription-driven model?  Does money talk?  Does subscriber bias replace advertiser bias?

These questions bring us back to The Letter, to the concept that there should be a free exchange of ideas and opinions, and that these ideas and opinions should compete freely in a marketplace of ideas so citizens can decide for themselves. 

Just as the principle of objectivity was driven by economics, I think the principle of giving a respectful voice to different sides of an argument will win out eventually because of, once again, economics.  By respectful, I mean that any position must respect the rules of debate and not be an ad hominin, personal attack but should attack only ideas and the other side’s arguments, assumptions and logic.

Therefore, no one asked me to sign The Letter, but I enthusiastically support it.

Gimme a ticket for an aeroplane
Ain’t got time to take a fast train
Lonely days are gone
I’m a-goin’ home
My baby just a-wrote me a letter