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Liberals rarely defend liberalism The woke threat to liberty is not a fringe issue — and people with mainstream opinions are in the firing line

Expelliarmus! J.K. Rowling has received little support from fellow liberals. (Photo by Mike Marsland/WireImage)

Expelliarmus! J.K. Rowling has received little support from fellow liberals. (Photo by Mike Marsland/WireImage)


December 31, 2020   6 mins

Cancel culture has yet to be cancelled. In fact, it’s never been busier and no one is safe. It doesn’t matter if you’re rich and famous, or poor and unheard of, you too can be a target. In fact, it doesn’t matter whether you meant to offend anybody — if enough people are offended, or claim to be, you can lose your privacy, your reputation or your job. Even being dead is no guarantee. If there’s some sort of monument to your memory then that too is fair game.

It should be stressed that cancel culture is not the exclusive preserve of the woke Left. Performative offence-taking is something that can be engaged in by persons of just about any ideological persuasion.

However, if you see a reasoned complaint about cancel culture, then it’s probably coming from a conservative or libertarian point of view. On the other side of the ‘culture war’, liberals have rather less to say about this matter.

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Which is odd, because in many ways they have more to lose. While conservatives are already alienated from modernity, and libertarians dream of a future that hasn’t happened yet, liberals are living in the world that they built. Our cultural infrastructure may have roots in pre-modernity, but today most of it is run by liberals — and has been for decades. It’s not called liberal democracy for nothing.

As radicals exploit the crisis-filled moment to continue their march through the institutions, it is liberal values that are under attack — like free speech, fairness, equality and reason.

So why aren’t the partisans of the Enlightenment rallying against the statue topplers — and the other manifestations of cancel culture? The liberal grandees of the commentariat seem remarkably unalarmed by recent events. Some of them, like Matthew Parris, in a recent piece for The Spectator, emphasise the upside.

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At this point I should point to some honourable exceptions. For instance, impeccably liberal writers like Janice Turner of The Times who speak out against the “tiny, intolerant minority” that “is dictating public policy which the vast majority of us abhor”:

“Where will the righteous anger train stop next? When will we know that ‘progress’ is finally achieved? When every member of every public body utters the required line? When every associate of JK Rowling is shamed? When every corporation is scared into compliance?”

Turner isn’t the only one. There are others, including some who aren’t just liberal but firmly on the Left, who have taken a stand. However, they often pay a price for doing so — becoming othered and isolated from the bien pensant mainstream. The feminists smeared as ‘TERFs’, for instance. Or the defenders of academic freedom associated with Quillette magazine. Or the Remain supporters, like Caroline Flint, who resisted the undemocratic attempt to overturn the referendum result.

Though these all continue to believe the things that placed them firmly in the non-conservative camp, they’ve become defined by their dissent. That’s not because liberalism and wokeness are the same thing (they aren’t), but because liberals who expose the differences find that their fellow liberals refuse to stand with them. It’s not that such solidarity would require full agreement, just a defence of the right to disagree.

So why the passivity? It maybe that mainstream liberals perceive the woke threat to be an exaggeration — perhaps an outright invention of the populist Right. If the calling-out of bigotry does occasionally tip over into cancel culture then any excess is the work of irrelevant fringe. And, anyway, where’s the harm? Will democracy be irreparably damaged if the likes of Katie Hopkins are kicked off Twitter?

Except that cancel culture goes so much further than any of that. This issue is about what is happening within mainstream institutions — and what is being done to people with mainstream views.

Look at what happened to James Bennet, who was, until recently, a well-regarded comment editor at the New York Times. He was forced out after internal ructions a few weeks ago. The controversy was over the paper’s publication of  an op-ed by Tom Cotton, a Republican Senator. It happened at the height of the unrest in several American cities — and Cotton argued for “an overwhelming show of force” to restore order. It was a hawkish piece, but one that drew a distinction between a “majority who seek to protest peacefully” and “bands of miscreants.” Nevertheless, that was too much viewpoint diversity for the paper’s activist-employees — and Bennet had to go.

It’s not only editors who need to watch their step. Columnists too are in danger. In March, Suzanne Moore of The Guardian wrote in defence of Selina Todd, an Oxford professor who was de-platformed for wrongthink on trans issues. Moore soon found herself facing an intense campaign of criticism. This included a condemnatory letter whose signatories included several of her own Guardian colleagues. Buzzfeed News reported on a further letter, this one apparently signed by hundreds of Guardian staff. Unlike James Bennet, this insider pile-on did not force Moore out. Still one doesn’t have to achieve a full cancellation to make others think twice before defying the party line.

Not that one has to be a public figure to be targeted. Earlier this month, the Washington Post decided to run a major story (getting on for 3,000 words of it) about a fancy dress party that happened two years ago. This was deemed newsworthy because a party guest had covered her face in black make-up. According to the article, the costume was intended as a satire on people thinking that wearing blackface is OK. The guest quickly regretted her decision and apologised for it. Nevertheless she was subsequently tracked down, named and ended up losing her job. Justin Trudeau is still in his though.

Another recent example is the bizarre story of how David Shor, a political data analyst whose work has contributed to Democrat election campaigns, got cancelled. His offence? Tweeting about research by a black academic showing how, in 1968, peaceful protests increased the Democratic vote while riots reduced it. For this, he was accused by members of his professional peer group of ‘anti-blackness’ and other affronts. His employers, a progressive data analytics company, fired him — though for reasons why are disputed. You can read more about this Kafkaesque tale here and here.

Meanwhile, on this side of the pond, we’ve had the Booker Prize Foundation’s cancellation of its honorary vice-president Baroness Nicholson, (see Janice Turner’s article for more). And also Graham Linehan, of Father Ted fame, getting banned from Twitter (trans transgressions, again).

So, no, it’s not just right-wingers who get cancelled. If they do or say the wrong thing — or merely do or say it in the wrong way — progressives can also find themselves in trouble. Indeed, on the principle of pour encourager les autres, liberals make the ideal cancellees.

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Perhaps that’s the real reason why liberals are reluctant to speak-up — they’re afraid they’ll be next. As Winston Churchill said about appeasers, “each one hopes that if he feeds the crocodile enough, the crocodile will eat him last”.

What can liberals do to defend liberal values while standing clear of the snapping jaws? Well, one thing they could do is to name their ‘woke breaking point’ — to state publicly how much woke is too much. Think about it in terms of statues. It’s one thing to object to a monument to a slave trader (I’d certainly hate to have one in my town), but how much further would you want either the illegal topplings or the official removals to go? Where do you say ‘thus far and no further’? Should Churchill be safe? Gandhi too? I’ll admit this is fast becoming a clichéd question, but it does demand an answer — especially from those who fancy themselves cultural arbiters.

For commentators who believe that the woke threat has been exaggerated there is surely no risk. Either they are right and their lines in the sand will never be breached — or they are wrong, in which case they’d surely want to defend their liberal values. If you use your position of influence to say that the crocodile doesn’t exist (or only eats bad people) then you shouldn’t be afraid to have some skin in the game. If the mob does come for the monuments that you said wouldn’t be toppled, or the writers that you said wouldn’t be sacked, then you should be honour-bound to take a stand.

What is dishonourable (for a self-professed liberal) is to make excuses, or stay conveniently silent, no matter how many times that liberties are encroached upon, or history erased, or language twisted out of shape, or the blatantly irrational imposed as incontestable truth.

*

Note that liberals don’t have to choose the same breaking points as their reactionary opponents. They can heartily approve of getting slave traders out of the public square or banning racist trolls from social media sites. Indeed, this isn’t only about wokeness and anti-wokeness — because not all the threats to free speech are about overtly woke issues.

For instance, in April, the CEO of YouTube announced that content contradicting the World Health Organisation advice on Covid-19 would be banned from the site. One can certainly see the wisdom in denying snake-oil salesmen a platform to peddle their wares. But equally one should see the danger of shutting down sensible debate on scientific questions that have yet to be settled. For instance, take a look at this UnHerd interview with Professor Karol Sikora. Can any true liberal be comfortable with the fact that this entirely reasonable discussion of an important issue was taken down by YouTube for “violating guidelines”? Or that the limits of allowable debate in major forums are now defined by the official line of a UN quango (which, by the way, goes against its own previously published guidance — e.g. by U-turning on the use of face coverings)?

If a spirit of intolerance and paranoia takes hold of our most important institutions — whether in academia, the media, politics or the arts — then that, ultimately, is a threat to everyone. If you can’t find it within you to defend the rights of those you disagree with, then at least think of yourself.


Peter Franklin is Associate Editor of UnHerd. He was previously a policy advisor and speechwriter on environmental and social issues.

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Alex Lekas
Alex Lekas
3 years ago

Stop calling them liberals. They are leftists. Totalitarians. A true liberal does not wet his pants over someone else’s point of view. In fact, that’s one of the hallmarks of classical liberalism, something out of style within the American left around the time of JFK. They don’t call themselves ‘progressives’ just for fun; it’s because even subconsciously, leftists know that they are wholly illiberal.

Look at the examples cited in this piece. This is the work of totalitarians, people who have more in common with radical jihadis than with members of a free society. I have no doubt that some of the wokerati would be just fine with executing the heretics in their ranks, and they would certainly have no qualms about lining conservatives against walls. It’s one reason why they have such a fetish about guns; disarming the citizenry is always on the authoritarian to-do list.

Drahcir Nevarc
RC
Drahcir Nevarc
3 years ago
Reply to  Alex Lekas

I think we should treat them exactly as we treat other fascists.

Pete Marsh
Pete Marsh
3 years ago

One of the organisers of the BLM protests, one Sasha Johnson, self described as the ‘Black Panther of Oxford’ has floated the idea of a ‘racists register’ along the lines of the sex offenders register. If you fall foul of Hate Speech laws etc. you get put on it.
Anyone on it will be barred from living near BAME people. Only Europeans being capable of being racists seems to be the assumption in their pseudo reality.

This is exactly the kind of crazy idea that the far left and the SNP would seriously consider.

It would require offenders being legally designated as of a certain ethnicity, and legally discriminated against on that basis. A bit like how the Nuremberg Laws started in 1930s Germany…

Sean Booth
Sean Booth
3 years ago

Blacking ones face is apparently an unforgivable crime, the accusation being that it is racist for a non-black person to masquerade (or dress up) as a black person. The same is said if one wears a native indian head-dress to a party when one is actually a caucasian. I could go on but you get my drift?

Why then is it absolutely fine, positively encouraged or even promoted for a man to dress as a woman? Or for a man to claim to be a woman, or a trixibell, or a donkey, or a xingding?

Is there a cynical double standard I am missing here?

Also who decided it was a crime to call someone a “coloured person”, but it is to be applauded if one calls the same person a “person of colour”? What is the difference and who decided what the correct term was/is? And when will it change again? And when it does change who will decide and who will be caught using the wrong term and be pilloried for it?

My point? Freedom of thought, speech and expression are the most precious things in life and should be cherished, guarded and fought for. Too long now the majority has remained silent. It is time to stand up and argue against the tyranny at every opportunity.

Peter Atkinson
PA
Peter Atkinson
3 years ago
Reply to  Sean Booth

‘A person of colour’ am I not a person of colour? I am white. Is that not a colour?

igorslamoff
igorslamoff
3 years ago
Reply to  Sean Booth

Howzabout black feet? Or black buttocks? Are they still allowed?

David Smethurst
David Smethurst
3 years ago

A well written and timely piece about the dangers of overwoke.

Michael Upton
Michael Upton
3 years ago

This is a wholly admirable piece of writing which deserves to be circulated as widely as possible – and acted upon.
Michael Upton.
Advocates’ Library,
Parliament House,
Edinburgh.

leznikm8
leznikm8
3 years ago

Being conservative today is when you want to ‘Conserve Enlightenment’.

Andrew Baldwin
AB
Andrew Baldwin
3 years ago

Peter writes: “Nevertheless she was subsequently tracked down, named and ended up losing her job. Justin Trudeau is still in his though.” If you follow Peter’s link, the woman who lost her job was graphics artist Sue Schafer, not a household name, and besides blacking her face she wore a tag saying her name was Megyn Kelly. So it was clearly intended as a take-down of Fox News journo Megyn Kelly for Megyn’s own not very outrageous comments about how she saw no problem with wearing blackface on Hallowe’en. This, as far as I know, fully defines the Schafer blackface story. However, Peter’s link to a Global News post from September 19, 2019, hugely underplays the Trudeau blackface story. Trudeau, at the advanced age of 29 years old, showed up at an Arabian Nights party dressed, as South African comic Trevor Noah pointed out, as Aladdin wearing blackface. The Canadian media covered for him, as in this article, claiming that he was in “brownface”, although he clearly wasn’t. Trudeau was so much in love with his blackface he had to use it even though he was taking himself out of character, not putting himself into it. Trudeau, when asked by a reporter on the plane if this was his only such incident, mentioned only a teenage incident where he performed a Harry Belafonte song wearing blackface makeup. This was incomplete information not at all different from a brazen lie considering that the very next day a video emerged of Trudeau in his early 20s (not in his late teens as the Globe article suggests) wearing blackface, gesticulating like an ape, and with a banana or a cucumber stuck in the crotch of his jeans.The next day Trudeau probably lied again, saying he couldn’t even remember the number of times that he had appeared in blackface, but that he had never done so after his performance as Aladdin. That he didn’t remember the number of times was almost certainly a lie. He wasn’t Sir Lawrence Olivier asked to remember the number of times he had appeared on stage as Othello. That he never did so after the Aladdin performance may also have been a lie by a man uncertain how many other photos or videos might be lying around somewhere, and this so-called social justice warrior might well have been pursuing his blackface hobby into his thirties.
Sue Schafer does not, from the article, seem to have blackened her cleavage or appendages, while Trudeau lovingly blackened even the exposed parts of his legs in the torn blue jeans he wore for his racist video. Schafer’s stunt was obviously a misguided attempt to mock Megyn Kelly, not black people, while Trudeau’s video and his Aladdin performance were viciously racist in character. Schafer never lied about her blackface as Trudeau did about his. Nevertheless, as Peter notes, Schafer, who was in no way a public figure, lost her job, while Trudeau kept his. The left will turn, in the most cruel and unreasonable way, on anyone who commits an indiscretion. However, when one of its own leaders is involved, it will go to almost any lengths, even to disseminating obvious disinformation (“brownface” for “blackface”) to keep someone in power whose career should have been over.

chris carr
chris carr
3 years ago
Reply to  Andrew Baldwin

440 angry words about a fancy-dress party?

David Uzzaman
David Uzzaman
3 years ago

Liberals and anything but liberal.
Democrats don’t believe in democracy.
Our LibDems aren’t liberal and don’t believe in democracy.
There’s a bit of a common thread here. The BBC had a very funny comedy drama series called Bleak Expectations. One of the running gags was that most of the characters were the exact opposite of their names for example the fiendish villain was Mr Gently Benevolent and the most generous chap is Mr Skinflnt Parsimonious.

Michael Cowling
Michael Cowling
3 years ago
Reply to  David Uzzaman

But you shouldn’t say nice things about the BBC here …

David Uzzaman
David Uzzaman
3 years ago

BBC Radio has been one of my greatest joys in life. Like much else the woke agenda has crept in and I change station when some programmes come on but there’s still good stuff. If all else fails there’s R4extra with archive material some of which is older than me.

Joe Blow
JB
Joe Blow
3 years ago

“Cancel culture,” and its conduits (twitter and FaceBook), are being used as tools to avoid democratic accountability – for now by the childish wing of the left.

Bannon, of whom I am no great admirer, made an analogous point when he said he was proud to be called a racist – because mere labeling is usually a tacit admission of absence of argument. (Notably, Stella Creasey, through either ignorance or dishonesty, claimed he’d said he was proud to be racist – he did not.) Labeling someone racist means there is no need to attend to their arguments.

This avoidance of debate is an avoidance of democratic process, and it is dangerous. The same motivation – to hamstring democratic process – underlined the left’s insistence that we stay in the EU (where democratic process matters less). It is dangerous there too.

The lesson the idiots involved in “cancel culture” have failed to learn is that all political tools will be used eventually by one’s opponents. Cancel culture may be turned on you next.

nevilleseabridge
nevilleseabridge
3 years ago

‘Woke’ is surely the greatest misnomer since the ‘UK Border Force’ aka Royal Navy taxis. A better description for the adherents of this deluded ‘philosophy’, I would suggest, is comatose – or maybe even moribund.

SHARMAKE FARAH
SHARMAKE FARAH
3 years ago

Okay I will make some comments on the whole issue. An important point about freedom of speech is it only applies vis-a-vis the government. This means that the government cannot punish you for your speech, especially when it´s critical of the government. It also means you have a right to protest and any restrictions cannot be for the purpose of silencing protest against the government. It also must be applied neutrally, i.e. supporters of the government cannot get an exemption when critics cannot get it. But it only applies to government, not to private entites. Good example here is Twitter. A lot of the cancel culture controversies start here. And you know what? I think that in some cases, they probably were wrong (Example David Shor´s firing). But free speech doesn´t apply to private entities, and for good reason. We don´t expect physical businesses to allow all people in, so why not digital entities? Once we understand that free speech doesn´t apply to private entities, a lot of the cancel culture complaints are mooted, including this article. And no, cancel culture is not Mao´s revolutionary guards or the Khmer Rouge, they have actually killed millions to do it. Nor do they even have a resemblance. Most cancel culture people are not too political here, so my point is cancel culture leading to negative consequences socially is not a free speech issue.

Michael Cowling
Michael Cowling
3 years ago

What is dishonourable (for a self-professed liberal) is to make excuses, or stay conveniently silent, no matter how many times that liberties are encroached upon, or history erased, or language twisted out of shape, or the blatantly irrational imposed as incontestable truth.

Well said!

Pierre Whalon
Pierre Whalon
3 years ago

The totalitarian overtones of “overwokeness” are clearly stated, and the examples are terrifying. Yet the events that have precipitated these overreactions (euphemistically), are also terrifying. The murder of George Floyd now symbolizes the reality of being black in America, and the symbol has become international for a reason.
Yet, when do the ideas I hold make me immoral? When do my expressed thoughts give others the right to suppress or exile me? There is a line, of course, but who gets to define it and how?

Adrian Maxwell
Adrian Maxwell
3 years ago

Of course ‘liberals’ are afraid of speaking out because they are afraid being next. The real and better question, which is hardly addressed in the article, is why institutions take the action they do. Institutions, as opposed to individuals, have nothing to fear whatever line they take. Why does Cricket Australia require teams to parade barefoot before matches, why does Lloyds of London feel obliged to apologise for distant events, why did the New York Times force out Bennet (although urging ‘overwhelming force’ sounds like something Trump would have said so Im not sure why that example is in the article) and the Washington Post delve into history for an item. I find that I’m forever reading lists of individual victims and the howls of frustrated protest, but rarely an insight into the mechanisms as to why global institutions like universities act as they do in restraining and confining what is manifestly free and useful speech.

Andrei Timoshenko
Andrei Timoshenko
3 years ago

A core tenet of liberalism is the freedom of association. This means that communities intolerant of dissent regarding their foundational principles need to be tolerated, regardless of whether those foundational principles are fascism or critical theory. Banishment from a community for ideological impurity or wrongthink is certainly illiberal, but it is not illiberal enough to itself be banished.

No one owes anyone else a livelihood or respect. Unhappy with Twitter or YouTube? Set up a server to host your own content. Fired from a now-illiberal organization (newspaper, university)? Go somewhere else. If too many people start to disagree with your opinion columns, go off and become a plumber. Until people are showing up to torch your alternative endeavors, there is little a liberal ought to say.

Did progressivism become more puritan as it grew mainstream? Of course it did, and this was to be expected. A dedicated commitment to ideological pluralism – a commitment to process rather than outcome – tends to be a difficult sell at scale and pretty much every movement preaching pluralism abandoned it as it became more popular. “Here be villains and monsters to say” is far more motivating than abstract philosophising. Punitive self-righteousness is too appealing a stance.

So yes – wokesterism is being “unfair” to conservative and pluralist opinions. Boo hoo. Today’s cancel culture is certainly no worse, and is arguably noticeably less bad, to how those outside of the mainstream have always been treated. It certainly is nothing new and no sign of society becoming soft totalitarian or even less free. The only thing that is new, is that opinions that were mainstream 10 years ago have quickly lost this position within certain institutions, and people who were just as fire-breathingly self-righteous as the worst of the wokesters are now finding themselves on the receiving end of the stick. Welcome to the other side.

chris carr
chris carr
3 years ago

Names are confusing. What is “liberal”? You cite as liberal values “free speech, fairness, equality and reason”. Are these not also valued by most conservatives and most socialists?