August 7, 2024 - 6:00pm

→ Liberals join the anti-mask crusade 

Republicans and Democrats are joining forces to ban face masks. Once the ultimate outward sign of liberal solidarity, face masks are now comparable to KKK hoods, according to the Anti-Defamation League and the NAACP.

Anti-Israel protesters’ use of masks to shield their identities has driven the latest round of anti-mask sentiment, angering both sides of the aisle. Long Island Republicans just passed a measure banning face masks except for religious and health reasons, though it’s entirely unclear how police will determine which masks are being worn for legitimate purposes. Los Angeles is considering a mask ban as well. Not long ago, LA was floating penalties for not wearing a mask…

→ A day of PR disasters for British police

As an inescapable wave of accusations of “two-tier policing” crashes over social media, it’s been a day full of own goals for British police forces.

First, there was a video from West Midlands Police Superintendent Emlyn Richards. When asked by Sky News why there wasn’t a larger police presence when “crew covering the unrest in Birmingham were followed by a man holding a knife and wearing a balaclava after broadcasting live,” Richards said police had been liaising with “business and community leaders” and the response was “commensurate” with the “intelligence” given to the police.

Then a video from Craig Guildford, Chief Constable of West Midlands Police, opened with the phrase “Salam Alaikum”, an Islamic religious salutation, and he signed off with “Shukran”, Arabic for “thank you”.

Next came a frankly bizarre video from the Superintendent of Oldham police. Trying to ease community tensions, the Superintendent sat in front of a row of standing Muslim community leaders and elders. If anything, it looked more like a hostage video than a police update.

Met Police chief Mark Rowley called two-tier policing accusations “nonsense”, while also warning that keyboard warriors are “not safe from the law”. Everything’s under control then…

→ Cancel culture wins

Standing out has lost its social currency. From 2000 to 2020, the value placed on being different and breaking the rules has declined, and people have become less willing to express unpopular opinions, according to a million-person study from the University of Michigan.

The need for inclusion and the need for authenticity are at odds, according to the researchers, but the former is winning out. Rising anxiety may be to blame, by making people more eager to conform. But the shift happened to coincide with the rise of the internet, which has provided new and creative channels for social shame and enforced conformity. Cancel culture is working…