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Some people from a couple of film podcasts I listen to had a (fairly balanced) discussion about this subject. I thought it was interesting and would share it here (about an hour long).
These are the cases that were mentioned of non-celebrities who got 'cancelled': PR executive who go fired after a tweet - https://www.google.com/search?q=Just...hrome&ie=UTF-8 and 'Husband-and-wife Yale professors resign in the wake of Halloween costume scandal' https://www.theatlantic.com/politics...t-yale/484418/ & https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/art...ume-email.html This is about the book 'So You've Been Publicly Shamed' by Jon Ronson. Quote:
https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikiped...iclyshamed.jpg |
I'm might have a listen to that on my way to work, thanks James
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- I don't want to get into the rights or wrongs of JK Rowlings tweets but I have to agree with one of the guys when he points out about her(and not just her, it could apply to a lot of other people too) which has been a big problem of mine with "cancel culture" (or whatever you want to call it) He said that, this is one topic that she has a different opinion on to some people, particularly very "liberal" or left wing people however probably 80% of her other views are probably toeing the party line so to speak but you have a different opinion on one thing from the "approved opinions list" and suddenly you're far right and a villain. This whole left or right thing and nothing in between just seems bad to me for individuality and for good reasoned discussions in general. Can we agree on a lot of things but not on others and still get on with each other anymore? - Then one of the other speakers who doesn't think cancel culture is a thing mentioned the extreme reactions on Twitter, he said that's not normal people "canceling" someone, that's just Trolls and while I kind of agree with him to a point, it seems to me that these trolls are almost taking over twitter and becoming acceptable and people don't really challenge them much and I feel like people actually think they're justified in some way? And if you say "hey, I don't agree with this person's opinion on this particular subject but she doesn't deserve death threats or rape threats etc etc" you're also cast out for not joining the pile on or saying that someone on your side has gone too far. So yeah you can say "oh yeah but that bad ones are trolls" but if people are allowing this big number of trolls to abuse and target people and even agree with them, isn't that still cancel culture? - So far the biggest thing I've agreed with is Twitter is a hell hole and people should stop posting there :laugh: |
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The only things "political" I actually care about are the environment and animals. Other things come and go, some of my opinions line up with the left and the right, but not enough to call myself either. I'm just above your puny human politics :hmph: |
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People make out like tribal politics is exclusive to the left when it definitely isn’t.
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No-one said the right is innocent of such things?
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The problem with centrism is that a lot of right wing people pretend they're centre when they're obviously not and it weakens the stance because it just makes it look like a stance for right wingers who don't want to admit they are right wing.
There are few true centrists and a lot of people in denial. |
Also I saw someone mention that JK Rowling has basically been cast as the villain when her other views are liberal and to that I say that the prime difference in behaviour between left and right is that the left hold other left leaning people accountable. The right has a culture of defending anything right leaning regardless. Just look at when you mention Right Wing terrorism is the vicinity of a right wing person and their first instinct is to bleat on about the left rather than denounce right wing terrorism because they see 'right wing' and automatically feel defensive.
It doesn't matter to the left if you present yourself as a liberal if you have views that are rooted in bigotry, you will be held accountable for those views. Standards like that apply to everyone, not just the 'other side' unlike the right that allows right wingers to get away with whatever as long as they are right leaning. |
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...the video you posted, James, is interesting...all of them make good points...I’m very undecided about cancel culture just because it feels like another unnecessarily and unhelpful label when it does feel similar to trolling...one of the things that is interesting is the discussion they had about the college professor..(..and her husband..)..and how there were screams for her to be fired from her job because of the Halloween costume email she had sent..when she’d previously been a much beloved professor..?...how one opinion had changed everything and determined her whole future etc...?...when she had been praised so highly before...it would most certainly feel like a mob mentality...anyways..(trying to make a long story, short..:laugh:...)...their whole opinion and ‘debate‘ about that was on a very small bit of information...and they said that/two of them did...’this is all I know..’...and then looking at your link, which yeah is the DM, so I wouldn’t say a great source either...but however accurate, it still gives a ‘different story’ to the one that they were given...It provided something entirely different ...it could be that another source would give something different again, I don’t know...people portray and relay with ‘slants’ and I think that’s true as well...According to the DM article, the professor wasn’t ‘just advocating free speech and saying a ‘dress code’ would undermine that’...she was intimating (...according to the article and allegedly etc...)...that there should be ‘room for students to offend in their dress code..’.../...as in blackface if they wanted to blackface etc...
...it also says in the DM article ... ‘The email was one of several incidents on campus that prompted hundreds of students and faculty members to march in protest on November 9 over what they saw as racial insensitivity at the school.’ ...and one of those incidents being an apparent allegation that a female student had been turned away from a fraternity party because she wasn’t white...so this could have been a whole series of events which led up to a highly charged situation and the result being the loss of jobs for the two professors...?...but I think that it would be quite unclear and uncertain whether ‘cancel culture’ could be applied at all with all of the factors we still don’t know but presumably the college board did know and made that decision... ...It is very interesting to look at how things are reported/relayed/portrayed etc and the ‘debate’ they provoke because of that... |
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