What is "Black Twitter"?
I suppose so. Probably one could do a network analysis on the nodes/connections to see how tightly knit the community really is, compared to other spontaneous groupings based on shared interests e.g. "Skeptic Twitter."Thanks - may be missing something but isn't that simply describing how Twitter has self organised groupings?
I suppose so. Probably one could do a network analysis on the nodes/connections to see how tightly knit the community really is, compared to other spontaneous groupings based on shared interests e.g. "Skeptic Twitter."
Again "the disenfranchised groups can now form social movements to the same degree as other groups" is not a problem.
Why does this matter, though? I think it's interesting that the phrase "cancel culture" appears to have been originally popularized within a particular subculture, but it doesn't actually tell us too much.Probably someone COULD, but until one actually does such a study, there is no real reason to assume it's any different from the average group.
Like, never? I thought it fairly problematic when a (relatively marginalized) group of unbelievers formed a heat-of-the-moment movement to drive a specific gelatiere out of business. Just because they were marginalized in the Bible Belt doesn't justify the collective action of driving online reviews down to one star based on a single short-lived incident.Again "the disenfranchised groups can now form social movements to the same degree as other groups" is not a problem.
Not really. Mob mentality is the root of cancel culture, and death threats are frequently a mob's calling card. Also, I'm not sure just how clear we are in defining cancelling. It's convenient to accept light cancelling (why, we just don't allow his kind on facebook) while downplaying the darker side.
Free speech? Not really. More like a targeted harassment, which doesn't enjoy much 1A protection.
I think expressing goofy or hateful ideas and opinions is one thing, and pressuring someone to take away someone else's livelihood is another. Try it on for size: would you accept being fired because some rando didn't like your tweets?
Your point about the traditional gate keepers is what I keep thinking about the most in regards to this topic.
These seem to be the people howling the most about "cancel culture", and it's exactly like you say. These positions used to have unique power to shape the public narrative. Editors at newspapers, columnists, talking heads on TV, tenured professors at elite institutions, and so on, all used to be the gatekeepers of social norms and public discourse.
The advent of social media is challenging that. They go on twitter and some no-name account calls them a moron and there's nothing they can do about it. All the social capital they have accumulated amounts to little when it comes to dealing with the non-elite masses, and if enough of the unwashed rubes make a ruckus, it can cause them real problems and undermine their pseudo-authority. There's a much more free-wheeling discussion and inconvenient narratives can no longer be swept under the rug.
The public discourse now seems much more spontaneous, rising from the masses rather than being handed down from the top.
The polite deference that used to exist within the exclusive club of gatekeepers is being corroded. Uppity outsiders can now get their voices heard, and, horror of horrors, sometimes they even get listened to.
Your point about the traditional gate keepers is what I keep thinking about the most in regards to this topic.
These seem to be the people howling the most about "cancel culture", and it's exactly like you say. These positions used to have unique power to shape the public narrative. Editors at newspapers, columnists, talking heads on TV, tenured professors at elite institutions, and so on, all used to be the gatekeepers of social norms and public discourse.
Like, never?
People had a legal right to express their negative feelings about Kaepernick, but that didn't make it morally right for them to do so.
Indeed.
Again nothing being complained about here is new or noteworthy in the slightest outside of who's using their opinions and influence to change society.
Old people writing "Letters to the Editor" aren't cancel culture but young people doing what amounts to the same thing on Twitter are. And as you say the only difference is one person using an "official" gatekeeping method and the other isn't.
That's why the people complaining have to keep referring to "The Mob" and "Mob Mentality" as if Twitter is somehow more driven by that then an HOA or a Political Party or literally anything else.
But this is what the Proudly Wrong always do.
When their house is burning down, the discussion is about how to put out the fire at their house.
When anyone else's house is burning down the discussion they demand we have is a broad philosophical debate about the what degree society is responsible for putting out house fires, or a sea-lioning "Oh I'm sorry when did we prove the fires were objectively bad?," or a hand wringing "Oh but if we let fire fighters just start pouring water on houses willy-nilly they could flood a house out if they go too far...." or some other parallel meta discussion designed to keep us as far away from putting out the other people's fire as possible.
And when called on it their response is always either a faux-innocent or huffy "Oh I can't talk about whatever I like."
"Cancel Culture" has not wielded its power to influence society any more (or less) responsibly then any other. It's not worth a new term, it's not worth becoming a society boogeyman.
If you insist on using death threats to define “cancel culture”, a lot of things previously considered “cancel culture” will stop being “cancel culture” and a lot of things not previously considered “cancel culture” now are.
You’ll need to cite some case law to support your contention that calling for someone to be fired isn’t protected speech.
I’m not sure what you mean by “accept”, but I probably wouldn’t like it. That doesn’t mean it isn’t protected speech, which means in a free society I have to tolerate it. Just like I have to tolerate other types of free speech that I personally dislike.
Is not caring how your behavior affects other people morally or ethically right?
Because you seem to want to preach morality and ethics to police other people’s behavior but grant yourself wide latitude for you own behavior. Seems... inconsistent.
Actually I don't define it as such, so non sequitur.
Actually I don't need to do anything. You asked if I thought public harassment was 1A protected. I think not necessarily.
Holup: are you pulling paradox of tolerance now, and implying that hate speech and Nazis have to be tolerated as 1A protected? The vaccillation is making me dizzy.
Cancel culture, to me, means mob disenfranchisement, pure and simple. I don't think that's a great idea, because a mob can always be assembled to disenfranchise any speaker with any viewpoint.
So again: say your posts here got public attention. Someone made a clever tweet about your above assertion about the P of T and framed you as a Nazi apologist, and it went viral. You ok with being fired over that because of the negative attention you inadvertently brought to your employer, who doesn't care if it is true or not, but just wants no waves created in his business? That's cancel culture on the hoof.
The analogous statement re: cancel culture would be something like "Cancellations facilitated by online shaming gone viral are invariably immoral." Since I've never made anything even approaching such a claim, it’s rather odd that you'd attribute such an analogous claim to me in particular.D4m10n: "We should arrest all left handed people."
I'd say these are analogous cases in most ways, but the interpostion of editorial gatekeepers seems likely to prevent virality in the more traditional print media scenario.And how exactly a bunch of young people talking on the internet to promote a progressive value is any more or less of a "Mob" than a bunch of old people writing letters to the editor to promote a conservative value just aggressively remains unanswered.