Tweeting into an internet storm over “cancel culture,” Ocasio-Cortez informed those who think they have been censured for their opinions they are probably “just being challenged, held accountable, or unliked.”
According to Ocasio-Cortez, a New York Democrat, the real victims of “cancel culture” are left-wing activists — and her.The term “cancel culture” comes from entitlement - as though the person complaining has the right to a large, captive audience,& one is a victim if people choose to tune them out.
— Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (@AOC) July 10, 2020
Odds are you’re not actually cancelled, you’re just being challenged, held accountable, or unliked.
The trigger: Ocasio-Cortez was responding to an open letter published on Tuesday in Harper’s Magazine that warned against a spreading culture of “censoriousness.”Many of the people actually “cancelled” are those long denied a fair hearing of their ideas to begin w/:
— Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (@AOC) July 10, 2020
Palestinian human rights advocates
Abolitionists
Anticapitalists
Anti-imperialists
Not spicy “contrarians” who want to play devils advocate w/ your basic rights in the NYT
- The mini-manifesto was signed by 150 mostly left-leaning luminaries, including J.K. Rowling, Gloria Steinem, Malcolm Gladwell and Noam Chomsky.
Many other members of the social justice left — where “cancel culture” has long been downplayed or denied — joined Ocasio-Cortez in condemning the letter and its signatories as privileged and out of touch.
- Some tried to make the debate about race and gender or suggested nefarious motives.
Ygelsias, a reformed “cancel culture” denier, declined to comment other than voicing support for VanDerWerff.I sent a version of this to the editors of Vox. (I have redacted some bits that are internal to Vox and shouldn’t be aired publicly.) pic.twitter.com/splNNSMivd
— Emily VanDerWerff 😎 (@emilyvdw) July 7, 2020
- He seemed to imply on Twitter that Vox was silencing him.
While many of the signatories expressed pride in the letter, at least two disavowed their support amid the outcry.
- Other prominent liberals boasted they had declined to sign in the first place.
- More than 160 journalists and academics signed a counter-letter published on Friday criticizing their peers, “many of them white, wealthy, and endowed with massive platforms,” for failing to recognize those who have been “silenced for generations.”
Case in point: Writer Thomas Chatterton Williams, who spearheaded the Harper’s letter, said the reaction proved his point.
“The very few people distancing themselves from the letter have been pressured and shamed to do so, not because of the arguments in the text, but because of the presence of certain other signatories, which I think is all the more reason the document is necessary,” he told TheWrap on Thursday.
Chatterton Williams, who was raised black but has rejected race, said he had sought “as wide and diverse a range of signatories as we could feasibly get.”
- Contrary to the claims by Ocasio-Cortez and other critics, many transgender, female and non-white people singed the letter.
- And two of the signatories, Salman Rushie and Garry Kasparov, were persecuted by authoritarian regimes because of their ideas.
Garry Kasparov was forced out of Russia
— Anne Applebaum (@anneapplebaum) July 7, 2020
Conservative commentators generally agreed the letter was a good if flawed corrective to left-wing intolerance and the backlash was bad.
Seth Mandel, the editor-in-chief of the Washington Examiner, declared Ocasio-Cortez’s Twitter thread “the worst take” of all.
Right on schedule with the worst take pic.twitter.com/hURPgum3Bk
— Seth Mandel (@SethAMandel) July 10, 2020
Actor James Woods was characteristically brutal in a reply on Friday.
You and your mob have been destroying careers and reputations and livelihoods on a whim. Now you’re being hoist by your own petard. Those of us blacklisted, libeled, and falsely maligned have zero sympathy. You all started it. May you be devoured by it. https://t.co/PGzMzNa0ku
— James Woods (@RealJamesWoods) July 10, 2020
Amid racial upheaval across the United States in recent weeks, several dozen people have been fired over often-dubious allegations of racism or racial insensitivity.
Also on Friday, the CEO of Latino-owned food company Goya appeared on “Fox & Friends” and decried a boycott pushed by Ocasio-Cortez and other Democrats because he praised President Donald Trump during a White House visit the previous day.
- Robert Unanue called the boycott “suppression of speech.”