Cancel
Culture, Where Liberalism Goes to Die
Elites and their courtiers who trumpet their
moral superiority by damning and silencing those
who do not linguistically conform to politically
correct speech are the new Jacobins.
By Chris Hedges:
February 16, 2021 "Information
Clearing House" - The Rev. Will
Campbell was forced out of his position as director
of religious life at the University of Mississippi
in 1956 because of his calls for integration. He
escorted Black children through a hostile mob in
1957 to integrate Little Rock’s Central High
School. He was the only white person that was
invited to be part of the group that founded Martin
Luther King Jr.’s Southern Christian Leadership
Conference. He helped integrate Nashville’s lunch
counters and organize the Freedom Rides.
But Campbell was also, despite a slew of death
threats he received from white segregationists, an
unofficial chaplain to the local chapter of the Ku
Klux Klan. He denounced and publicly fought the
Klan’s racism, acts of terror and violence and
marched with Black civil rights protestors in his
native Mississippi, but he steadfastly refused to
“cancel” white racists out of his life. He refused
to demonize them as less than human. He insisted
that this form of racism, while evil, was not as
insidious as a capitalist system that perpetuated
the economic misery and instability that pushed
whites into the ranks of violent, racist
organizations.
“During the civil rights movement, when we were
developing strategies, someone usually said, ‘Call
Will Campbell. Check with Will,’” Rep. John Lewis
wrote in the introduction to the new edition of
Campbell’s memoir “Brother
to a Dragonfly,” one of the most important books
I read as a seminarian. “Will knew that the tragedy
of Southern history had fallen on our opponents as
well as our allies … on George Wallace and Bull
Connor as well as Rosa Parks and Fred Shuttlesworth.
He saw that it had created the Ku Klux Klan as well
as the Student Nonviolent Coordinating
Committee. That insight led Will to see racial
healing and equity, pursued through courage, love,
and faith as the path to spiritual liberation for
all.”
Jimmy Carter wrote of Campbell that he “tore down
the walls that separated white and black
Southerners.” And because the Black Panther
organizer Fred Hampton was doing the same thing in
Chicago, the FBI — which, along with the CIA, is the
de facto ally of the liberal elites in their war
against Trump and his supporters —
assassinated him.
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When the town Campbell lived in decided the Klan
should not be permitted to have a float in the
Fourth of July parade Campbell did not object, as
long as the gas and electric company was also
barred. It was not only white racists that inflicted
suffering on the innocent and the vulnerable, but
institutions that place the sanctity of profit
before human life.
“People can’t pay their gas and electric bills,
the heat gets turned off and they freeze and
sometimes die, especially if they are elderly,” he
said. “This, too, is an act of terrorism.”
“Theirs you could see and deal with, and if they
broke the law, you could punish them,” he said of
the Klan. “But the larger culture that was, and
still is, racist to the core is much more difficult
to deal with and has a more sinister influence.”
Campbell would have reminded us that the
demonization of the Trump supporters who stormed the
capital is a terrible mistake. He would have
reminded us that racial injustice will only be
solved with economic justice. He would have called
on us to reach out to those who do not think like
us, do not speak like us, are ridiculed by polite
society, but who suffer the same economic
marginalization. He knew that the disparities of
wealth, loss of status and hope for the future,
coupled with prolonged social dislocation, generated
the poisoned solidarity that give rise to groups
such as the Klan or the Proud Boys.
We cannot heal wounds we refuse to acknowledge.
The Washington Post, which
analyzed the public records of 125 defendants
charged with taking part in the storming of the
Capital on January 6, found that “nearly 60 percent
of the people facing charges related to the Capitol
riot showed signs of prior money troubles, including
bankruptcies, notices of eviction or foreclosure,
bad debts, or unpaid taxes over the past two
decades.”
“The group’s bankruptcy rate — 18 percent — was
nearly twice as high as that of the American
public,” the Post found. “A quarter of them had been
sued for money owed to a creditor. And 1 in 5 of
them faced losing their home at one point, according
to court filings.”
“A California man filed for bankruptcy one week
before allegedly joining the attack, according to
public records,” the paper reported. “A Texas man
was charged with entering the Capitol one month
after his company was slapped with a nearly $2,000
state tax lien. Several young people charged in the
attack came from families with histories of
financial duress.”
We must acknowledge the tragedy of these lives,
while at the same time condemning racism, hate and
the lust for violence. We must grasp that our most
perfidious enemy is not someone who is politically
incorrect, even racist, but the corporations and a
failed political and judicial system that callously
sacrifices people, as well as the planet, on the
altar of profit.
Like Campbell, much of my own family comes from
the rural working class, many espousing prejudices
my father, a Presbyterian minister, regularly
condemned from the pulpit. Through a combination of
luck and scholarships to elite schools, I got
out. They never did. My grandfather, intellectually
gifted, was forced to drop out of high school his
senior year when his sister’s husband died. He had
to work the farm to feed her children. If you are
poor in America, you rarely get more than one
chance. And many do not get one. He lost his.
The towns in Maine where my relatives come from
have been devastated by the closures of mills and
factories. There is little meaningful work. There is
a smoldering anger caused by legitimate feelings of
betrayal and entrapment. They live, like most
working class Americans, lives of quiet desperation.
This anger is often expressed in negative and
destructive ways. But I have no right to dismiss
them as irredeemable.
To understand is not to condone. But if the
ruling elites, and their courtiers masquerading as
journalists, continue to gleefully erase these
people from the media landscape, to attack them as
less than human, or as Hillary Clinton called them “deplorables,”
while at the same time refusing to address the
grotesque social inequality that has left them
vulnerable and afraid, it will fuel ever greater
levels of extremism and ever greater levels of state
repression and censorship.
The cancel culture, a witch
hunt by self-appointed moral arbiters of speech, has
become the boutique activism of a liberal class that
lacks the courage and the organizational skills to
challenge the actual centers of power — the
military-industrial complex, lethal militarized
police, the prison system, Wall Street, Silicon
Valley, the intelligence agencies that make us the
most spied upon, watched, photographed and monitored
population in human history, the fossil fuel
industry, and a political and economic system
captured by oligarchic power.
It is much easier to turn from these overwhelming
battles to take down hapless figures who make verbal
gaffes, those who fail to speak in the approved
language or embrace the approved attitudes of the
liberal elites. These purity tests have reached
absurd and self-defeating levels, including the
inquisitional bloodlust by 150 staff members of The
New York Times
demanding that management, which had already
investigated and dealt with what at most was poor
judgment made by the veteran reporter Don McNeil
when he repeated a racist slur in a discussion about
race, force him out of the paper, which management
reluctantly did.
Too often the targets of the cancel culture are
radicals, such as the feminists who run the
Vancouver Rape Relief and Women’s Shelter and who do
not admit trans people because most of the girls and
women in the shelter have been physically assaulted
and traumatized by those with male bodies. None of
the critics of these feminists spend ten or twelve
hours a day in a shelter taking care of abused girls
and women, many of whom were prostituted as
children, but
fire off screeds to attack them and cut their
funding. The cancel culture, as the Canadian
feminist Lee Lakeman says, is “the weaponization of
ignorance.”
The cancel culture was pioneered by the red
baiting of the capitalist elites and their shock
troops in agencies such as the FBI to break, often
through violence, radical movements and labor
unions. Tens of thousands of people, in the name of
anti-communism, were cancelled out of the
culture. The well-financed Israel lobby
is a master of the cancel culture, shutting down
critics of the Israeli apartheid state and those of
us who support the Boycott, Divestment, Sanctions
(BDS) movement as anti-Semites. The cancel culture
fueled the persecution of Julian Assange, the
censorship of WikiLeaks and the Silicon Valley
algorithms that steer readers away from content,
including my content, critical of imperial and
corporate power.
In the end, this bullying will be used by social
media platforms, which are integrated into the state
security and surveillance organs, not to promote, as
its supporters argue, civility, but ruthlessly
silence dissidents, intellectuals, artists and
independent journalism. Once you control what
people say you control what they think.
This cancel culture is embraced by corporate
media platforms where, as Glenn Greenwald writes,
“teams of journalists at three of the most
influential corporate media outlets — CNN’s ‘media
reporters’ (Brian Stelter and Oliver Darcy), NBC’s
‘disinformation space unit’ (Ben Collins and Brandy
Zadrozny), and the tech reporters of The New York
Times (Mike Isaac, Kevin Roose, Sheera Frenkel) —
devote the bulk of their ‘journalism’ to searching
for online spaces where they believe speech and
conduct rules are being violated, flagging them, and
then pleading that punitive action be taken
(banning, censorship, content regulation,
after-school detention).”
Corporations know these
moral purity tests are, for us, self-defeating. They
know that by making the cancel culture legitimate —
and for this reason I opposed locking Donald Trump
out of his Twitter and other social media accounts —
they can employ it to silence those who attack and
expose the structures of corporate power and
imperial crimes. The campaigns of moral absolutism
widen the divides between liberals and the white
working class, divisions that are crucial to
maintaining the power of the corporate elites. The
cancel culture is the fodder for the riveting and
entertaining culture wars. It turns anti-politics
into politics. Most importantly, the cancel culture
deflects attention from the far more egregious
institutionalized abuses of power. It is this smug,
self-righteousness crusade that makes the liberal
class so odious.
Doug Marlette, the Pulitzer Prize-winning
editorial cartoonist who created the comic strip
“Kudzu,” which featured a Campbell-inspired
character called Rev. Will B. Dunn, brought Campbell
to speak at Harvard when I was there. Campbell’s
message was met with a mixture of bewilderment and
open hostility, which was fine with me as it meant
the room swiftly emptied and the rest of the night
Marlette, Campbell and I sat up late drinking
whiskey and eating bologna sandwiches. Marlette was
as iconoclastic and acerbically funny as Campbell.
His cartoons, including one that showed Jesus on
Good Friday carrying an electric chair instead of a
cross and another that portrayed Jerry Falwell as
the serpent in the Garden of Eden, provoked howls of
protest from irate readers.
Campbell’s memoir, “Brother to a Dragonfly,” is
not only beautifully written — Campbell was a close
friend of Walker Percy, whose novels I also consumed
— but filled with a humility and wisdom that
liberals, who should spend less time in the
self-referential rabbit hole of social media, have
lost. He describes America, which routinely employs
murder, torture, threats, blackmail and intimidation
to crush all those who oppose it at home and abroad,
as “a nation of Klansmen.” He refused to draw a
moral line between the American empire, which many
liberals defend, and the disenfranchised and angry
whites that flock to racist groups such as the Klan
or, years later, would support Trump. The architects
of empire and the ruling capitalists who exploited
workers, stymied democracy, orchestrated state
repression, hoarded obscene levels of wealth and
waged endless war were, he knew, the real enemy.
Campbell remembers watching a documentary by CBS
called “The Ku Klux Klan: An Invisible Empire,”
after which he was invited to address the audience.
The film showed the murder of the three civil rights
workers in Mississippi, the castration of Judge
Aaron in Alabama, and the deaths of the four young
girls in the Birmingham Sunday school bombing. When
the film showed a Klan recruit pivoting right when
the drill master shouted, “Left face,” the audience
erupted in “cheers, jeers, catcalls and guffaws.”
Campbell writes that he “felt a sickening in my
stomach.”
Those viewing the film were a group convened by
the National Student Association and included New
Left radicals of the sixties, representing Students
for a Democratic Society, the Port Huron group,
young white men and women who had led protests at
campuses across the country, burned down buildings,
coined the term “pigs” to refer to police. Many were
from affluent families.
“They were students in or recent graduates of
rich and leading colleges and universities,” he
writes of the audience. “They were mean and tough
but somehow, I sensed that there wasn’t a radical in
the bunch. For if they were radical how could they
laugh at a poor ignorant farmer who didn’t know his
left hand from his right? If they had been radical
they would have been weeping, asking what had
produced him. And if they had been radical they
would not have been sitting, soaking up a film
produced for their edification and enjoyment by the
Establishment of the establishment — CBS.”
Campbell, who was asked to address the group
following the film, said: “My name is Will Campbell.
I’m a Baptist preacher. I’m a native of Mississippi.
And I’m pro-Klansman because I’m pro-human being.”
Pandemonium erupted in the hall. He was shouted
down as a “fascist pig” and a “Mississippi
redneck.” Most walked out.
“Just four words uttered — ‘pro-Klansman
Mississippi Baptist preacher,’ coupled with one
visual image, white, had turned them into everything
they thought the Ku Klux Klan to be — hostile,
frustrated, angry, violent and irrational,” he
writes. “And I was never able to explain to them
that pro-Klansman is not the same as
pro-Klan. That the former has to do with a person,
the other with an ideology.”
“The same social forces
which produced the Klan’s violence also produced the
violence in Watts, Rochester and Harlem, Cleveland,
Chicago, Houston, Nashville, Atlanta and Dayton,
because they are all pieces of the same garment —
social isolation, deprivation, economic conditions,
rejections, working mothers, poor schools, bad
diets, and all the rest,” Campbell writes.
And these social forces produced the nationwide
Black Lives Matter protests after the police murder
of George Floyd and the storming of the Capitol by
an enraged mob.
Campbell never asked any of the members of the
Klan he knew to leave the organization for the same
reason he never asked liberals to leave “the
respectable and fashionable organizations or
institutions of which they were a part and party,
all of which, I was learning, were more truly racist
than their Klan.”
This radical love was the core of Dr. Martin
Luther King’s message. This love informed King’s
steadfast nonviolence. It led him to denounce the
Vietnam War and condemn the US government as “the
greatest purveyor of violence in the world today.”
And it saw him assassinated in Memphis when he was
supporting a strike by sanitation workers for
economic justice.
Campbell lived by his oft-quoted creed, “If
you’re gonna love one, you’ve got to love ‘em all.”
Like King, he believed in the redemptive and
transformative power of forgiveness.
The ruling elites and the courtiers who trumpet
their moral superiority by damning and silencing
those who do not linguistically conform to
politically correct speech are the new Jacobins.
They wallow in a sanctimonious arrogance, one made
possible by their privilege, which masks their
subservience to corporate power and their amorality.
They do not battle social and economic injustice.
They silence, with the enthusiastic assistance of
the digital platforms in Silicon Valley, those who
are crushed and deformed by systems of oppression
and those who lack their finely developed politesse
and deference to linguistic fashion. They are the
useful idiots of corporate power and the emerging
police state. Cancel culture is not the road to
reform. It is the road to tyranny.
Chris Hedges is a Pulitzer Prize–winning
journalist who was a foreign correspondent for
fifteen years for The New York Times, where
he served as the Middle East Bureau Chief and
Balkan Bureau Chief for the paper. He previously
worked overseas for The Dallas Morning
News, The Christian Science
Monitor, and NPR. He is the host of the
Emmy Award-nominated RT America show On
Contact. Chris Hedges writes
a regular original column for ScheerPost.
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