The following was originally published at Spikedonline
I cannot find much I disagree with here, in fact I welcome views like this. RM
The progressive case against cancel culture
Dan Kovalik on why the left and the working class have the most to lose from censorship.
spiked: What inspired you to write the book?
Dan Kovalik: I’m a longtime peace activist and
anti-imperialist. I was moved to write the book after the cancellation
of another peace activist, a friend of mine called Molly Rush. She
helped form a peace and justice group in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania called
the Thomas Merton Center 50 years ago and has been a very prominent
activist ever since. In May last year, a little after the George Floyd
protests started, she reposted a meme on Facebook. It was a picture of
Martin Luther King and some text explaining that MLK never rioted or
looted, but nonetheless changed the world. Immediately, she was attacked
on social media. People said she had shared a racist post. She was
moved to apologise given these attacks, but this was not enough.
Eventually, the Thomas Merton Center said it couldn’t work with her any
longer.
The centre cancelled out all the good things this woman had done,
including as an activist who lobbied for African Americans to be
included in the construction industry. This was the last straw for me.
This was not a productive thing to be doing.
spiked: What other examples of censorship of the left caught your attention?
Kovalik: A good example I mention in my book is
Adolph Reed, a Marxist academic and long-time civil-rights activist. He
has essentially been cancelled because he says that although race is
important, class explains many things that people often try to explain
through race. The Democratic Socialists of America, which is probably
the biggest leftist group in America, cancelled a discussion he was
going to lead at the end of 2019 due to an article he wrote, in which he
said that class cannot be overlooked when discussing racial divisions.
He was accused of being a class reductionist, which is just absurd.
Today, if you even talk about class, you’re seen as racist and out of
the loop. So he doesn’t get much of a hearing anymore. I rarely see him
in publications or interviews. He’s been shunned, because he didn’t give
in to the prevailing narrative on these issues.
spiked: Why is it so important for the left in particular to fight cancel culture?
Kovalik: Free speech has always been important to
the left. The left is the side that tends to be targeted for censorship.
Studies show that even Facebook and Twitter tend to censor left-wingers
more than right-wingers.
One of the most censored types of speech, at least in the US and UK
(in fact, it probably fatally undermined the candidacy of Jeremy
Corbyn), is advocating for the rights of Palestinians. There’s an
aggressive movement in the US to get professors fired and people
deplatormed for being pro-Palestinian. Desmond Tutu, a Nobel Prize
winner from South Africa, had a speech cancelled in the US because he is
pro-Palestinian. It was inevitable that the left’s embrace of
censorship would come back to bite us.
Even within the left, we need to accept that we don’t know
everything. We need to be able to talk about the important issues of the
day without being fearful that a perceived misstatement is going to get
us cancelled. The Molly Rush example shows this. She was advocating for
peaceful protests. Peaceful protests tend to be more effective at
winning over people than violent protests. We need to be able to have
that discussion on the left. But it is being shut down and that is
counterproductive.
People seem to think cancelling other people is somehow a form of
activism. Real activism and social change have now been eschewed in
favour of piling on people to get them fired or deplatformed. That’s the
problem – you have a movement that cares more about that than about
actually winning real gains for working people.
spiked: How does cancel culture impact on workers’ rights?
Kovalik: It destroys solidarity. The idea that I, as
a worker, would unite with the administration to get another worker
fired is incredible. But that’s what’s happening. Look at when people
try to get professors fired. Most professors now are adjuncts, they
don’t have tenure, they get paid peanuts and have no benefits. Getting
one of those people fired really is an example of kicking downwards.
This is not progressive in any way.
The logical extreme of this approach came to fruition in one case
under Donald Trump. As I mention in the book, in 2019 the National Labor
Relations Board overturned years of labour law which had given very
broad free-speech protection to workers in the context of collective
action. Before this decision, workers were allowed to talk in a heated
way to employers, other employees and strike replacements, to use foul
and even offensive language, so long as they did not threaten actual
violence. But in a new case regarding General Motors, the board
overturned that law, seizing upon the moment in which progressives were
calling for people to be fired for offensive speech. The ruling lays the
ground for employers to fire or discipline workers for speech they deem
to be offensive. The board even upheld the disciplining of an
African-American employee who, when trying to make his point that the
company was asking for too great of a concession, essentially pretended
to be a slave and said ‘yes, Master’. This censorious mood has been
taken up by the right and turned against workers.
Society’s cancellers are privileged for the most part. They can sit
in their fuzzy slippers in bed and go on their computer and engage in
activism by piling on people. It’s a very comfortable way to feel good
about themselves. But they are not speaking for those who are suffering
through homelessness and hunger. People who have those problems don’t
have access to computers and WiFi. And it’s therefore unsurprising that
the cancellers don’t care about class issues. They see themselves as
above that.
spiked: Are the Democrats part of this problem?
Kovalik: The Democrats are now taking up the mantle
of suppressing speech in the name of social justice. Much of their base
supports that. It’s happening at the same time as they have abandoned
the working class. We are going to see the ability to protest and speak
freely start to collapse – and a lot of ‘progressives’ will be clapping.