Conservatives should critique, not copy, left-wing cancel culture. I was working at The Christian Post during the Obama administration and spent a lot of time reporting on the many incidences of left-wing cancel culture at the time. I still recall the disappointment I felt in many of my left-leaning friends’ unwillingness to critique their own side. I was thankful, however, to befriend others on the left during this time, such as Will Saletan and Kirsten Powers, who were willing stand up for the rights of conservatives, even when they disagreed with them. Powers authored a book on the topic in 2015 titled, The Silencing: How the Left is Killing Free Speech. I’ve never mentioned this publicly before, but when I was a professor and interviewing for many tenure track positions, there was at least one job, maybe more, I know I did not get because of my conservative views. It’s hard to describe the feeling of being on the receiving end of cancel culture, especially from people who claim to value classical liberalism and tolerance. Today, as government power has shifted from left to right, so has cancel culture.¹ There are many recent examples, but the cancellation of Jimmy Kimmel hits a new low due to its absurdity. After Kimmel made some jokes related to the death of Charlie Kirk (video here), FCC Chairman Brendan Carr threatened ABC, which is owned by Disney. ABC then removed Kimmel from the air indefinitely. Ironically, this is happening after claims that Kirk died a free speech hero. Notably, ABC’s decision came after Nexstar announced it would pre-empt Kimmel’s program. Nexstar is currently in negotiations to acquire a rival company for $6.2 billion, which will need FCC approval. Kimmel had mischaracterized the political beliefs of Kirk’s alleged shooter as MAGA, something Kimmel said he had planned to address Wednesday before the show was canceled. Kimmel also mocked Trump’s reaction to the death of Kirk. Regardless of the reason, in a free society government officials shouldn’t be dictating what jokes are acceptable. And now I’m witnessing many of my right leaning friends tie themselves in knots trying to defend this. That same feeling of disappointment I felt for my lefty friends during the Obama administration I feel for my righty friends today. Kimmel isn’t the only victim of right-wing cancel culture this week. At least 15 people so far, including MSNBC political analyst Matthew Dowd, have been fired or suspended for not mourning Kirk the right way due to an online campaign by MAGA activists. If you’re not opposed to cancel culture when it comes from your own tribe, you’re not really opposed to cancel culture. If you’re not opposed to cancel culture when it comes from your own tribe, you’re not really opposed to cancel culture. If you consider yourself on the right side of American politics, your voice is especially important right now. This is not a time to remain silent or, worse still, defend these actions. Show that you will defend the rights of those you may disagree with. Or as in this case, the right to joke about the president and his allies. If you consider yourself on the left side of American politics, remember how you feel right now. The right wing will not be in control of the government forever, assuming we remain a democracy. The cancel culture pendulum may yet swing back to the left. That is when your voice will become important. Show that you will defend the rights of those you may disagree with. What Else We’re ReadingMore in Common: “Attitudes towards political violence in the United States”
YouGov: “What Americans really think about political violence”
RNS: “Charlie Kirk's AI resurrection reveals new era of digital grief”
David French: “There Are Monsters in Your Midst, Too”
Liberal Currents: “Yes, It’s the Guns. It’s Also the Phones. Life online is corroding the virtues that make liberal democratic life tenable.”
1 Right-wing cancel culture existed during the Obama administration, and before, but it wasn’t dominant and didn’t have the use of government authority like we see today. Thanks for subscribing to American Values Coalition’s newsletter. We’re a 501c3 organization. If you appreciate our work, please consider making a tax-deductible donation: |