What does canceling mean in the context of political speech?
It does not mean making fierce, critical, or even rude comments about something someone has written or spoken when the intention of those is to debate the issue at hand (1). That, my friends, is joining the debate, though any moderator certainly has the right to mute that rudeness and should censor any ad hominem attacks.
Some have said that it is like cancelling the snail mail when you go on that beach vacation or like canceling your subscription to the New York Times because they front-paged an article written by mentally disordered weirdo, wouldn't let anyone comment on it and you can spot three factual errors in it and that gives you dyspepsia on the beach. (2)
Others have compared it to boycotting a store for its policies, refusing to buy its products and refusing to frequent its premises. From this angle the canceling of an idea or a person or an organization is similar to a commercial boycott: You refuse to buy it and enlist others to join your boycott.
That gentle definition doesn't fit most of the online cancellations I have observed in real time. They are more like first boycotting a store, then standing outside its windows equipped not only with protest signs and megaphones but also with rotten eggs and perhaps even projectiles for breaking the windows, and when the store finally closes (because the protests never end), making certain-sure that it can never ever open for business again, not even in a busy commercial area where competing stores sell products which directly counteract the messages of the store which is considered harmful. (3)
It is possible to cancel an idea or a person, the above rough definition states, but in practice the way to cancel an idea is to cancel everyone who tries to express it. Thus, in the rest of this post cancellation refers to people getting cancelled though of course the real goal is to get ideas cancelled by turning them into something so costly to utter that nobody will.
Cancelling people for political speech has a long history. It has been practiced by governments (4), by political parties from both sides of the aisle, and by powerful business interests. Although the current cycle is one where the cancel culture (5) has support on the left or far left (6), it was fairly recently thriving on the right or the far right and is likely to do so again in the future.
Thus, the explanation for the existence of a cancel culture cannot be derived from the political leanings of those who are currently pushing it or even from the seismic changes that the Internet has created by providing almost everyone with instant anonymous access to individuals someone, somewhere, might like to cancel.
But the Internet, and especially the rise of social media do affect the special flavor of today's cancel culture:
1. Anonymity means that joining in the cancelling of someone comes now with minimal personal consequences. It's an almost no-risk romp for those who like to express their anger and to feel their power by joining in a faceless mob of avenging angels. And it is far, far easier to cancel someone when one can stay a long distance away from watching the real-world effects of that cancellation on, say, the cancelled person's family.
2. Even numerically very small ideological groups can create viable online coalitions powerful enough to cancel a person for wrong-speak because the costs of coalition building are minimized, and, perhaps for the first time in history, disadvantaged groups can get together online and so join in the historical trend of wielding the shining sword of those who cancel (7).
3. The Internet makes cancelling a person so easy. It provides instant access to much juicy information, ranging from the person's family and employer to the person's professional affiliations, religious ties and even any recreational group he or she might belong to.
Many of those can be almost instantly contacted by email to increase the chances that something very unpleasant or at least inconvenient will happen to the wrong-speaker, and this can be done at the same time by several avenging angels!
This saturation tactic is probably the most vicious aspect of mob-led social media cancellations (a death by thousand paper cuts) because it is executing a sentence given by no judge or jury and because the person so sentenced might, in fact, be innocent of any wrong-doing (8). But even if wrong-speak can be "proven", turning this process on can magnify any intended punishment out of all fair proportions.
All these reasons explain why a cancel culture is particularly likely to thrive in the cyber era. That is a poignant and bittersweet thought about the Internet once thought to herald in the era of truly open and free democratic debates, accessible to all and not just the most privileged few.
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Act III, the last part of this post, will focus on some additional characteristics of the current round of the cancel culture and on the responses of those who disagreed with the Harpers Letter. I hope it won't take quite as long to write as this one did...