By Ben Domenech
Friday, April 06, 2018
The firing of Kevin Williamson from The Atlantic on the day he was set to give an opening Q&A in
their offices was sadly unsurprising given the pattern of these types of hires.
It is an incident that will be referred to largely as a “media story”, meaning
that Williamson is not a figure so prominent nor The Atlantic a brand so ubiquitous as to graduate this to a
national story, in the way that the situations of Brendan Eich at Mozilla or
James Damore at Google became national cable news stories. But they really are
the same story, a story about the times that we live in and the changing nature
of America. They tell a story about what happens when a talented individual has
deeply held beliefs those in his profession find unacceptable.
This story is a predictable continuation of the left’s
ownership not just of media but indeed of all institutions. It is depressing.
It is predictable. And it is where we are as a country now. It is not confined
to the realm of ideas. Eich, Damore, Williamson and others are subject to
blacklists and HR reports and firing in every arena of industry and culture. If
you have wrongthink, you will not be allowed for long to make your living
within any space the left has determined they own – first the academy, then the
media, then corporate America, and now the public square. You will bake the
cake, you will use the proper pronoun, and you will never say that what Planned
Parenthood does is murder for hire, and should be punished as such under the
law.
Imagine what the few lonely voices that inhabit a
position at a prominent publication or network to the right of Hillary Clinton
on social issues if their hiring was taking place right now. Imagine what Ross
Douthat would be going through if the Times
hired him today (recall he was at The
Atlantic before that). Imagine how his deeply held theology would be
interpreted by an audience that has no respect for it whatsoever, and view it
more as anti-science mysticism than as belief rooted in thousands of years of
human experience.
In the case of Williamson, even someone who literally
wrote a book titled The Case Against
Donald Trump was unacceptable for The
Atlantic because wrongthink about what ought to be the legal ramifications
for tearing an unborn child apart – ramifications that ANY pro-lifer of any
seriousness has wrestled with in conversation. Serious ethical and legal
ramifications for destroying the unborn or the infirm are debated in philosophy
classes every day – Williamson’s mistake, as an adopted son born to an unwed
teenage mother, was being too honest about his belief that what he sees as the
daily murder of infants should, in a more just society, have severe legal
consequences. Well, that’s not what we want around here.
This brings to mind Herbert Marcuse’s “Repressive Tolerance”, published in
1965. This essay does a good job of summing it up.
Marcuse argued that, because of the
radical repressiveness of Western society, a tolerance for all viewpoints
actually contributed to social oppression. A pervasive network of assumptions
and biases implicitly privileges the viewpoint of the powerful, so that
seemingly “equal” presentations of opposite opinions actually end up benefiting
the viewpoint of the powerful… Because of social programming, the inhabitants
of a given society automatically favor certain values. The ideological playing
field’s lack of levelness means that seemingly equal presentations of ideas are
not really equal.
In the light of this situation,
Marcuse made a rather cunning inversion (one that has been aped countless times
since by cultural organs across the United States): The fact that society is so
radically unequal means that we should be intolerant and repressive in the name
of tolerance and liberty. He rejected what he termed “indiscriminate tolerance”
— a tolerance that accepts all viewpoints — in favor of “liberating tolerance”
or “discriminating tolerance.” Unlike many of his disciples, Marcuse was frank
about what this intolerance would mean: “Liberating tolerance, then, would mean
intolerance against movements from the Right and toleration of movements from
the Left.
That is what is required to make one’s living primarily
from these institutions: you must bend the knee. Consider the major hires at
the Washington Post, New York Times, and the networks since
the 2016 election. The additions overwhelmingly haven’t been Trump fans – they
have been different critics of the president and the administration from a
slightly more rightward position. Kevin Williamson was consistent with this.
The point is that the audience, for all their airs about diversity of
viewpoints, really just wants their existing views re-expressed to them in
different forms and by different voices. Get through the diversity veneer, and
you’ll find the same rule: No wrongthink can be tolerated.
When contrarian voices are elevated to publications once
viewed as places where contending ideas shared space, organized online backlash
is now inevitable. It will come in the forms of constant professional shaming,
of hashtag and email campaigns, and of attempts to undermine from within the
people who’ve made the decision to venture slightly away from the established
dominant editorial path. Digital life is threatening liberal institutions in a
way they understand on some frantic level, but shudder to comprehend and
ultimately are failing to combat.
When such a mob forms, it is important to understand you
cannot escape them. You can only face them. It is a moment that demands courage
in the face of the braying of Social Justice Warriors on the internet and
within your own offices. But that is in short supply.
For those with views placing them on the right, the only
way to win is not to play this game anymore. The only way to win is to build up
our own platforms and institutions – our own Hillsdales, our own TV shows, our
own Atlantics. And that’s why The Federalist exists.
The pressure surrounding the American public square is
building. It is steadily destroying the standing of institution after
institution and bringing a certain frantic tension to every aspect of life. It
will, eventually, explode. What that explosion looks like, I cannot tell you.
But I can tell you that if you think Trump was the explosion, you are wrong.
You haven’t even seen it yet.
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