By Kevin D. Williamson
Thursday, August 02, 2018
For some mysterious reason, my name keeps coming up in
connection with that of Sarah Jeong, a writer recently hired by the New York Times editorial board. I am not
familiar with her work, but there is a social-media campaign currently under
way, sometimes using my name, seeking to have her fired from the position in
response to some odious and boneheaded tweets that might be summarized as
“Derka derka white people.”
I am agnostic on the question of whom the New York Times hires and why. They
employ some excellent reporters, a couple of very good columnists (Hey, Ross!),
a fair number of mediocrities, and Paul Krugman.
I assume that the editors of the Times knew exactly who and what Jeong was when they hired her. If
not, then it isn’t Jeong who needs to be fired — it’s the negligent people who
hired her.
If, on the other hand, the Times is more or less satisfied with Jeong, then it should resist
the social-media mob campaign to have her dismissed. It is up to institutions to hold the line against mass
hysteria and the mob mentality of social media. I don’t know much of anything
about James Gunn, the director fired from the Guardians of the Galaxy franchise for making a bunch of ghastly
jokes, but I do know that Marvel Studios can and should say: “We’ll hire who we
want.” Marvel and the New York Times
have the resources and the standing to stand up to this kind of social-media
scalp collecting: All they need is the guts. I hope the Times has enough. Berkeley didn’t. ABC didn’t. Google didn’t. A few
book publishers I can think of haven’t.
I’ve heard some people on the right say, “If Kevin
Williamson has to get fired by the Atlantic,
then Sarah Jeong has to get fired by the New
York Times.” The Times can hire
and fire whomever it likes — but not in my name. I’m sure that many of the
people invoking my experience are well-meaning friends, but I’ll thank them to
leave me out of this.
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