By Douglas Murray
Wednesday, September 05, 2018
This week, it was Steve Bannon’s turn to be the subject
of a no-platforming effort after it transpired that both The New Yorker and The
Economist had invited him as a speaker to liven up one of their annual
yawn-fests. Cue outrage on social media and plenty of talk of “not
legitimizing” fringe voices. All of which allowed a lot of fringe voices to
pretend that the former chief strategist to the president of the United States
is some obscure, fringe whacko. These people are now just one office away from
trying to “no platform” the U.S. president on the grounds that he is too
obscure and unimportant a figure to engage with.
The other line of attack is that Bannon’s views are so
despicable that they must not be engaged with. In the U.K., a commentator
called Laurie Penny announced that she was dropping out of The Economist festival because of Bannon’s slated appearance. She
gave her rationale to the BBC’s Newsnight
thus: “He is not interested in listening to me. He is not interested in
listening to anybody else. These people do not want to engage.”
So Ms. Penny chose not to engage in the same festival as
Steve Bannon because she believes that he doesn’t want to engage. Which must
count as a sort of pre-emptive hit of non-engagement: “I’m going to not engage
with you before you can not engage with me.”
Anyhow — the most interesting aspect of this storm is the
old issue of what are “legitimate” views, what are “illegitimate” views, and
the age-old question of who gets to decide.
Here is Chelsea Clinton on the matter of Bannon’s
banning:
For anyone who wonders what
normalization of bigotry looks like, please look no further than Steve Bannon
being invited by both @TheEconomist & @NewYorker to their respective events
in #NYC a few weeks apart.
I have nothing against Chelsea Clinton, and I am certain
she would have accumulated 2.34 million Twitter followers through her talents
alone. But I still cannot see why she — or any other applicant for the role of
national censor — should decide who is or is not “normalizing bigotry.” In
fact, Ms. Clinton may be one of the worst people to opine on the matter.
For as anyone who watched the obsequies for the great
Aretha Franklin last week will have noticed, both of Chelsea Clinton’s parents
were up onstage for that occasion.
And the most shocking aspect of that event (even more
than the presiding minister fondling Ariana Grande live onstage at a funeral)
was the moment when we all said, “Isn’t that Louis Farrakhan up there onstage?”
And indeed it was. Mr. and Mrs. Clinton seemed to have no problem sharing a
platform with one of the world’s most notorious racists and anti-Semites.
Indeed, when Farrakhan waddled over to President Clinton to shake his hand, he
was positively oozing with the satisfaction he obviously gets — and has always
gotten — from such encounters. For handshakes with — and proximity to — the
likes of the Clintons is the only thing that stops Farrakhan from being
recognized for what he is: no better or worse than a David Duke.
As of this moment, the official Twitter page of Louis
Farrakhan is still up and running. And the “pinned Tweet” at its head is
still this.
So as I say, I just cannot understand the rules here. So
far as I know, Steve Bannon has never given a speech titled “Thoroughly and
completely unmasking the Satanic Jew and the Synagogue of Satan.” If he had,
then I doubt he would be so proud of it that it would be still sitting at the
top of his Twitter page. And if he had, then I imagine that the Clintons would
run the other way from him even if it meant no-platforming someone at a
funeral.
But as I say, the rules are all in flux. And in the
meantime, some of the people attempting to hold themselves out as arbiters of
what is or is not “legitimate” opinion would appear to be doing little more
than furthering their own political and social agendas. Since I’m sure they
wouldn’t want that impression to continue, perhaps some effort could be put in
to trying to find a policy with some consistency here?
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