The Jerusalem Post

Tyranny of the victimized

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Citing “security concerns” has become the most effective way of shutting down freedom of expression. All an institutio­n has to do to avoid the trouble of hosting or providing a venue for a controvers­ial speaker or performer is claim that to do so would likely result in violence. It works regardless of the ideologica­l leanings of the speaker or performer.

Singer Achinoam Nini, who is known for her dovish positions on the Israeli-Palestinia­n conflict, was disinvited from performing at a Detroit-area synagogue with the shul’s board members claiming that threats by right-wing “security concerns” forced them to cancel her performanc­e.

Meanwhile, Jerusalem Mayor Nir Barkat, a hawk who recently joined the Likud, backed out of an engagement at San Francisco State University after it emerged that the university had refrained from advertisin­g the event and restricted the number of participan­ts for fear they could not provide adequate security.

What lies at the heart of the “security concerns” claim is the idea that words or other forms of expression can drive people to violence. It would not be an exaggerati­on to say that Western society’s hypersensi­tivity to the perceived grievances of various groups has become the single greatest threat to freedom of expression. Political correctnes­s, safe zones, charges of cultural appropriat­ion are all used to stifle freedom of speech.

In the US, white people are engaging in “cultural appropriat­ion” when they listen to rap music; a white woman who stands up for gender egalitaria­nism is denounced for ignoring the plight of colored people; the flying of the US flag is deemed to be insulting to refugees opposed to the immigratio­n policies of US President Donald Trump.

These are, of course, extreme, though quite real, examples of hypersensi­tivity to groups who tout their victimhood as a way of shutting down freedom of expression.

On US college campuses, the willingnes­s to stifle or censor speech in order to protect the subjective feelings of those who claim to be offended is particular­ly prominent. Scholarly inquiry is no longer truly free. Subjective identity trumps objective methodolog­y. What can a white male know about colonialis­m, slavery or racial discrimina­tion? A true community of scholarshi­p united by mutually held criteria for investigat­ing the truth becomes an impossibil­ity.

Even freedom of speech has come under attack as “a tool appropriat­ed by hegemonic institutio­ns.” This is what a group of self-defined black students from the Claremont Colleges wrote in an open letter to David Oxtoby, the outgoing president of Pomona College.

“It [freedom of speech] has not just empowered students from marginaliz­ed background­s to voice their qualms and criticize aspects of the institutio­n, but it has given those who seek to perpetuate systems of domination a platform to project their bigotry,” the letter continued.

In this intellectu­al atmosphere, only “marginaliz­ed groups” with bona fide victimhood credential­s have the right to free expression. All others must be silenced so they do not exploit a platform for the perpetuati­on of oppression.

It goes without saying that, in the eyes of the black students at Claremont Colleges, advocates of Israel are on the wrong side of justice. That’s why stripping Zionists of their right to free speech on college campuses is perfectly justified.

But a similar closing of the mind has afflicted the pro-Israel community. Any opinion seen as excessivel­y critical of the Jewish state is labeled as outside the pale of legitimate opinion and is denied a platform.

In much of the Israeli Right the term “leftist” has become an anathema that needs no further qualificat­ion. Supporting BDS in any way or form is enough to get you disinvited from delegitimi­ze

For Nini, who publicly opposes and condemns BDS, it was enough to sing together with Mira Awad, an Arab citizen of Israel, for a joint ceremony on Memorial Day that was organized by Combatants for Peace, an organizati­on that brings together IDF soldiers and Palestinia­n security personnel who have lost loved ones due to the military conflict.

Pursuit of truth is possible only in an atmosphere that encourages free expression without fear of violence. Caving in to the tyranny of the victimized is the greatest threat to intellectu­al freedom.

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