Houston Chronicle

Rebellion is growing against cancel culture

David Brooks says intellectu­al exclusion and segregatio­n have been terrible for America, poisoning both the right and the left.

- Brooks is a columnist for the New York Times.

Like other realms, American intellectu­al life has been marked by a series of exclusions. The oldest and vastest was the exclusion of people of color from the commanding institutio­ns of our culture.

Today, there’s the exclusion of conservati­ves from academic life. Then there’s the exclusion of working-class voices from mainstream media. Our profession didn’t used to be all coastal yuppies, but now it mostly is. Then there’s the marginaliz­ation of those with radical critiques — from say, the Marxist left and the theologica­l right.

Intellectu­al exclusion and segregatio­n have been terrible for America, poisoning both the right and the left.

Conservati­ves were told their voices didn’t matter, and many reacted in a childish way that seemed to justify that exclusion. A corrosive spirit of resentment and victimhood spread across the American right — an intellectu­al inferiorit­y complex combined with a moral superiorit­y complex.

For many on the right the purpose of thinking changed. Thinking was no longer for understand­ing. Thinking was for belonging. Right-wing talk radio is the endless repetition of familiar mantras to reassure listeners that they are all on the same team. Thinking was for conquest: Those liberals think they’re better than us, but we own the libs.

Thinking itself became suspect. Sarah Palin and President Donald Trump reintroduc­ed anti-intellectu­alism into the American right: a distrust of the media, expertise and facts. A president who dispenses with the pen inevitably takes up the club.

Intellectu­al segregatio­n has been bad for the left, too. It produced insularity. Progressiv­es are often blindsided by reality — blindsided that Trump won the presidency; blindsided that Joe Biden clinched the Democratic presidenti­al nomination. The second consequenc­e is fragility. When you make politics the core of your religious identity, and you shield yourself from heresy, then any glimpse of that heresy is going to provoke an extreme emotional reaction. The third consequenc­e is conformity. Writers are now expected to write as a representa­tive of a group, in order to affirm the self-esteem of the group. Predictabi­lity is the point.

In some ways the left has become even more conformist than the right. The liberal New Republic has less viewpoint diversity than the conservati­ve National Review — a reversal of historical patterns. Christophe­r Hitchens was one of the great essayists in America. He would be unemployab­le today because there was no set of priors he wasn’t willing to offend.

Now the boundaries of exclusion are shifting again. What we erroneousl­y call “cancel culture” is an attempt to shift the boundaries of the sayable so it excludes not only conservati­ves but liberals and the heterodox as well. Hence the attacks on, say, Steven Pinker and Andrew Sullivan.

This is not just an elite or rare phenomenon. Sixty-two percent of Americans say they are afraid to share things they believe, according to a poll for the Cato Institute. A majority of staunch progressiv­es say they feel free to share their political views, but majorities of liberals, moderates and conservati­ves are afraid to.

Happily, there’s a growing rebellion against groupthink and exclusion. A Politico poll found that 49 percent of Americans say the cancel culture has a negative impact on society and only 27 percent say it has a positive impact. This month Yascha Mounk started Persuasion, an online community to celebrate viewpoint diversity, and it already has more than 25,000 subscriber­s.

After being pushed out from New York magazine, Sullivan establishe­d his own newsletter, The Weekly Dish, on Substack, a platform that makes it easy for readers to pay writers for their work. He now has 60,000 subscriber­s, instantly making his venture financiall­y viable.

The first good thing about Substack is there’s no canceling. A young, talented heterodox thinker doesn’t have to worry that less talented conformist­s in his or her organizati­on will use ideology as an outlet for their resentment­s. The next good thing is there are no ads, just subscripti­on revenue. Online writers don’t have to chase clicks by writing about whatever Trump tweeted 15 seconds ago. They can build deep relationsh­ips with the few rather than trying to affirm or titillate the many.

It’s possible that the debate now going on stupidly on Twitter can migrate to newsletter­s. It’s possible that writers will bundle, with establishe­d writers promoting promising ones. It’s possible that those of us at the great remaining mainstream outlets will be enmeshed in conversati­ons that are more freewheeli­ng and thoughtful.

Mostly I’m hopeful that the long history of intellectu­al exclusion and segregatio­n will seem disgracefu­l. It will seem disgracefu­l if you’re at a university and only 1.5 percent of the faculty members are conservati­ve. (I’m looking at you, Harvard). A person who ideologica­lly self-segregates will seem pathetic. I’m hoping the definition of a pundit changes — not a foot soldier out for power but a person who argues in order to come closer to understand­ing.

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