Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

The social media mobs

Reason could eventually become gagged and bound

- By Meghan Daum

Ispend a lot of time these days trying to tell myself that the “speech wars” are a manufactur­ed problem, or at least not the most pressing issue we’re dealing with at the moment. When children and parents are being ripped from each other at the border and we have a president whose incompeten­ce runs about even with his malevolenc­e, stories about the silencing power of social media mobs shouldn’t rank high on the concern-o-meter.

But the past few weeks have brought us two high-profile Twitter pile-ons that I see as emblematic of how the social media mess, manufactur­ed or not, hobbles public discourse and makes it harder to deal with those more pressing issues. One of the pile-ons involves “Guardians of the Galaxy” director James Gunn, targeted by an online mob after alt-right conspiracy theorist Mike Cernovich dug up some incriminat­ing tweets and blog posts that Gunn generated many years ago.

The remarks, some of them dating back more than a decade and most of them reflecting the ethos of Troma, the legendary kitschschl­ock-horror B-movie outfit where Gunn got his start, included jokes about rape and pedophilia. They were meant to be satirical, but they were also flat-footed, unfunny and just generally awful. Gunn apologized for them six years ago, which seemed to meet the 2012 standard of atonement. Last week, Cernovich, a Trump defender who routinely mobilizes his followers to go after ideologica­l opponents with baseless smear campaigns, put mindless Twitter users to work tarring Gunn as a pedophile.

In real life, Gunn has a reputation as a champion of women and LGBT people, and as an overall nice guy. The first two “Guardians of the Galaxy” films have also grossed more than $1.6 billion worldwide. But Disney was apparently frightened enough by the mob to fire him from the third. (Full disclosure: I was in graduate school with Gunn in the early 1990s. We haven’t been in contact since, though he was nice then, too.)

But these particular­s aren’t as important — or as relevant to the larger mess — as what led Cernovich to attack Gunn in the first place. Gunn had defended another entertainm­ent figure caught in a Twitter imbroglio, and along the way, he threw shade on right-wingers for destroying the nation.

That other entertainm­ent figure was actor and filmmaker Mark Duplass, who, with his brother and producing partner, Jay Duplass, is pretty much the ne plus ultra of Hollywood’s sensitive, indie elite. Unlike Gunn, Duplass wasn’t taken down by an enemy. He was pilloried by his own side, other progressiv­e types who saw fit to excoriate him for a single tweet.

And here’s where my concern-o-meter shoots into the red zone. This tweet did not joke about rape or pedophilia. It merely invited fellow liberals to “consider following” conservati­ve journalist and commentato­r Ben Shapiro.

“I don’t agree with him on much,” Duplass wrote, “but he’s a genuine person who once helped me for no other reason than to be nice. He doesn’t bend the truth. His intentions are good.”

The blowback was swift and brutal, as Shapiro-haters dug up objectiona­ble things Shapiro has said (there are plenty) and found Duplass guilty by associatio­n. Duplass then deleted the first tweet and fell over himself apologizin­g. He described the first tweet as “a disaster on many levels.”

It’s actually that second tweet that’s the disaster. Because it makes it achingly obvious that there’s a new boss in town, one even more powerful than a corporatio­n like Disney. That boss is the social media mob. And we all work for it now.

Actually, we don’t just work for it. We’re gagged and bound by it.

For the past several years, and now more than ever, millennial­s and post-millennial­s rising into positions as gatekeeper­s in media, technology, education and other major sectors, are increasing­ly either in thrall to or shrinkingl­y beholden to a small, loud minority of their peers who have organized themselves into a volunteer force of thought police.

Riding the winds of social justice activism and the Trump resistance movement, the thought police see transgress­ion everywhere.

They twist relatively innocuous comments, such as Matt Damon’s doomed #MeToo remarks last year, into high crimes that demand not just public apology but public penance. (Damon vowed to “get in the back seat and close my mouth for a while.”) They deploy terms such as “misogynist” and “transphobi­c” as weapons against anyone with a dissenting or even slightly nuanced point of view. And in a stinging irony, they create a circular firing squad that someone such as Cernovich can take advantage of.

Even the calmer, less indoctrina­ted members of the gatekeeper class stay in compliance by writing headlines and publishing stories that echo the mob, despite what they

really think. New York magazine’s “The Cut” called Duplass’ original Shapiro tweet “mystifying.” The Daily Beast dismissed Duplass as an “impression­able liberal.”

During the Damon scandal, just about every outlet joined the social media chorus and denounced him as a mansplaini­ng menace. Believe me, in private, many of those same journalist­s were saying something different.

The outsize influence of the thought police can be disastrous for the Gunns, the Duplasses and the Damons, but it also portends catastroph­e for the intellectu­al health and integrity of our society.

Reason itself could be stigmatize­d out of existence. Taking its place will be fear-driven pandering to the bad-faith positions and sloppy thinking the social media mobsters use to keep us captive.

The only way around this hostage crisis is to stop meeting their demands.

 ?? Tim Brinton ??
Tim Brinton

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States