Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Time to update the résumé

- DANIELLA GREENBAUM

As an opinion columnist for Business Insider until my resignatio­n Thursday, I had grown accustomed to strong reactions from readers when I wrote about Hamas (I’m not a fan) or the problems with accusation­s of cultural appropriat­ion. But I didn’t see this one coming.

Commenting on recent criticism of actress Scarlett Johansson for taking a movie role that called on her to portray a transgende­r man, I made the commonsens­ical and, I admit, not particular­ly original observatio­n that actors specialize in make-believe and ought to be allowed to take any jobs they like.

The brief online post stirred immediate fury—among some of my Business Insider colleagues. As has been reported elsewhere, several people within the organizati­on complained to the editor, who responded by scrubbing the ScarJo post from the site and institutin­g a new policy of requiring “culturally sensitive” work to be reviewed by an executive editor or an editor in chief before it can be published. As the Daily Beast reported, he also suggested that writers and editors talk with a group of employees who would volunteer to be sounding boards on issues of cultural sensitivit­y.

Given that in these thin-skinned days just about any subject can be called “culturally sensitive,” and given that a committee would basically ensure that my column became a safe space, I had no alternativ­e but to resign. And so I’ve had the disorienti­ng experience of becoming one small data point in what is a disturbing­ly large set.

Columnists on the right and the left have known for years about the ferocious blowback that awaits the expression of unpopular ideas. But now the definition of “unpopular” has expanded so widely that reasonable views that might have seemed mainstream just a few years ago can be deemed unacceptab­le by selfappoin­ted censors. Even publicatio­ns that pride themselves on holding open-minded values are watching their backs.

The problem is not confined to the college campus, where conservati­ve speakers are being shouted down or disinvited. It’s not confined to the media, where publicatio­ns and television stations and their audiences seem increasing­ly comfortabl­e in liberal or conservati­ve silos where conflictin­g outlooks and even conflictin­g informatio­n are unwelcome. It’s beginning to permeate every area where we use language— every area of life.

The only way to fight it is head on. Defend the idea that more speech is always better.

Ultimately, even the wokest of the warriors will realize that when it comes to outrunning the predatory mob they’ve created, no space is safe.

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