The Daily - Cancel Culture, Part 2: A Case Study
Episode Date: August 11, 2020Yesterday on “The Daily,” the New York Times reporter Jonah Bromwich explained how the idea of cancel culture has emerged as a political and cultural force in 2020. In the second of two parts, he ...returns with a case study. Guest: Jonah Engel Bromwich, who writes for the Styles section of The New York Times, spoke with Zeeshan Aleem about his experience of cancel culture. For more information on today’s episode, visit nytimes.com/thedaily Background reading: Here’s the first episode in this two-part series exploring cancel culture’s origins and political power.There’s an emerging class of people canceled for bad, conservative or offensive opinions. Cancellation is bringing many of them together.For teenagers, cancellation on social media is not a new phenomenon. Here are some of their own experiences with being canceled.
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From the New York Times, I'm Michael Barbaro.
This is The Daily.
If I tweet or hashtag about how you didn't do something right,
then I can sit back and feel pretty good about myself.
Because, man, you see how woke I was? I called you out.
I've been canceled. I've been canceled before they had canceled culture.
The only thing that has changed is that people have been held accountable
to folks who always thought they were untouchable.
And now they realize they're not.
Yesterday, my colleague Jonah Bromwich explained how cancel culture has emerged as a political and cultural force in 2020.
One of their political weapons is cancel culture, driving people from their jobs.
Today, Jonah returns with a case study.
It's Tuesday, August 11th.
You may not even remember me from high school because you were in my brother's grade.
And you were one of my brother's friends. No, I remember you. Yeah. But we didn't talk that much.
Yeah. You were always someone he spoke extremely highly of in terms of what he liked to do,
which was talk and argue and stuff.
So I was like very aware of you.
So Jonah, tell me about your friend.
So Zeeshan Aleem is someone that I originally got to know in high school.
And I didn't know him as well as I knew of him.
And that's because he was three years older than me in the same grade as my brother.
in the same grade as my brother.
And my brother, who loves to argue and loves to figure out what he thinks about things,
would go to Zeeshan when he wanted to talk about something serious,
when he wanted to talk about politics,
when he wanted to talk about something he didn't know quite that well.
Zeeshan was that guy for him.
I think it's just for me personally,
and this makes me very out of touch with internet culture
and just what it's like to live in 2020.
But I tend to think very slowly about things.
And I'm not saying that's a virtue, but that's just sort of the way I am.
And I'm often skeptical of my own opinions on things and disagree with myself while articulating
things.
But I was...
And I really wanted to be like that as well.
I mean, I know what I'm scared of, which is like, anytime I tweet, I'm worried about what people are going to think about it.
And, you know, I panic.
And so fast forward to adulthood.
I mean, like you, for the longest time,
I was sort of terrified of making a joke that would be misinterpreted.
And I'm running into him in New York.
We're both in media.
And one of the things we talk about when we run into each other
is both kind of how abysmal we are at Twitter and specifically how that kind of conversation,
the kind that my brother liked to have with Zeeshan, is actually really difficult on Twitter.
And so we're both a little timid, we're both a little shy. But then,
earlier this year, I start to see that Zeeshan, despite me thinking I related to him on this,
is actually really starting to talk about the subjects that interest him. And one of the subjects he starts
talking about is cancel culture. And I was like, oh, here we go. This is someone who's very much
like me thinking kind of in similar ways about this thing, but he's going to talk about it in
public where I can see it. So I was excited to see that. Well, I'm glad that you see some kind of growth. I only continue
to feel that I totally fail at this medium and am continually overwhelmed by it. And where does
this story with Zeeshan, this encounter with cancel culture, where does it begin? So it's
helpful to know that Zeeshan's a progressive political writer. So he writes a lot about
activism and power, the political left, and he writes a lot about activism and power,
the political left,
and he's engaging with those topics in his work,
but also on Twitter.
Do you remember when you came across that phrase
or when you started to think about it
as something that might actually be worth looking into?
When I initially saw the term get traction,
I did find it to resonate with me to some extent,
you know, at least in social media culture, there seemed to be a tendency to sort of look at things
through sort of a good versus bad binary, casting people out or exiling them by the sort of larger
culture online to be somebody who is no longer, you know, with it or moral or an upstanding citizen
of Twitter culture, which I didn't necessarily consider to be the worst thing in the world.
But it was odd and intrigued me. And I was curious if this, you know, kind of culture
would continue to grow over time. So just to be clear, it's not that Zeeshan doesn't agree
that a lot of people being held to account on Twitter have done something wrong or have said something racist. And he cares about the underlying issues that sit at the heart
of the encounters. But he's also kind of questioning, especially when these things that we
label as cancellations happen, like what is that energy being put to use for? So a lot of, I think,
the primary energy that it makes sense to sort of kind of focus on is focusing on how to dismantle
the systems that give rise to this behavior in the first place, which involves things like addressing
institutional racism, which manifests in things like housing or in education or wealth inequity
or mass incarceration. There's all kinds of ways that historically grounded material racism has
helped produce the kind of behavior we're seeing today. And I'd say, of course, it doesn't mean that there isn't work
to be done on the level of dealing with personalities and interpersonal behavior.
And of course, there's a huge debate today. So in other words, he wants to be involved in
substantive conversations about the actual issues that sit at the heart of these encounters, right?
Like he doesn't want to be talking about the people
and the fighting that result from them.
He wants to talk about the issues.
So, you know, I remember it being a slow summer day in July
and logging on to Twitter and then sort of seeing this video.
You're six feet away from me.
You're harassing me.
I'm not harassing you.
You are infecting us.
I feel threatened.
I feel threatened!
Surfacing over and over again in my feed.
You're coming close to me.
Back off!
Yes.
Threaten me again!
This man in Florida at a Costco's had a belligerent outburst
in response to being asked by a customer to put a mask on.
Back the f*** up or you're f***ing phone down!
Yes, sir.
And this video, which was about 17 seconds long,
really caught the attention of a lot of people because of the level of aggression of the person involved in the video.
The man clenched his fists and walks towards the phone in kind of a sort of menacing way, saying, back off and I feel threatened.
And probably most notably, he's wearing a bright red shirt that says, Running the World since 1776.
What did the 1776 shirt, what did that say to you about the person wearing it?
The shirt seemed to me to evoke a certain kind of political worldview,
probably somebody who has right-wing politics and kind of a make America great again attitude.
What was your immediate reaction to that?
Like, how did you feel about it?
Well, I thought the way that the man was behaving was sort of unhinged.
The behavior was obviously very aggressive.
It was inappropriate.
Most importantly, it was extremely unsafe.
You know, there's a pandemic going on.
He wasn't wearing a mask and he's almost spitting on the person he's talking to.
So, you know, I thought it was definitely, you know,
inappropriate behavior.
You're six feet away from me.
You're harassing me.
I'm not harassing you.
You are infecting us.
I feel threatened.
And Zeeshan says that he started seeing this video...
Threaten me again!
...going viral. You're harassing me.
I'm not harassing you.
You are infecting us.
You're coming close.
Back off!
Back the f*** up or you're f***ing blown down.
You're six feet away from me.
You're harassing me.
This was like kind of the summer of viral videos of fights over masks.
I'm going to put you on my 3,000 follower Instagram feed.
Mostly locals.
Hi everyone.
I work for Costco and I'm asking this member to put on a mask 3,000 follower Instagram feed. Mostly locals. Hi, everyone.
I work for Costco and I'm asking this member to put on a mask because that is our company
policy.
And I'm not doing it because I woke up in a free country.
That man harassed me for not wearing a mask.
You guys are violating federal laws.
Get that on camera.
Did you think, oh, I should tweet this video or I should tweet my outrage about this video
or were you not interested in it in that way yet?
I was just trying to kind of size it up and figure out what was going on.
The video was so short that I was curious if there was any other information, you know, to be obtained about the situation.
So what I started doing was actually just looking through the replies.
And, you know, I'm going through them and sort of seeing the mockery and criticism and condemnations.
And one thing in particular kind of caught my eye, which is that one Twitter user seemed to be sort of spearheading a search campaign to try to identify who this guy was and figure out more about him.
In particular, it seemed that the idea was to try to figure out where he worked
and to try to get him fired.
So Zeeshan says that he goes and looks into the Twitter user
who seems like he's really kind of leading the charge
to get the guy in the 1776 shirt fired.
And he finds out a couple of things about this guy. So he finds out that the guy is in marketing,
that he looks like he's like an influencer of some kind. He'd appeared on a 30 under 30 list
to Zeeshan. He's really like appearing to be kind of a type. All right. So, you know,
you saw the clip of the 1776 shirt guy in Costco, and maybe he didn't seem like the kind of guy you'd necessarily want to be friends with.
But then how did you feel now about seeing the marketer gunning for this guy's job?
I was sort of confused about it, I suppose.
There is basically a 17-second clip here, and the idea of immediately playing the role of judge jury executioner in terms of taking a
person's job seemed to me sort of a hasty conclusion to come to and not something that
given the time span could have necessarily been sort of well thought out i also wasn't sure whether
or not the idea of trying to identify someone random on the internet was a good idea there's
a number of documented cases of people identifying the
wrong person based off of who they think they found on a photograph or a video. And then,
you know, the wrong person getting doxxed or getting fired or getting threatened by random
people on the internet. And so, you know, I think targeting jobs is a bad idea.
Right. And at the risk of asking you something that may seem incredibly obvious,
why do you think targeting jobs is a bad idea? Well, I think there's a lot to say about this. First is the issue of the sort
of severity of this sentence. You know, in American society, when you lose your job,
you're not only losing your income, but you're also losing your health insurance. And if you
are the, you know, an earner in a family, that could also potentially mean that your family also loses their health insurance.
And then, of course, you have to take into account that we have a very weak social safety net happen to, you know, sort of immediately get another one,
you're potentially condemning them
to extreme sort of material deprivation.
And you also have to take into account the fact
that when people lose their jobs in these ways,
they might become radioactive on the labor market
and become unhirable in many situations.
And of course, all this stuff is sort of done
without deliberation, without broader context
we don't even know who's whipping up these sort of
job firing campaigns, I mean it could potentially be
a group of teenagers going for a joyride online
and the other issue
So Zeeshan is thinking
and thinking about this issue
and eventually he decides he's going to take those thoughts
and he's going to put them together into a thread,
which is kind of how he does things on Twitter.
And in this thread he actually mentions the marketing guy
that he sees leading the campaign to get the 1776 guy fired.
So I think I tweeted at him a couple of times
and I also tagged him when I wrote this critique
saying that I thought that, you know, this is something that is sort of out of line with sort of progressive values.
And I found his response to sort of be dismissive. He sort of dodged my argument saying, well,
you know, are you saying that this behavior is okay or acceptable? And I said, no, not at all. All I'm saying is that this specific
mode of punishment doesn't seem to be the right way to deal with the situation at this moment.
And then when I said that, he sort of responded by dismissing me. And it didn't really go any
further than that. Do you remember how he dismissed you? Yes. He responded, calm down, sir.
how he dismissed you? Yes. He responded, calm down, sir. It's a thread. I mean, did it bother you?
I was just surprised that someone who had just sort of gathered a pack of vigilantes to take someone's job down and apparently played a pretty successful role in that genuinely did not seem to
have any rationale for the ethics of what he was doing. So Zeeshan's a little frustrated with the marketer's response
and he steps away from his computer and he goes about his life.
But meanwhile, the thread is still there.
It's just kind of floating on Twitter and it's picking up a like here
and it's picking up a retweet there and it's slowly kind of growing in popularity.
And I'm kind of tracking this kind of along with all the other things I'm doing.
And then the thread gets the kind of retweet you really don't want to get.
So I think I was making some tea over in my kitchen
when I received a text message, popped up on my phone, opened up the text,
and my friend sent me a screenshot of the tweet thread that I'd sent out.
And two things stood out to me immediately.
One, it had seemed to start going viral.
It was going to the hundreds of retweets.
And secondly, it showed that I'd been retweeted by Jack Posobiec.
And I was immediately shocked by this news.
Bill Clinton is a rapist!
Bill Clinton is a rapist! Bill Clinton is a rapist!
So Jack Posobiec is like the king troll
of alt-right Twitter.
I said comic pizza was really only about 30 minutes
from where I live here.
He's someone who propagated the pizza gate conspiracy.
This alleged pedophile activity going on.
You would kind of sense it.
The minute he's retweeting you,
you know that a certain section of the pretty far right is going to be interested in what you have to say.
And it's going to be pretty unpleasant.
A lot of news is not paying attention to this.
A lot of news is not bringing it out.
Go look at my Twitter.
I've just put up all of the pictures.
And Zeeshan starts to see that right-wing Twitter is coming in droves to his thread.
It was one of those things where when I first saw it, I was really shocked and surprised. But then over time, I sort of was
able to figure out what was going on. I mean, basically, the reason that it was being retweeted
was because what I was saying was critical of something that a progressive had done.
But the reason that it struck me as sort of absurd is the substantive points I was
making were all coming from a progressive or left perspective of criminal justice and being a less
punitive society and the gutting of the welfare state and, you know, our employment system.
None of them are really kind of digging into the points that Zeeshan's making. And instead,
they're actually really focused on Zeeshan's characterization
of the marketing guy and what the marketing guy was up to.
And they're actually going directly after the marketing guy.
All of a sudden, a lot of people who had swarmed over from sort of the Trump sphere
start attacking him and criticizing him,
start saying things that sound threatening or, you know, cruel.
And they end up digging up a number of tweets that are sort of unseemly, potentially racist,
definitely compromising or hypocritical for somebody who has a hashtag Black Lives Matter
in their bio.
And they dig up all this old and yeah, offensive stuff
that the marketing guy has said in the past.
And they're using that to like come right back at him
and try and quote unquote, cancel him.
He seems to become basically the sort of victim
of a new job targeting campaign
and appears to have the barrel of his own gun pointed back at him,
which was really remarkable. So it's like a ricochet. Yeah. So Zeeshan, who was really just
looking to play this role as a commentator, trying to help people figure out what's going on in the
culture, gets pulled into this drama. And so he's not only a common hater, he arguably actually causes the whole second wave because his thread is the incentive for all these Jack Posobiec followers to go after the marketer.
Did you feel used?
of latest example of how online discourse is so incredibly bad faith and how so much of the way people boost what other people say is not necessarily ideologically sincere, but as long
as it's tactically advantageous, it will sort of be pushed forward. So in this situation,
what I was saying was things that
people on the right are actively hostile to about having better health care and better protections
for the unemployed. But the reason they were boosting it was because the fact that at least
on a surface level, it was criticizing the idea that progressive activists are doing things that
are inappropriate and was an indictment of the left.
And an example, the fact that Trump's America is persecuted.
And so it's this really remarkable phenomenon where people are not necessarily engaging with the substance or the specifics of what anyone else is saying,
saying, but instead are merely trying to sort of advance their own specific narrative or their own specific political goal by scoring points in this sort of really shallow or cheap way.
Because the funny thing is that if any of, you know, Jack Posobiec's followers had read through
what I said, they'd actually be exposed more to progressive ideas. But the reality is people just
see the first thing I say and say, oh, this is a great example
of how the left has just gone crazy.
Right, and they were using your identity too.
Some people were saying, look, even this progressive guy
thinks that this has all gone too far.
Yeah, definitely.
But do you think you should have been surprised by this?
When in history of Twitter being what it is right now
have things like this gone well on Twitter?
Yeah, I mean, there's probably a general rule
that when something goes viral enough,
like nothing good can come of it.
But yeah, I mean, there's constant,
constant context collapse online.
And what that means is that intentions and the specific kind of, you know, broader background behind any specific set of actions just sort of vanishes when it's presented to certain crowds and can so quickly be used as fodder in another political battle that it's, I mean, it's just genuinely astonishing.
battle that it's, I mean, it's just genuinely astonishing. In a way, both these guys got canceled, right? The 1776 guy got canceled and then the marketer got canceled. But what they did
and who was doing the canceling and the result it had was completely different. And so for Zeeshan,
who's actually in the middle of all this, kind of seeing how different each context is and how
they're just completely collapsed by the term cancel culture, I think that's really eye-opening for him.
I should add, by the way, that the final chapter of this story involves me receiving an email,
the subject line of which said, cancel culture canceler, which, you know, basically said that I was no better
than anyone else in this situation. So I end up being accused of basically being a part of the
culture that I was decrying in some ways. But it was a pretty fitting end to the saga.
Right. So it's actually like a triple cancellation.
It's an attempted triple cancellation. I think I'm not yet canceled.
Got it.
We'll be right back.
So Jonah, you walked us through a complicated tale of cancellations where one person's job was under threat.
Another person had his history dug up on Twitter.
And your friend, Zeeshan, despite his best intentions, found himself playing a role in all of this.
And I wonder how this experience has affected how he's thinking about all this.
Yeah, you know, it's interesting.
Zeeshan is trying to use Twitter in this way that I never really have figured out how to do.
And obviously, in this case, it didn't work out that well.
I mean, he immediately got dragged into this thing.
I don't think that Twitter rewards asterisks and ums and skepticism, ambivalence, questions.
I think Twitter rewards absolute claims, you know, simple sort of black and white, good and evil allegories and binaries and strong declarations of truth that leave little room for interpretation.
of truth that leave little room for interpretation.
Yeah. So, I mean, does it make you just more cynical about your ability to kind of do what you set out to do, which is argue and persuade and think through problems in a way that's
serious and that you clearly kind of mean to be helpful and good?
I think there's a great deal about the very infrastructure of social media that are
explicitly designed to incentivize this kind of behavior, to encourage people to be adversarial
towards each other. But I don't think all is necessarily lost. I think it is still possible
to create, you know, at least subcultures online and these platforms and in other places
that are at least more encouraging of, you know, open debate. And this really does also exist
across the political spectrum, I would say, of, you know, people trying to engage with each other
in a way that is, you know, actually with a real desire to be productive, I think.
So it's interesting, actually.
Zeeshan is not giving up this very sensible,
logical, by-the-books way of tweeting at all.
It did make him reconsider one key part of the message
that he sent.
It did change my mind about using the term cancel culture.
I'm pretty sure that tweet thread is the last time
that I've used it.
And there's a couple of reasons for that. One is the last time that I've used it.
And there's a couple of reasons for that.
One is there's a coherence problem, which is the fact that cancel culture is something that some people have called kind of a suitcase term, which is that, you know, people will end up packing a whole variety of completely disparate terms and ideas into this one phrase.
And at this point in time, it can refer to things that are, you know, quite different. Everything
from having a sort of adversarial sort of civil society online, you know, people just being mean
to each other. It can refer to the idea of ousting people from organizations for saying or doing bigoted or sexist or racist things in the past.
It can refer to boycott campaigns.
It can be used for, as we discussed, the idea of campaigning to get someone fired from their own job.
And the reason this is a problem is because when people debate cancel culture, it's a moving target.
And it's hard to know what someone's referring to
when someone else is talking about people can be using different definitions, and then in effect,
be either intentionally or unintentionally strawman each other by using different definitions. And so
a lot of people will use a sort of more mild instances of what's commonly understood as cancel
culture to sort of say it's not a big deal. And then certain people emphasize
the sort of harsher elements of it
to say that this represents its true essence.
And it just becomes very difficult to refer,
to sort of discuss in a way that really advances debate.
And so I think now Zeeshan thinks that the term itself,
like the term cancel culture,
even though he's still concerned about
some of the behavior that it refers to, is obstructing his ability to talk about that behavior, right? The term
is preventing him from talking about what the term is supposed to refer to,
because it's such a distraction, right? Like, it turns even these progressive points that he lays
out so, so carefully into fuel for alt-right Twitter. I mean, that's the power of this term,
but also why it's become totally meaningless for him.
I think specificity is the path to enlightenment.
And I think going forward,
the idea is to just lay out the specific things
that bother you.
And I would be-
So it's more than a semantic debate.
It's about how language gets used.
Yeah, I mean, let's think about what happened in 2016, right? There's actually
a very similarly loaded phrase. It is 9 p.m. on the East Coast and the moment of truth has arrived.
Welcome to the first debate night of the 2016 presidential campaign. I'm Megyn Kelly.
So you'll remember that President Trump in 2016 took political correctness and really made it kind of a weapon.
You've called women you don't like fat pigs, dogs, slobs and disgusting animals.
How will you answer the charge from Hillary Clinton, who is likely to be the Democratic nominee, that you are part of the war on women?
The big problem this country has is being politically correct.
I've been...
So political correctness also can refer to so many different kinds of things.
But polls show that the phrase political correctness,
the actual words political correctness,
it's just
viewed overwhelmingly as negative. People have a negative response to whatever they think political
correctness is. And recently, a Politico poll found that something really, really similar is
happening with the phrase cancel culture. So it found that, you know, a quarter of Americans had
not even really heard of it. They hadn't formed an opinion on it. But if you're familiar with the phrase cancel culture, what this poll found is that you
probably think it's a negative thing and that it has a negative impact on society. So owning a
phrase like that, owning a phrase that for people is just this like big blast of, oh, I don't like
that. That's an incredibly powerful thing. And to be able to take that phrase and then put it on
your opponent and say, my opponent is associated with cancel culture. That's even incredibly powerful thing. And to be able to take that phrase and then put it on your opponent and say my opponent is associated with cancel culture,
that's even more powerful.
You're taking this phrase that means
so many different things to so many people,
but they all don't like it.
And you're associating it with someone
who is your political enemy.
That can be an astonishingly powerful political tactic.
So Jeffrey Toobin of The New Yorker has this quote
that I've been thinking about a lot recently that I think applies to this situation. So the quote is
actually talking about the Mueller report, but it actually, it really does work perfectly here.
So the quote is, simplicity rarely loses to complexity in battles in the public square.
Angry mobs are trying to tear down statues of our founders to face our most sacred memorials
and unleash a wave of violent crime in our cities.
Many of these people have no idea why they're doing this,
but some know exactly what they are doing. So then it really should be no surprise,
given that we know cancel culture is this incredibly complex and difficult to understand
thing, but also that it's a negative thing that Americans don't like, that heading into the 2020
election, the president has recognized these features of
the phrase cancel culture, and it's become, for him, a new favorite weapon. One of their political
weapons is cancel culture, driving people from their jobs, shaming dissenters and demanding total submission from anyone who disagrees. This is the very definition
of totalitarianism. And it is completely alien to our culture and to our values.
And it has absolutely no place in the United States of America.
Jonah, thank you once again.
We appreciate it.
Thanks, Michael.
We'll be right back. Here's what else you need to Nerdeh.
On Monday, the Prime Minister of Lebanon, Hassan Diab,
and members of his cabinet resigned amid rising public anger at the government there over the massive explosion last week that killed more than 150 people
and wounded more than 6,000.
150 people and wounded more than 6,000.
In a televised speech, Diab said that he stood with the people of Lebanon and blamed widespread corruption for the explosion, which occurred at a site where thousands of tons of ammonium
nitrate had been stored for years,
despite repeated requests that the government remove it.
But the resignations did little
to quell the growing demonstrations in Beirut,
where protesters are now calling
for the country's president to resign as well.
And what occurred in our downtown and surrounding communities was abject criminal behavior,
pure and simple.
Between Sunday night and Monday morning in Chicago, hundreds of people broke into stores
and clashed with police in the city's downtown,
in what Mayor Lori Lightfoot described as an unprovoked crime spree.
This is not legitimate First Amendment protected speech.
These were not poor people engaging in petty theft to feed themselves and their families.
This was straight-up felony criminal conduct.
This was straight-up felony criminal conduct.
The crowds smashed windows and looted businesses,
prompting city officials to briefly raise the bridges to and from downtown to try to stop the unrest.
The Times reports that the confrontation may have been a response
to a police shooting of a city resident
and to misinformation about that encounter that spread online.
By Monday morning, Chicago police had arrested more than 100 people.
That's it for The Daily.
I'm Michael Barbaro.
See you tomorrow.