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Abstract

ckled down. It required the development of social media, politics based on social identity instead of class, and neoliberalism, the successor to Keynesian liberalism.</p><p id="5dde">Cancel culture is mob justice. The cruelest cancelers issue death threats, but few of them want to physically harm anyone. They want to socially and economically destroy violators of the cancelers’ unwritten code of conduct. When told their punishment is greater than their target’s crime — the consequences of mobbing include mental breakdowns and suicide — cancelers shrug and say, “freedom of speech is not freedom from consequences.” It is the the philosophy of bullies who insist their victims made them do what they did. They reject the idea that the consequences of speech should be speech.</p><p id="a625">Because the cancelers’

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code is unwritten, their saddest victims are people who were trying to do and say the right thing but used the wrong words. When Mercedes Lackey confused “people of color” with “colored people”, identitarian crusaders in science fiction fandom immediately set out to cancel her. (See <a href="https://readmedium.com/has-any-writers-organization-treated-a-writer-as-badly-as-sfwa-treated-mercedes-lackey-536ead7f2d0d">Has Any Writers’ Organization Treated A Writer As Badly As SFWA Treated Mercedes Lackey?</a>)</p><p id="1185">Whether cancel culture first took form in science fiction fandom, I do not know. but the earliest example I can cite was Cherokee author William Sanders, who was canceled in 2008. I’m currently revising a Medium post about that; expect it later today or sometime tomorrow.</p></article></body>

Cancel Culture: Older than Socrates and Newer than the Internet

Saying cancel culture is ancient is both true and trite — it’s like responding to a mention of the electric car by saying wheeled vehicles have been around for five and a half thousand years. Cancel culture is the 21st century version of the ancient desire to destroy heretics and infidels. It began in the US and has parallels to an older US phenomenon, McCarthyism, but if McCarthyism is Witch-Hunting 2.0, cancel culture is the New McCarthyism or Witch-Hunting 3.0. It began at the schools for the rich, Harvard and Yale, then spread to other expensive schools, then trickled down. It required the development of social media, politics based on social identity instead of class, and neoliberalism, the successor to Keynesian liberalism.

Cancel culture is mob justice. The cruelest cancelers issue death threats, but few of them want to physically harm anyone. They want to socially and economically destroy violators of the cancelers’ unwritten code of conduct. When told their punishment is greater than their target’s crime — the consequences of mobbing include mental breakdowns and suicide — cancelers shrug and say, “freedom of speech is not freedom from consequences.” It is the the philosophy of bullies who insist their victims made them do what they did. They reject the idea that the consequences of speech should be speech.

Because the cancelers’ code is unwritten, their saddest victims are people who were trying to do and say the right thing but used the wrong words. When Mercedes Lackey confused “people of color” with “colored people”, identitarian crusaders in science fiction fandom immediately set out to cancel her. (See Has Any Writers’ Organization Treated A Writer As Badly As SFWA Treated Mercedes Lackey?)

Whether cancel culture first took form in science fiction fandom, I do not know. but the earliest example I can cite was Cherokee author William Sanders, who was canceled in 2008. I’m currently revising a Medium post about that; expect it later today or sometime tomorrow.

Mobbing
Cancel Culture
Mccarthyism
Social Justice
Anti Racism
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