Here's the thing: I don't think cancel culture exists, at least not in the form that is popularly disseminated. I think that cancel culture is one of two things, both of which are lumped together as an evil phenomenon.

Branch one is people rightfully getting called out and shut down for their goddamn idiocy. Justine Sacco is a great example, because she posted a dumb racist joke and then got fired. Why'd she get fired? Well, would you, if you were a person of color, want to work with a stupid person who makes racist joke? Maybe, maybe not. It's a liability for the company. See ya, dipshit. This is not a left thing, though. This tends to be led on Twitter by progressives, liberals, and unaffiliated decent people who are outraged by bigotry.

Branch two is weaponized discourse by the right. They plumb the depths of someone's social media and find shit someone said from years ago, remove context, sometimes even fake stuff, and they try to get people fired. Usually they target public media figures. You rarely see them going after a day-to-day person like a Justine Sacco. You see them go after James Gunn.

There are other, unaffiliated things that aren't part of cancel culture that also happen and they're their own boxes of rocks.

One example would be deplatforming, which the left definitely has done for idiots like Milo Yiannopoulis (as he tweeted here ). Ultimately they weren't even the ones who canceled him--see branch two. But leftists protested him and his tour where he threatened to out trans and undocumented students like a real piece of shit.

Another unrelated example would be targeted harassment. It's lumped in with cancel culture but it seems to be mostly about terrorizing marginalized people in public forums. JK Rowling bitched about being shouted at by trans people when she said horrible stuff, and a small sliver of unaffiliated people took that moment to say fucked up stuff to her about sexual assaulting her, but it would be extremely, extremely disingenuous to say that's representative of the majority of responses she got, let alone members of the trans community.

In short no one can tell me what the fuck cancel culture is, what its consequences are, or anything but it's pretty clear it's just a tired revival of so-called PC culture hysteria to paint reasonably asking neoliberal goons like Bari Weiss to fuck off as some sort of witch hunt.

    • gayhobbes [he/him]
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      4 years ago

      Let me be clearer then: cringe isn't really a good critique and it's childish

        • gayhobbes [he/him]
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          4 years ago

          So then read this instead.

          I like Mark Fisher, but he's wrong about this.

          • mrhellblazer [he/him]
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            4 years ago

            I like this piece way more, at least the author is playing with the themes and seems like a well-thought and good-faith article. It's bookmarked and will be reading later, thanks comrade

              • mrhellblazer [he/him]
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                4 years ago

                Just finished the article, I wish Krul engaged even further with Fisher, I would love to hear more of his thoughts on the Vampires' Castle and even the Hyde-Jekyll analysis, but honestly this is a really great piece. As such a reformation of the party line is in order (this is a meme, I'm not a child I swear lol):

                Read Exiting the Vampire Castle by Mark Fisher, then read Gothic Politics: A Reply to Mark Fisher by Matthijs Krul