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Intense disagreements about the Israel-Hamas war fuel cancel culture
A week after the Israel-Hamas war broke out, Michael Eisen, editor-in-chief of the scientific journal eLife, took to X to an article from the satirical newspaper The Onion bearing the headline, âDying Gazans Criticized For Not Using Last Words To Condemn Hamas.â After receiving pushback, Eisen , âEvery sane person on Earth is horrified and traumatized by what Hamas did and wants it to never happen again.â Nonetheless, he said he was âalso horrified by the collective punishment already being meted out on Gazans, and the worse that is about to come.â
Days later, eLifeâs board of directors removed Eisen from his position as editor-in-chief.
The board Eisenâs âapproach to leadership, communication and social media has at key times been detrimental to the cohesion of the community we are trying to build and hence to eLifeâs mission.â Whatever other issues may have contributed to the decision, Eisenâs endorsement of The Onionâs satire was apparently the last straw.
In the wake of the October 7 attack, ĂÛÖÏăÌÒ explained that amid discord over the Israel-Hamas war, America needs to recommit to â not abandon â free speech. The number of FIRE cases involving student and faculty speech related to the conflict has predictably increased in the last few months.
The scene off campus is also bleak.
Eisenâs ouster is just one of many examples of someone losing their job or platform because of what theyâve said about the conflict. The 92nd Street Y an event featuring novelist Viet Thanh Nguyen after he signed an open letter calling for an end to the âunprecedented and indiscriminate violenceâ by Israel in Gaza. Melissa Barrera her starring role in the âScreamâ horror franchise for sharing a post accusing Israel of genocide. A Florida school district a teacher on leave after she sent district officials an email asking them to âpublicly recognize the Palestinian communityâ in its communications about the conflict.
And while most examples have involved pro-Palestinian speech, pro-Israel speakers are hardly safe from retaliation. NYU Langone Health cancer biologist Benjamin Neel for pro-Israel social media posts including a political cartoon that lampooned pro-Palestinian protesters by depicting them holding signs with messages like âBEHEADING IS RESISTANCEâ and âPROUD OF OUR RAPIST MARTYRS.â
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We shouldnât ignore the climate of fear and mass self-censorship that arises when people know their paycheck depends on hiding their political opinions in and outside of work.
With the exception of the Florida school district, these incidents donât involve a government actor, so they donât raise First Amendment issues. Yet, as FIREhas said many times, the government isnât the only threat to free speech. In âOn Liberty,â John Stuart Mill warned of the threat of âsocial tyranny,â or the âtendency of society to impose, by other means than civil penalties, its own ideas and practices as rules of conduct on those who dissent from them; to fetter the development, and, if possible, prevent the formation, of any individuality not in harmony with its ways, and compels all characters to fashion themselves upon the model of its own.â
Free speech rights and free speech culture
As important as First Amendment rights are, free speech also depends on a cultural climate that supports the exercise of those rights. FIREExecutive Vice President Nico Perrino wrote that free speech culture entails a set of ânorms that see value in curiosity, dissent, devilâs advocacy, thought experimentation, and talking across lines of difference; where our first instinct in response to speech we dislike isnât to find a way to censor it â or âcancelâ the speaker â but to meet it with more speech.â
As the Israeli-Palestinian conflict escalates, so must our commitment to free speech
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FIREhas long defended the free speech rights of speakers on all sides of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.
A thriving culture of free expression relies in part on cultural institutions that embrace and promote this value. If anything, itâs even more important for such institutions to fulfill their role of facilitating dialogue when seismic world events deepen societyâs ideological fault lines.
The actions of private employers can also have a major impact on free speech culture. Theyâre not bound by the First Amendment, so they can generally choose to dissociate from individuals based on their views. Freedom of association is a crucial right, especially for organizations with a distinct expressive purpose. Planned Parenthood should not have to keep on a staffer who vocally opposes abortion rights. Likewise, the NRA should have the right to fire an employee who supports repealing the Second Amendment. As the Supreme Court said more than 60 years ago, âIt is beyond debate that freedom to engage in association for the advancement of beliefs and ideas is an inseparable aspectâ of civil liberties including freedom of speech.
But while we should respect employersâ freedom of association, we shouldnât ignore the climate of fear and mass self-censorship that arises when people know their paycheck depends on hiding their political opinions in and outside of work, even when those opinions have nothing to do with their job or the mission of their employer.
A norm against firing people for their speech on matters of public concern
At this point, some readers might ask: âOK, but are you saying companies shouldnât fire employees who openly celebrate terrorism?â
First, as the examples in this piece show, cancel cultureâs predictable domino effect is now resulting in people losing jobs for speech about the Israeli-Palestinian conflict that most people consider pretty tame compared to applauding the murder of civilians.
Does anyone know where the line is?
If you donât know what you can say, and the consequences for saying the wrong thing are as serious as losing a job, many are rationally going to avoid saying anything that could conceivably get them in trouble. They may completely steer clear of a subject as divisive and polarizing as the Israeli-Palestinian conflict rather than try to navigate a career-ending minefield.
Second, the argument here isnât that companies should never fire an employee for their speech. Some employers may personally find working with people who hold certain extreme views intolerable, and, ultimately, itâs their right to dissociate from that person. But if more employers simply put more weight on the free speech side of the scale when making these decisions, that would be a win for the culture. We donât want to find ourselves in a society where most or all employers â not just cause-based organizations but ordinary businesses â treat any off-the-clock comments deviating from the employerâs views on hot-button political issues as grounds for termination.
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An amendment before the U.S. House impermissibly threatens the expressive rights of students and faculty across the country.
There are no hard and fast rules. But employers should at least embrace a strong presumption against firing someone for opinions they express in their personal capacity, outside of work, on matters of public concern.
Private employers donât have to abide by the First Amendment, but they should look to its sensible principles as a guide for instituting policies that donât unduly restrict employeesâ freedom of speech in their private lives. In the public employment context, courts balance employeesâ right to comment as citizens on matters of public concern against an employerâs ability to run an efficient operation. At the end of the day, a business is a business, and if, for example, an employeeâs speech significantly hurts the companyâs bottom line or creates so much discord within the company that itâs unable to function efficiently, itâs understandable for the employer to take action.
But all things considered, free speech culture benefits from fewer people losing their livelihoods for speaking their minds, especially off the clock. Gainful employment should not come at the cost of democratic participation.
Consider, too, that speech-related firings are often a knee-jerk reaction to outside pressure â and many are likely an attempt to preempt backlash, given the current climate. Transient social media mobs controlling the range of acceptable speech on issues of active public debate is not ideal. Every time employers yield to pressure campaigns, they encourage more of the same. Behavior that gets rewarded gets repeated. Often the employerâs best solution is just to hold its nose for a few days. The mobs tend to run out of steam quickly.
In the free speech culture that FIREis championing, these campaigns would be vanishingly rare, and businesses would find themselves in these difficult positions less often. More people would reject the idea that someoneâs political opinions should determine whether they can pursue their desired line of work.
Cancel culture doesnât change minds
This certainly isnât the first time people have lost positions for expressing even relatively mainstream political opinions. The term âcancel cultureâ entered the lexicon well before October 7. As Greg Lukianoff explains in his new book, â,â the phenomenon has pervaded American culture for nearly a decade. It wasnât long ago that Levi Strauss its president to resign over her opposition to school closures during the COVID-19 pandemic, or that a leading medical journal its editor-in-chief on leave because of comments a deputy editor made criticizing the use of the term âstructural racism.â Gregâs book is filled with similar stories.
Ultimately, itâs up to each and every one of us to help foster a culture of free expression in which Americans can reap the full benefits of the First Amendment.
Successful cancellations donât change minds, but they do drive resentment in people sympathetic to the speakerâs views, making them eager to turn the tables at the first opportunity. A shared commitment to hashing out our disagreements in the arena of public debate is the only way out of this vicious cycle of reprisal. By opposing cancel culture even when it targets people with whom we disagree, we provide greater protection to the speech we value.
If more companies stood up for their employeesâ right to speak in their personal lives on matters of public importance, it would set a precedent that encouraged other companies to follow suit, slowing the momentum of cancel culture.
Ultimately, itâs up to each and every one of us to help foster a culture of free expression in which Americans can reap the full benefits of the First Amendment. Either we live our values now â when it matters most â or invite their demise.
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