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Let the Revolution Eat Its Own Children

AmericanRenaissance
AmericanRenaissance - 1,938 Views
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1,938 Views
Published on 29 Mar 2021 / In News and Politics

Jared Taylor mocks people who claim to want a broad exchange of opposing ideas – except for the ideas they don’t like. Once enough people are “canceled,” it may dawn on them that no one should be.

First posted to BitChute on July 24, 2020.

The transcript of this video is available here: https://www.amren.com/videos/2....020/07/let-the-revol

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Ian Smith
Ian Smith 2 years ago

Great quotes from the video:

“It has never been more true that no matter how loony a leftist you are, there will always be someone even more loony than you who thinks you are a fascist. Let’s start with this guy, Gary Garrels. He used to be a respected senior curator at the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art. He raised a lot of money to buy art by women, people of color, and LGBTQs. But he made the mistake of saying that he wasn’t going to cut out white men entirely. That’s all it took to make him a white supremacist, and he had to go.

Until recently, David Shor was a data analyst at a progressive consulting firm, Civis Analytics. His job was to help Democrats win elections. He tweeted about a paper that had found that in 1968, when there were violent black protests, it increased the number of people who voted Republican, while peaceful black protests helped Democrats. Don’t you think that when there is looting and arson in an election year, progressives might want to think about that paper? Instead, this one tweet was interpreted as an insult to blacks — whose righteous rage apparently justifies looting and arson — and David Shor was fired. …

Here’s a guy writing for the Russian site RT, in an article called “Who are the real racists? The woke mob tries to redefine racism to hide their own bigotry.” He’s making Bari Weiss’s point: “Black Lives Matter and ‘Woke Twitter’ are redefining racism to weaponize the charge against anyone they choose.” If you disagree with “the woke mob,” it calls you a racist and destroys you. But then he adds that that kind of treatment is fine for some people: “Individuals like Jared Taylor or Richard Spencer are not tolerated.”

The people who say that name-calling has gone too far can always tell you exactly how far it should go. As the brilliant cartoonist Stonetoss points out, cancel culture is fine, so long as it is crushing your conservative enemies. But it’s gone too far if it crushes a good little liberal like you.

A final example: Ben Shapiro says this:

It’s self-serving to say you don’t like the cancel culture when you’re trying to pry open the Overton Window JUST wide enough to escape, but not wide enough to allow open conversation with others obviously within the mainstream political conversation who disagree with you.

In other words, you’re a hypocrite if you rail against cancel culture but don’t care if it smashes people you don’t like. But Mr. Shapiro is happy to smash people he doesn’t like. Here, he says, “Of course there are legitimate racists and we should target them, we should find them and we should hurt their careers because racism is unacceptable.” Mr. Shapiro has a whole list of what he calls Alt-Right types whose careers should presumably be hurt: Peter Brimelow, Jim Goad, John Derbyshire, Pat Buchanan, Steve Sailer — even Donald Trump — and, of course, your servant.

Mr. Shapiro wants to be exactly what Bari Weiss says was so stifling about the New York Times. He wants to be the high priest of the “enlightened few whose job is to inform everyone else.” They’re all claiming *they* know who’s good and who’s bad. *They* want to decide what you can read and what you can think. They disagree only on where to draw the line. …

Let the revolution eat its children. I’m sorry for the victims, but I hope they learn something. I hope they begin to wonder if *anyone* should lose his job because of a political opinion.

And I think it’s great when people like Ben Shapiro and Bari Weiss claim to be all in favor of a vigorous exchange of ideas — except for ideas *they* don’t like. That’s pure hypocrisy, and there are few things people dislike more than hypocrisy.

This is a very dark time for a country that used to believe in freedom of speech. But some good could come from this insane craze to cancel people, and from pompous people who claim to oppose cancel culture but just disagree on who should be canceled. This political terror campaign and this hypocrisy might lead us back to something that should have been obvious from the start: That no one — not the government, not Twitter, not Facebook, not YouTube — no one should have the right to decide what you should think.

Maybe, eventually, we’ll get there.

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