Cancel Culture and The Word Police
As we progress into a more social media driven society, the cancel culture movement has rapidly spread across various platforms, with people collectively withdrawing support from figures deemed “harmful” or “intolerable”, shaming the accused until they are never seen on social media again. Although this movement has done a lot of good work – canceling criminals, racists, etc. – some are considering that cancel culture may have gone a bit extreme now, losing its effectiveness as people are straying away from the important issues in this world and focusing on irrelevant topics.
In The Word Police, author Michiko Kakutani argues that the politically
correct movement has overstepped its initial goal “to embrace multiculturalism
and a new politics of inclusion”. Kakutani claims that P.C specific intolerance
for words has created a hole in their desires, altering the course of actions
they first planned out. Instead of finding ways to solve the problems of
discrimination and exclusion, many people in the P.C movement emphasize their
upset on harmless words and phrases. The desire to entirely change the way we
speak conflicts with the embracement of multiculturalism that the P.C movement initially
set out to achieve. The word police, in Kakutani’s opinion, have become “the
monarch of the jungle”, moving further and further from the true intentions of
the movement.
Cancel culture is very much a part of the P.C movement, and
vice versa. Both seek to create a more equal and ideal world, in where everyone
can be embraced, and the “bad” people lose their spotlight. However, like the
word police, cancel culture at times haven’t been entirely true to their goal.
First off, many people have been cancelled for very minor “crimes”, and their
career’s, even their livelihood, is as a result compromised. With this in mind,
many people have now become overly cautious of this movement, with people
suppressing their personality, content, and opinions to appease the overwhelming
crowd watching their every move. People are less of themselves, as a misaligned
and distracted cancel culture breeds robots that conform to every “societal law”,
ensuring that no one steps out of the boundaries of what they consider to be “right”.
Cancel culture has done tremendous things in society,
especially with the whole Ukraine situation, but we all must be more aware of
what and who we are canceling, and must remain diligent in our collective goal
to create a more accepting and embracing society- one that benefits all.
I agree. Although both cancel culture and political correctness had good initial intentions, they deviated from their intended goal when it became misused or too extreme. I liked how you mentioned the importance of the "collective goal" that we must focus most of our attention and effort on. I also liked how you included integrated quotes, commas, and dashes for the style! Nice!
ReplyDeleteI definitely agree with your points on cancel culture Youssef. I feel like when it's applied in the right manner, it can be beneficial to society as a whole and it can get rid of "bad" people. However, sometimes it is unfairly used against people who only made minor mistakes.
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