Approximately 1,200 human souls were killed in Hamas’ terrorist attack on Israel on Oct 7.
Since that date 30,000 human souls have been massacred by the Israeli Military with bombs paid for by the United States in Gaza.
Hate crimes are increasing against Jews and against Muslims.
The climate crisis is putting millions of people’s lives at risk.
There are wars raging in many countries.
Democracy is in peril in the U.S. and in many other places.
We are living in a time where many of our colleagues in the human community do not feel safe because they are deeply and physically unsafe.
Right now all around this country students are being doxed and losing opportunities for jobs because well-funded organizations are keeping lists of those who speak out against the U.S.-funded Israeli war machine. Teachers who speak out are losing their jobs, and even powerful and prominent people, such as the former president of Harvard Claudine Gay, are losing their jobs.
And yet there is a rhetoric around the idea of safety that is counterproductive to building a world in which we can all be truly safe.
On my campus, I helped organize a teach-in on the Israel/Gaza war and the speakers came from a humanistic perspective that honored the tragedy of lives lost on both sides and which dug into the history and politics of the present moment. I was worried that hecklers would show up, and my colleagues asked that there be campus police presence. We specifically offered for those posing questions to write them on paper so they wouldn’t need to be identified publicly.
But I was told that because our teach-in was sponsored by Jewish Voice for Peace, an organization dedicated to Palestinian rights and an end to the Israeli occupation of Palestinian territories, some Jewish students on our campus didn’t feel safe attending.
Many of us live inside bubbles with people who agree with our positions and when something changes to bring us face-to-face with views that disrupt what we have come to accept as common sense, we can find that experience destabilizing.
Many of us feel silenced by worries that our speech might be met with disagreement. We are in a period of increasing self-censorship where people don’t say what they think is important or true because they are afraid of the social consequences—even in cases where those consequences are likely to be quite small. And yet, taking the risk to be honest and to speak out often puts us in more right alignment with the people around us. Speaking truths often strengthens our relationships by making them more authentic.
The dictionary definition of the word “safety” centers on being free from danger. Much of the current discussion of a lack of safety is really about discomfort. And discomfort is something we should generally lean into. We should reserve the word “safety” for situations where we are in danger of something more than a destabilization of our worldviews.
Social Media and Canceling
A lot of people’s sense that it is unsafe to engage in political dialogue comes from the kinds of bad behavior that are routine on social media where people make comments about social and political things and they are then flamed and sometimes “canceled.”
It is important to remember that Facebook and X function exquisitely as profit-making advertising platforms. People’s outrage is the fuel that drives those profits. The platforms are optimized for outrage. It isn’t surprising that people attack one another there. Those attacks fuel attention. People gain clout by how many followers they have and they gain followers by drawing more eyeballs to their posts.
Cancel culture is a practice in social media where people flame each other for clout. Algorithms foster outrage to keep people engaged. Weirdly, social media is such a toxic place precisely because there is generally no real danger there. The personal and real-life stakes are often so low that people feel that they can say anything. There is no point trying to figure out how to have productive humanistic and civil conversations on social media. The algorithms don’t allow it. A better strategy might be to avoid commercial social media altogether. We should avoid feeding the trolls. If you are concerned about the toxic nature of social media, rather than jumping into that fray, it is likely to be more productive to work actively for policies to break the monopolies and allow for the proliferation of non-profit forms of social media.
Your silence will not protect you
We are living in dangerous times. And It might be tempting in the face of those real attacks to retreat into the comfort of silence. And yet, we can’t expect, in a period of extreme instability and a rising fascist movement in our country, to feel safe all the time. Living ethically in times of crisis requires that at least some of us take risks, and of course the more of us who take risks to speak out and work for justice, the safer we all are. As the great African- American poet and essayist Audre Lourde said: “Your silence will not protect you.”
And while this is a time for speaking out and for bravery, that doesn’t mean that our words need to be fighting words. A dangerous and consequential time is also a time for being strategic, for thinking about the most effective ways to speak and to act in relation to the dangers we face.
It is generally a good idea when speaking with people to follow the basic rules of effective civil communication:
- We should avoid attacking people;
- We should practice humility and openness;
- In our communications we should try to get to underlying shared values; and
- We should remember that as we speak in ways that challenge dominant narratives some people will feel destabilized.
But no amount of civil dialogue will stop the forces that are fighting to maintain social power at the expense of the rest of us.
Long before Trump came onto the political scene, Republican legislators had stopped engaging in political compromise. It was very disheartening that the response of liberals was often to wring their hands and call for more civil dialogue. Being civil with those who are bent on your destruction is like bringing a knife to a gunfight.
Fighting against the rising forces of fascism in this country does not require us to be routinely uncivil, but it does require much more of us than civility. We engage in significant social change when we pressure political systems to change.
We need to step outside of our comfort zones to do that.
We need to make those who are abusing their power uncomfortable. And we need to out-organize them to take away their power to destroy the fabric of our society.
That involves mobilizing social resources to shut down the abuses of power that exist in a wide variety of forms.
Our silence will not protect us, and neither will our civility.
Thank you, Cynthia. This is exactly my position, only I am old enough not to be fussed by threats. You’ve got to die of something anyway, why not for standing up for decency?
That said, no one has threatened me.
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Dear Cynthia,
It’s been long time since we’ve communicated. So good to see your continued good work. Hope you are well.
I wanted to comment on your writing here. I appreciate the important message here on the problematizing of both “safety” and “civility” in opposing the current social unrest. Agreed that in general terms, silence will not protect us. However, one comment I respectfully take issue with is the portrayal of the Japanese American community response to incarceration as “silence”. This is misleading, inaccurate and perpetuates damaging stereotypes of API’s. The reality is much more complex.
Much evidence exists of resistance to the illegal incarceration beyond the legal cases of Yasui, Hirabayashi, and Korematsu. More recently Mitsuyo Endo has been recognized for her stand against the imprisonment. Other examples include the FairPlay Committee at Heart Mountain concentration camp where at least 63 JA’s fought the draft order, went to court, and were convicted and imprisoned at McNeil Island and Leavenworth federal penitentiaries for 3-4 years. There was the prisoner uprising in Santa Fe in response to fellow JA’s being shipped away from the camp, resulting in government agents using tear gas and batons to restore “order”. The protests that arose at the camp in Topaz following the guard’s murder of James Wakasa and the service conducted and memorial stone brought to Topaz and placed at the site of the shooting in spite of camp administration orders to cease and desist. And of course the many issues that arose at Tule Lake where the “No-No’s” were sent to this “segregation” camp. There were many more acts of resistance too numerous to mention, and, of course the many in the JA community who were involved in subsequently fighting for redress in the successful movement to get the government to apologize and provide reparations to those imprisoned.
Since I did not experience the effects of Executive Order 9066 myself, it is difficult to say how I would respond to such government orders; armed military forcing community members (citizens and non-citizens alike) out of their homes at gunpoint; the loss of any personal property that could not fit into two suitcases; living behind barbed wire with guard towers with guns facing into the camp, etc. I only hope I would have had the socialization and courage to stand up as many of these folks did. But the characterization of the JA response as one of “silence” is far from accurate. The responses were many and varied, but the dominant narrative that is perpetuated by the sole descriptor of “silence”needs to challenged and corrected. Perhaps more accurately the portrayal should be one of a people “being silenced” then, as well as today. Further, it may be worth exploring and recognizing the power of silence that can move beyond the Western construction of silence as only being seen as complicity (perhaps for another writing).
Thank you for the opportunity to respond Cynthia. A few related sources below.
Best to you always.
Eugene Fujimoto
https://newsroom.ucla.edu/stories/center-shatters-myth-of-quiet-japanese-americans-imprisoned-in-camps
https://resisters.com/
https://encyclopedia.densho.org/Heart_Mountain_Fair_Play_Committee/
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Good point Eugene I have edited out that reference.
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