We're losing the ability to have fierce disagreements but and that without someone's career being destroyed. You will be held responsible for things other people say with whom you have some association which could be as trivial as liking something they said on twitter. If before you like something don't think okay is this person said other things recently that could be hung around my neck maybe i don't want to like something that this person said or even co like something thatthis person said. We've all absorbed this so quickly and it's not wrong because you are in league of each other, he says.
There is a lot of bad advice going around these days. If something bad happened to you, define yourself by your trauma. And if somebody inadvertently did something offensive, react as though they had intended to harm you. Emily Yoffe, a member of Persuasion's Board of Advisors and a contributing writer at The Atlantic, has spent years giving thoughtful advice and chronicling the strange turn in our culture. One of the country's best writers and most fearless reporters, she knows better than just about anyone else how to skewer the growing self-righteousness in our intellectual discourse.
In this week’s episode of The Good Fight, Yascha Mounk and Emily Yoffe sit down to discuss the hallmarks of cancelation, why intent matters, and how we can recover our capacity to converse freely.
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