12 X 2019: If you find racism you will find Trump

The author Jennine Capó Crucet was invited to Georgia Southern University to speak about her novel Make your Home among Strangers, an account of the difficulties of a first-generation Cuban-American woman at an elite white college, required reading this year for first-year students at Georgia Southern. The issue of white privilege was, of course, prominent in the novel and affected its reception by Georgia Southern students. Some students who, like most Americans, are dimly conscious of color-based privilege, but persist in angry denial, took offense at Ms Capó Crucet’s person, her book, and her discussion of it. This was evident in hostile tweets that were collected by the campus paper, but abruptly deleted, and in the behavior of a group of students who collected around a barbecue grill to burn the frightening novel and, figuratively, its author.

This was a revealing combination! The Spanish inquisition and Nazi mass book burnings re-enacted on a barbecue grill, a symbol of suburban, middle-class America. Of course, many students and the University itself were deeply embarrassed by this outrage. University representatives denounced the burning but asserted that it was protected speech. However, free speech was not protected when the University canceled another scheduled event of Ms Capó Crucet’s visit because it felt it could not guarantee her safety due to open-carry laws.

The commotion began when, after Capó Crucet’s presentation, a student questioned her right to be speaking there and her generalizing about white privilege. Students started shouting against and for the questioner, and of those supporting the questioner some were heard shouting “Trump 2020!”

Three threads stand out here: frantic hostility to exposé of white privilege, abuse of the right to free speech, and open-carry laws preventing free speech. And these are all woven together by “Trump 2020!”

4 V 2019: Freedom of speech no guarantee of an audience

We’re hearing rumblings from the left and from Trump and associated crazies about Facebook’s banning Alex Jones, Laura Loomer, Louis Farrakhan, Milo Yiannopoulos, and other sociopaths from its facilities. This is viewed by some as a blow or, at least, a menace to freedom of speech.

I think there is here an underlying assumption that freedom of speech implies a guarantee of audience. Now no one can stop me from going into Kirkwood Park, setting up a soapbox, and denouncing Monothelitism vehemently and at length, but I think that only a substantial cash incentive could provide me with an audience.

The worst threat to freedom of speech these days is that society allows semi-criminal rabble rousers such free access. It is virtually routine for totalitarian movements to subvert and destroy democracy by exploiting the freedoms that democracy guarantees.

I cannot propose an answer to the dilemma that this presents, but I can say that unless our democracy finds a way to obviate or moderate the voices of hate-mongering and uninhibited deceit in the public sphere, they will tear us apart.