2019-12-19 ------------------------------------------------------------------ Breaking my own rules here. I had decided that one of my phlog themes is COMMENT and I had defined it as "commenting on something specific" so it WOULD usually mean I have a link to the thing I am commenting. But I have to make an exception this time. The topic I am about to comment is something that I think has kind of traumatized me. Because of the potential for trauma to others I am not even sure if I should mention this at all. If you have seen the Ring, you know what I mean. If you haven't, think of Pandora's box. DISCLAIMER: Do not read further if you are easily rattled. If you do continue to read, know that I am not throwing this out there in order to shock anyone. I find it a point that would be hard to make without pointing to a case that is disturbing and that has affected myself. I suppose in these days probably majority of people who read this have seen at least one decapitation video, so it could be that I am just too sensitive for the times we live in. Right? Right. So, lets begin. I saw a phlog in the gopherspace about people who have done something that the public finds despicable. I am unsure if this was also scaled out to include people who have different political stances since I could not follow the implied breadcrumbs. BTW, the reason I don't actually point to this phlog is not because I think you are not able to find it or something like that. It's because, if the Pandora's Box is as distasteful to the writer of that phlog as it is for me, I just don't want to mention their name in the same post that I mention the Pandora. It might be a bit extra paranoid from my part, but I think it is the safest bet. So, the point in that phlog was, that there are people who have done something that is opposed by a large part of the public and the writer was wondering about how they should react to this. I find this question quite interesting myself. And I find it somehow quite scary as well. Because to me it seems that public sentiment can be too easily pushed by corporations and politicians and whoever has enough of a platform. The best argument I have heard for cancel culture has been this: Freedom of speech is not the same as freedom to have a platform. I find this compelling. But as a counterargument I kind of think that social media is so ubiquitous that it is comparable to a utility service. And I think that maybe the dilemma lies here in this grey area of platform vs service. Because, if we were talking about something like denying email service for everyone who says "wrong" things, that would no doubt be stepping on freedom of speech. I think human rights are important. I think rule of law is important. I haven't been following the deplatformings that much because I find this topic quite stressful, but I think the way these things seem to go down, there must have been cases where people are deplatformed without clear evidence. This troubles me. It's like the question of how many innocent should go to jail versus how many guilty walk free? I don't know what I think about this, but here's the part where I think I can point to something that may or may not give some different perspective to the question. And this is the traumatizing part. There is an artist who as a student videotaped himself killing a cat. He claimed this was art. I have never seen this video but I have heard it described and it really never left me. Sometimes just randomly this video comes to my mind out of nowhere. I find it really disturbing that this person is considered a successful artist. I think a case could be made that without getting himself noticed by killing the cat he would not be as successful. Now, even though I have not seen the video, I must admit that it really is art. It is a sort of social commentary that is impossible to put into any other category than art. It has made me question my meat consumption, for example. It has made me question my shopping habits. When I see a video of how they butcher cows it makes me think of the cat. And this association makes me think of myself as a worse person because I find one cat dying to be more shocking than those truckloads of cows. What I think about the person? Sometimes I hear someone mention his name and I say "oh, the cat killer". He is always that. No matter what he comes up with, artistically, he will always just be that cat killer to me. He has in some sense turned himself into a human sacrifice. He has truly colored everything he does with the act of killing that cat in the beginning of his career. It's very hard to not think it's art. What does that say about me? On one hand I really despise this person very deeply. At the same time I know that it is irrational of me to do so, compared to the good he must have caused to animal rights, for example, by really rubbing it in for many people. I mean, even if only one person became a vegan as a result of the video, it means that the cat saved lives. But what about the trauma? If the video or even the knowledge of the video caused trauma, how is that compared to the animal lives that were saved? It's just a very complex question. In a way, what this person did to his own public persona somehow is a sort of analogue of the sort of public shaming that the deplatforming seems to entail. In this person's case it is very clear cut to me that whatever reputational damage he has taken was deserved, especially since he did it knowingly. But what scale of reputational damage is deserved in each of the deplatform cases? I have no idea. ------------------------------------------------------------------