Discussion about this post

User's avatar
Michael D. Spektor's avatar

I have struggled with the limits of free speech since the Nazi march in Skokie. What I find most difficult about the substack and online hate mongers is their ability to not have to respond to their vitriol face to face. In the real court of public opinion. In the past this was a more personal endeavor and you needed your ducks in a row. when you faced those that disagreed. Now it's just say whatever you want and forget facts or reality. Louder you shout, more you are followed by the disaffected. When the concept of free speech/hate speech is opened to the light of day as with the Harvard, Penn and MIT presidents there is clarity and personal responsibility.

Expand full comment
David Isenberg's avatar

And I wish it was only a Substack problem. With digital and social media firmly embedded within our communication tool box, society and individuals have simply weaponized information/misinformation. And as you very accurately point out Michael, in the absence of face to face exchanges the normal social checks and balances against taking the debate too far are negated. Add to that the ability to instantly access viewpoints simply to reinforce our own fears and anxieties, well confirmation bias only catalyzes the pathology. Add a healthy dose of cognitive dissonance (i.e. "Christians for Trump", "Queers for Palestine", "Cows for McDonalds") and it's hard to be optimistic. I do know that as we see levels of anti-Semitism rising to a place I have not experienced in my 62 years, the Seattle Jewish Community will become increasingly unified. There will always be divisive voices at the extremes, but as long as we appropriately marginalize bad actors and take care of each other during crisis, well that gets me to be a little more optimistic. A little. ;)

Expand full comment
3 more comments...

No posts