Angus Johnston Profile picture
Jun 14, 2018 18 tweets 5 min read Read on X
Okay. I've found it. The absolute culmination of the "we have to build bridges with the far right" argument.
Henry Cadbury was a Quaker, and I'm sure he was a lovely man. But wow, was he wrong in a very familiar way.
Among the anti-fascist tactics Cadbury condemned? Boycotts. He called them "war without bloodshed."
Astonishingly, Cadbury gave this speech to a conference of rabbis. It was not well-received.
Rabbi Stephen Wise (who would, ironically, himself be later criticized for equivocation on anti-Nazi topics) repudiated Cadbury's speech.
Another rabbi basically said any talk of "loving" Hitler was pointless sophistry.
That same rabbi on the moral and practical necessity for a diversity of tactics:
(Same day, same page: American Baptist pastor says the appeal of Nazi antisemitism is grounded not in bigotry, but—I kid you not—economic anxiety.)
The conference released a statement repudiating Cadbury's both-sidesism and insisting on the moral necessity of resistance to the Nazis.
(Just a note: "Israel" in the above clip doesn't refer to the nation of Israel, which didn't exist in 1934, but to the Jewish community.)
Here's the original article on Cadbury's speech.

timesmachine.nytimes.com/timesmachine/1…
And here's the follow-up article from the next day from which the rest of the above clippings were taken. timesmachine.nytimes.com/timesmachine/1…
A nice summary of the blowup from a broader article on the conference that appeared a day later:
Here's to "a spirit of sterner resistance to Hitler"!
Just going to leave this here in case any of you can think of good uses for it.
Gonna have some more thoughts on these articles tomorrow. Stay tuned.
Here's my thread of musings on the above articles, as promised.
Since this is blowing up again: I included links in the above thread, but if those don't work for you, the articles discussed are from the New York Times, June 15 through 17, 1934.

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More from @studentactivism

Nov 1, 2023
Okay, let's take a look at the free-expression issues raised by how this confrontation went down.
(I tweeted about it last night, but as I sometimes do, I frontloaded conclusions rather than explanation, so I'm rebooting.)
There are a lot of people around—including a lot of people in my comments—who start from the premise that tearing down these posters is hostile to free expression, and so what happened to this guy was a free-speech victory. Let's unpack that.
Read 25 tweets
Jun 6, 2023
I ran the first paragraph of Orwell's 1984 through ChatGPT, asking it to fix any "spelling, grammatical, or usage errors."

I think my copyediting gig is safe. Check it out:
Orwell: "It was a bright cold day in April, and the clocks were striking thirteen. Winston Smith, his chin nuzzled into his breast in an effort to escape the vile wind, slipped quickly through the glass doors of Victory Mansions..."
ChatGPT: "It was a bright, cold day in April, and the clocks were striking thirteen. Winston Smith, with his chin nuzzled into his chest in an effort to escape the vile wind, slipped rapidly through the glass doors of Victory Mansions..."
Read 7 tweets
Jun 6, 2023
It's only—the quoted text—not dangerous because it's so ignorant. If your goal is to "evaluate grammar" in order to determine whether a manuscript is publishably competently written, all you need to do is have a copy editor spend three minutes reading a random page. (1/?)
It's not an onerous task. But it's not also a useful task. Because lots of books that get published are written by authors who have a shaky grasp of grammar. Lots of GOOD books are written by such authors. Such manuscripts are the baby, not the bathwater.
Me, to my partner, also a copy editor, or vice versa: "How's the book you're working on going?"

Them, to me, or v-v: "It's fine. The author doesn't know how commas work, but it's fine."

This happens ALL THE TIME.
Read 15 tweets
Jun 5, 2023
"Meryl Streep is grievously miscast in Postcards from the Edge."
My view: Streep was perfect in the breakup scene with Dennis Quaid and a few others, but she needed to (1) be meaner to, and more like, her mom and (2) give the impression that she'd be a fun person to get high with.
I can buy Streep being Maclaine's daughter in Postcards, and I can buy her living the life she's living in the movie, but to believe the former I have to disbelieve the latter, and vice versa.
Read 9 tweets
Apr 1, 2023
It would have been SO EASY to leverage the cachet of the celeb blue-checks in monetizing the new buy-in system. It really is astonishingly perverse how far he’s gone to do the opposite.
Obvious Step One: Give the legacy blue-checks access to the paid features for free. Get them talking up the product, beta-testing it, debating it.
Obvious Step Two: Announce that the "For You" feed will be people you follow, legacy blue checks, and paid blue checks.
Read 6 tweets
Mar 25, 2023
When people ask me why I think decency is a better organizing principle than civility, I'm going to point to this right here.
Seems like this may be about to reach exit velocity, so to be clear: I'm applauding Megan Hunt here. She is upholding and insisting upon decency by refusing to reciprocate empty civility from her colleagues.
Don't hurt my family and send me a Christmas card. Don't reveal yourself to be a bigot and ask me how my weekend went. Don't vote for evil and assume my ongoing goodwill. Don't be indecent and expect civility in return.
Read 8 tweets

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