Interesting new article deconstructing the so-called ‘anti-woke’ culture war, in which the appropriation of the #neofascist culture war discourse by the mainstream right in the UK is analysed discursively.

By Bart Cammaerts.

journals.sagepub.com/doi/full/10.11…
The anti-woke culture war by the British conservative party as well as right-wing media will serve to analyse how social justice struggles like anti-racism, anti-sexism and pro-LGBTQ rights are being abnormalised and positioned as extreme deviant political positions.
So-called ‘cancel culture’ is strategically deployed to neutralise contestations against a range of bigoted views. Freedom of speech & the right to offend is weaponised to protect racist & discriminatory language, positioning idea’s as valid opinions worthy of democratic debate.
In the last three decades, we have witnessed a gradual but consistent return to prominence of extreme right, authoritarian & fascist views, values & politics across the world (Rydgren, 2018).
Whereas the fascist authoritarian extreme right was a marginal political phenomenon in many democratic countries 30 years ago, it has in a relatively short period of time become a strong, powerful & emboldened segment of the mainstream right.
Ideas and viewpoints once considered deviant and morally repugnant, today are confidently asserted as the new 'common sense' and increasingly shape public policy.
It only suffices to refer to current immigration policies, more frequent attacks on independent judicial powers, the undermining and delegitimisation of democratic processes, the increased curtailment of press freedoms, and the criminalisation of protest as cases in point.
This has – in part – been achieved through waging a long-term Gramscian war of position geared towards the re-normalisation of racist and fascist ideologies (Cammaerts, 2018, 2020; Hainsworth, 2000; Krzyżanowski, 2020; Wodak et al., 2013).
The focus here is how this normalisation is coupled with a strategic and persistent abnormalisation of those that contest and fight racist, sexist and fascist ideologies. The discursive mechanisms through which this abnormalisation is achieved will be unpacked and exposed.
This will be achieved by analysing the so-called ‘anti-woke culture war’ discourse using a combination of political discourse analysis, the discourse-historical approach and discourse-conceptual analysis.
Empirically the 'war on woke' discourse will be analysed with respect to the UK political context, but this discourse is prevalent in many other countries too.
Normalisation & abnormalisation processes will be discussed through the related concepts of hegemony & metapolitics, and the role of deviance & othering in processes of ideological normalisation & abnormalisation will be theorised.

(I'll post details of the analysis later).
The analysis demonstrates that the ‘anti-woke culture war’ discourse traverses several ‘fields of action’, including party-political internal communication, shaping of public opinion, propaganda, and crucially law-making (Reisigl and Wodak, 2001: 38).
This last point shows that the oyeran discursive strategy to abnormalise social justice struggles through the production of moral panics, has serious consequences for democracy and social cohesion.
The current success & salience of anti-woke discourse amongst right-wing politicians, but also broader public opinion, does not come out of the blue: metapolitics & a war of position is a long-term battle & the ground for this had to be prepared.
The older ‘PC gone mad’ discourse, reacting against ‘an often-clumsy negotiation towards a kind of formal linguistic politeness’, was a prelude to the current weaponisation of free speech & the abnormalisation of anti-fascism, anti-racism, anti-sexism, anti-LGBTQ-phobia, etc.
Abnormalisation is achieved by strategically instigating moral panics and creating a false sense of crisis with a view of bedevilling social justice struggles as politically deviant, dangerous, sinister, insidious, evil and an imminent danger to British society.
This is subsequently coupled with the assertion of a new 'common sense' which normalises that which social justice politics aims to contest, expose, and push back against.
In addition to this, a self-asserted victimhood, that is, from a position of dominance and privilege, is expressed; reversing the perpetrator into a victim and turning the victim into a perpetrator - the 'victim-perpetrator reversal' (Wodak).
I
It's important to point out that the current virulent anti-woke metapolitical war of position is also a testament to the relative success of anti-racist, anti-sexist and pro-LGBTQ struggles in recent decades as it constitutes a forceful fight-back against these recent successes.
This has caught many activists, who might have thought that their respective struggles for equality and social justice were by and large won, by surprise.
It has to be acknowledged that identity politics in a highly polarised & hyper-mediated public space also has its own moral entrepreneurs & its own aberrations, which get consistently amplified in the right-wing media as yet another potent example of so-called ‘woke madness’.
In the society of the spectacle we live in today it is often through a disproportional focus on these aberrations that moral panics are fed and the anti-woke metapolitical war of position won.
This discursive analysis exposes how mainstream right-wing politicians & right-wing mainstream media consciously engage in borderline discourses by buying into & actively propagating the culture war discourse with a view of undermining & reneging social justice struggles.
In doing so they are appropriating and aligning themselves with discursive strategies that pertain to or originate with the fascist right. From a democratic and civic perspective this is a worrisome and deeply problematic observation.
This appropriation of discourse ultimately serves to normalise the neofascist right’s agenda further, through turning its various contestations into deviant, aberrant & irrational behaviour & ideologically biased opinions, rather than the strong moral disposition it should be.
Central to processes of ideological normalisation is the concept of hegemony. That which is hegemonic is presented as natural, as anti-ideological, as devoid of bias. Hegemony becomes considered to be 'common sense' & thereby rendered unquestionable, beyond discussion and debate.
While he did not coin the notion, the Italian Marxist Antonio Gramsci was central in popularising the idea of hegemony and more specifically cultural hegemony into political theory, but also into practical leftwing political strategy (see Laclau and Mouffe, 1985).
Gramsci understood that achieving a revolutionary agenda in Western Europe was not going to be possible through a violent overthrow of the capitalist and bourgeois powers that be, but required a more long-term insidious struggle, or a ‘war of position’ (Gramsci, 1971: LXVI).
This long-term insidious struggle, or a ‘war of position’, represents a ‘demilitarisation’ of the struggle to render that which is considered unjust and abnormal into something just and normal (Laclau and Mouffe, 1985: 70).
Recently, class & identity politics, disconnected from & often juxtaposed to other democratic struggles relating to gender, sexuality & race, has appropriated the strategy of a war of position to achieve a new authoritarian turn in hegemonic practices - from the radical right.
In the political discourse of the contemporary fascist right, Gramsci’s ideas regarding hegemony and war of position are denoted as 'metapolitics' - a concept originally developed by 18th Century German liberal thinkers.
These 18th Century German liberal thinkers foregrounded it as ‘a metaphysical study into the principles of politics, its fundamental grounds, and its ultimate ends’ (Bosteels, 2010: 879).
In the wake of May 1968, however, the French extreme right, with amongst other authors like Alain de Benoist and Guillaume Faye, picked up the notion of ‘metapolitics’ to denote a culture war aimed at changing hearts and minds in the long-term.
De Benoist observed that ‘all the big revolutions in history did no more than transpose into facts an evolution that had already taken place, in an underlying manner, in the minds of people’.
As such, the Nouvelle Droite movement saw metapolitics as a way to strategically make its ‘political discourse ring more and more true’, or as Faye (2001) put it, to diffuse ‘ideas and cultural values for the sake of provoking profound, long-term, political transformation’.
The subversive strategies implied by the extreme right interpretation of metapolitics have been eagerly picked up by the contemporary so-called ‘alt-right’ movement - the notion of ‘alt-right’ is metapolitical as it primarily serves to detoxify fascism and extreme right ideology.
Daniel Friberg, a Swedish ‘alt-right’ ideologue, for example, appropriated the idea of metapolitics and defined it as ‘a war of social transformation, taking place at the level of worldview, thought, and culture’ (Friberg, 2018: 268).
Metapolitics is thus very much in line with the long-term counter-hegemonic war of position, as envisaged by Gramsci, but geared towards naturalising fascist ideas and ideology rather than left-wing revolutionary ideas.
Besides Gramsci, another great influence on the contemporary fascist imaginary is the anti-enlightenment constitutionalist and outspoken Nazi, Carl Schmitt, and especially his contention that the friend/enemy distinction and insurmountable conflicts are central to the political.
Following Schmitt then, 'metapolitics' is thus not merely concerned with a normalisation of the self and thus of fascist ideology, but it is also invested in a sustained effort to intensify the conflict between the self and its enemies so as to reinforce hegemonisation.
This idea of the political being an ontologically conflictual space, where enemies, alliances, adversaries interact and co-exist, has also been taken-up by discourse theory (Laclau and Mouffe, 1985).
From a discourse theory perspective, the production of an ideological enemy occurs through processes of 'Othering'. Discursive othering practices serve to ‘externalise distance and exclude the other’ (Pickering, 2001: 47).
This is accompanied by an 'oyeran' discursive strategy of conflictual polarisation, characterised by ‘positive ingroup description and negative outgroup description’ (van Dijk, 1998: 33), but it also involves ‘long-term stigmatisation of targeted individuals and social groups’.
Hegemonisation, in other words, cannot be achieved without the active construction of an enemy; of an ideological outside (achieved through the discursive/rhetorical process of Othering).
Building on Derrida’s notion of the constitutive outside, Laclau and Mouffe (1985: 135) stress that ‘in order to speak of hegemony [. . .] it is also necessary that the articulation should take place through a confrontation with antagonistic articulatory practices’.
The notion of 'deviance' comes into the fray: Stuart Hall argued the construction of clear-cut differences & symbolic boundaries between self & other ‘leads us, symbolically, to close ranks, shore up culture & to stigmatise & expel anything which is defined as impure, abnormal’.
However, the relationship between normalcy & deviance is also contingent & unstable. Approached from a poststructuralist perspective, power is thus not merely implicated in the punishment or repression of deviance, but also in its very production & articulation (Foucault, 1998).
One of the most powerful ways of producing deviance & deviants is through the instigation of moral panics, fear, & the production of crisis; a process which includes exaggeration & distortion, prediction of dire consequences, & symbolisation of acute threat (Cohen, 1973).
In his classic study, Cohen highlighted the pivotal role of media & of moral entrepreneurs (an individual/group/organisation that persuades society to develop or enforce rules that are consistent with its own ardently held moral beliefs) in turning something or someone deviant.
The ways in which moral entrepreneurs attempt to render certain behaviour, ideas or groups of people as (politically) deviant is through processes of signification or labelling, stigmatisation and bedevilment (Cohen, 1973 [2002]; Schur, 1980).
By and large most scholars agree that moral panic analysis is still a productive conceptual framework to study and analyse contemporary instances of deviance production.
Critcher suggests approaching moral panics as discursive formations while Krzyżanowski points out that in the context of the normalisation of racism, the strategic production of moral panics is often geared towards the construction of a 'crisis imaginary' (a manufactured crisis). Image
The manufactured crisis then subsequently serves to further stigmatise certain groups & phenomena. This can also have long-term impacts & consequences for those groups in terms of fostering negative attitudes towards them, & in legitimating discriminatory actions & policies.
Through purposeful sampling, a corpus of texts was collected and constructed that would enable a detailed discursive analysis of the UK’s anti-woke culture war. The focus was on texts produced by political actors active in the mainstream public sphere and political space.
The analysis highlights the way in which the 'anti-woke' culture war as metapolitics has permeated and increasingly come to define mainstream public discourse in the UK (but as briefly mentioned above this is not confined to the UK).
It focuses on what Krzyżanowski and Ledin (2017) have called ‘borderline discourses’; where civility and uncivility meet, where mainstream politics and media and an anti-democratic extreme right cross-modulate, and where ultimately normalisation is being achieved.
The so-called ‘anti-woke culture war’ is waged by a variety of political actors (moral entrepreneurs), namely: Conservatives, who are the driving political force pushing the so-called 'war on woke' in the UK; & right-wing journalists who actively mediate & amplify this discourse.
In this regard, in addition to Conservative politicians & the influential right-wing national print news press, the start-up of a new national news broadcaster - GB "News" - which explicitly calls itself ‘anti-woke’, was also deemed relevant to include in the analysis.
Besides newspaper columns, interviews and a speech in Parliament, a more ideological document entitled ‘Conservative Thinking for a Post-Liberal Age’, which extensively deploys the culture war discourse, was also included.

blogs.sussex.ac.uk/snapshotsofemp…
This diversity of genres in the corpus is also indicative of the various fronts on which the anti-woke culture war in the UK is being waged.
The empirical focus is also on everyday discourses and their broader implications rather than abstract ‘depersonified’ discourses (Jørgensen and Phillips, 2002). This has methodological implications, situating this article more in the Critical Discourse Analysis (CDA) tradition.
In this regard, political discourse analysis, as developed by van Dijk (1997), was a very productive analytical resource, as was the discourse-historical approach, emphasising contingency and historical context (Reisigl and Wodak, 2001).
Finally, as the analysis foremost focuses on the strategic use of concepts such as ‘woke’, ‘culture war’ and ‘cancel culture’, discourse-conceptual analysis was also useful (Krzyżanowski, 2016).
In line with the conceptual framework outlined above, the culture war against ‘wokeness’ will be deconstructed as successful attempts to Other those that actively counter racist, sexist and anti-LGBTQ views, as well as those that struggle for social justice.
Another important aspect of the anti-woke culture war discourse is the cultivation of victimhood through the denouncement of so-called 'cancel culture' and, related to this, the weaponisation of free speech.
‘Woke’ is a central concept: ‘woke culture’, ‘woke opinion’, ‘wokeism’, ‘woke times’, ‘woke agenda’, ‘woke elite’, ‘woke dogma’, ‘woke ideology’, ‘woke activists’, ‘woke mindset’, ‘woke society’, ‘woke causes’, ‘woke broadcast media’, ‘woke insanity’, ‘woke mob’ & ‘woke Britain’.
Before unpacking and contextualising these occurrences, let me first consider the genealogy of ‘woke’. Woke is intrinsically tied to black consciousness and anti-racist struggles.
'Woke' was a black slang word which was first referenced in popular culture during a spoken word section at the end of a recording of the 1938 protest folksong ‘Scottsboro Boys’ by Lead Belly.
The song refers to the gruesome case of nine black youth who were falsely accused of raping two white women and whose lives were destroyed by the deeply racist Alabama justice system (Cose, 2020).
Lead Belly tells the men to ‘be a little careful when they go along through there — best stay woke, keep their eyes open’: woke & staying woke refer to the need for Afro-Americans to be acutely aware & conscious of the dangers & threats inherent to a white-dominated racist USA.
A similar connotation could be found in a NYT-piece written by Black novelist William Melvin Kelley (1962) entitled If You’re Woke You Dig It. While not explicitly defining woke, he prophetically warns of the misappropriation & subversion of the black vernacular by white culture.
Staying Woke or being aware and conscious of racism rose to prominence again in the context of the #BlackLivesMatter movement and especially in the aftermath of the 2014 Ferguson protests when the hashtag #StayWoke was used a lot in conjunction with #BLM.
The use of ‘woke’ & ‘wokeness’ by non-black progressives, engendered critiques of performative wokeness or performative allyship, & also shifted from verb to adjective, expanding to include other injustices & forms of discrimination & oppression to do with gender & sexuality.
But ‘woke’ & ‘wokeness’ was also weaponised by the right: its initial meaning in the struggle for civil rights turned into an insult used against those who fight fascism, racism & other forms of injustice/discrimination, as well as signifying a supposed progressive over-reaction.
'Woke' became a convenient shorthand to negate the ‘negative ideologization’ of the extreme right (Reisigl & Wodak, 2001).

In this regard, we might even say that ‘woke’ has become a powerful political metaphor which ‘creates social reality & guides social action’ (Lakoff).
This detournement also shows in a very blatant way how ‘a discourse can always be undermined by articulations that place the signs in different relations to one another’ (Jørgensen and Phillips, 2002: 39).
Examining the words in the corpus commonly associated with ‘woke’, shows how it isn't just a convenient discursive shorthand or political metaphor for being anti-racist, anti-sexist, pro-LGBTQ rights, but it is also consistently negatively attributed to a wide range of phenomena.
The anti-woke discourse became an integral part of what in political discourse analysis is called ‘semantic and ideological polarisation’ (van Dijk, 1997: 28).
Fighting fascism, condemning discrimination, & contesting hate speech is thus no longer framed as a moral disposition, but rather merely an ‘opinion’.

However, it is not just an opinion like any other opinion, but it is framed as a very dogmatic & highly ideological one.
And furthermore, according to the anti-woke discourse, those who espouse such ‘opinions’ are part of an 'aberrant, crazy, elitist, irrational mob', 'lacking a sense of humour and out of touch with common sense'.
This is also well captured by a quote from Andrew Neil, a senior British broadcaster who was the short-lived chairman of GB "News", a new self-proclaimed ‘anti-woke’ news channel.

In an interview prior to the launch of the station he stated:
"The original meaning of woke was somebody who was aware of social justice issues and who can complain about that? But it is not about social justice anymore, it is about conformity of thinking." (quoted in The Evening Standard, 8 June 2021).
Andrew Neil also described ‘woke liberals’ as ‘po-faced people who take themselves too seriously’ (Neil, 2021), re-enforcing the image of ‘woke’ as a knee-jerk and overly sensitive reaction.
Social justice struggles such as anti-fascism, anti-racism and anti-sexism or pro LGBTQ rights, are also conveniently labelled, stigmatised and bedevilled as an extremist, authoritarian, intolerant and above all an ideological and thus contestable position.
So-called ‘woke ideology’ is described as ‘destructive, totalitarian, divisive, negative and anti-democratic’ (Gareth Bacon MP, in The Common Sense Group, 2021: 26).
Advocates for #BlackLivesMatter, environmentalism and transgender rights are referred to as ‘extreme cultural and political groups’ who adhere to ‘intolerant woke dogma’ (John Hayes MP, in The Common Sense Group, 2021: 1 and 16).
Columnist Dan Wootton called the England’s football players decision to take the knee before each match at the European Championship ‘virtue-signalling’ and representative of ‘trenchant and often extreme positions’ (in The Daily Mail, 7 June 2021).
This discourse also emanates from the UK government, whose Education Secretary spoke of those contesting racist, sexist or transphobic voices within universities as ‘the intolerant minority’ (Gavin Williamson MP, in The Daily Telegraph, 11 July 2021).
The intolerant (anti-woke moral entrepreneurs) are thus accusing those that are fighting intolerance of being intolerant extremists.

This again is not new & part & parcel of the discursive tactics of the denial of racism, as outlined by van Dijk: 'The person accusing the...
other of racism is in turn accused of inverted racism against whites, as oversensitive & exaggerating, as intolerant, as ‘seeing racism where there is none’. Accusations of racism soon tend to be seen as more serious social infractions than racist attitudes & actions themselves.'
It is here that the instigation of moral panic and the production of deviance emerges – that is, countering racism, sexism, homophobia or transphobia is consistently labelled as deviant, crazy and dangerous, as an imminent threat to ‘our’ way of living.
Columnist Oliver Harvey, for instance, spoke of ‘woke insanity’ and describes ‘wokeism’ as ‘religious, totalitarian fanaticism’ and ‘puritan’ (in The Sun, 24 June 2021).
The moral panic created around ‘wokeness’, in combination with the articulation of a clearly defined enemy, subsequently justifies drastic action; the ‘woke mob’, columnist Douglas Murray writes, ‘must be stopped... It’s time to run back at them’ (in The Sun, 24 June 2021).
Dan Wootton calls his readers to ‘stand up to the mob & be counted’ (Daily Mail, 7 June 2021). John Hayes MP: 'The Battle for Britain has begun, it must be won by those who, inspired by the people’s will, stand for the common good in the national interest'. (Common Sense Group).
We can observe here how everything ‘woke’ is positioned as aberrant, politically deviant, as extremist, as going against the sovereign will of ‘the people’ and ‘the common good’, as a threat to ‘our’ Britain.
These motivational frames are also instrumental in the creation of what could be called horizontal out-groups. Whereas populism tends to create a clear vertical juxtaposition between ‘the people’ & the out of touch ‘elite’,
through negative attributions such as ‘the wokerati’, ‘wokeism’ and ‘woke insanity’, those who are denoted as woke are discursively ostracised from the category of ‘the people’ (Cammaerts, 2018, 2020).
Furthermore, by frequently associating the word ‘mob’ with ‘woke’, moral entrepreneurs instigate a moral panic by invoking irrationality, unruliness and vindictiveness, all characteristics which are commonly associated with a mob in public consciousness (McClelland, 1989).
Both the reference to ‘the mob’ & to the ‘Battle of Britain’ & Britain’s self-asserted greatness are historical topoi (basic rhetorical themes/concepts) in mobilising the fear of crowds in the case of the former, & reminiscing the UK’s colonial past & WW2 heroisms for the latter.
These topoi thus not only serve to ‘warn of a repetition of the past', but also to glorify it.

The othering & bedevilment of those who fight for social justice is, however, not the only discursive grenade that is being thrown from the right into the metapolitical trenches.
There are also persistent attempts to immunise those with racist, sexist or LGBTQ-phobic views against anyone who dares to contest them, or who chooses not to platform people that espouse such views.
Within the ‘anti-woke’ discourse, the pushback against those who voice racist, sexist, or LGBTQ-phobic views in the public space - and the fact that today there are (at times) real consequences if you do so - is referred to as ‘cancel culture’.
Concurring with the Schmittian friend/enemy distinction discussed above, James Sunderland MP & David Maddox describe the culture war they are waging as ‘a life and death struggle for conservatism faced with the Left’s attempts to “cancel” opposing voices’ (Common Sense Group).
Without necessarily asserting this explicitly, hate speech, discrimination, & racism are positioned in anti-woke discourse as legitimate ‘opinions’ - just as legitimate as any other - worthy of ‘democratic’ debate, & therefore the pushback against it is illegitimate & ‘sinister’.
Push back against bigotry is framed as 'disagreement not now being tolerated' & any perceived deviation from the narrow ‘true path’ as being ruthlessly crushed. So called ‘no-platforming’ & the rise of the ‘cancel culture’ are framed as particularly sinister. (Gareth Bacon MP).
Douglas Murray accuses universities of being ‘in thrall to the woke mob’ (The Sun, 24 June 2021) & argues, with reference to the suspension of Ollie Robinson for having posted racist & sexist tweets and the controversy around JK Rowling’s Gender Critical views & statements, that:
"The woke mob doesn’t just try to get people into line. It tries to end their careers and stop their livelihoods if they don’t obey. It is an insidious movement" (Murray, 2021).
Dan Wootton called the backlash against Ollie Robinson ‘a public flogging’ & condemned the ‘woke culture of extreme virtue-signalling followed by brutal cancellations’, which he argues ‘is becoming a stain on society’ (in The Daily Mail, 7 June 2021).
This led the then UK’s Culture Secretary Oliver Dowden MP &PM Boris Johnson MP, to condemn Robinson’s suspension & by extension ‘cancel culture’. Andrew Neil (Evening Standard, 8 June 2021) also took issue with those who contest discrimination & hate speech in the public sphere:
"Now it is the norm that if I disagree with you, you should be stigmatised, brought before the court of woke opinion, you should lose your job, you should certainly wear sackcloth and ashes and your name should be dragged through the social media sphere."
By positioning this in the context of 'agreement/disagreement within a democratic debate', a moral equivalence between a variety of opinions is constructed, thereby disregarding the inherent ethical dimension of the fight against fascism, racism, sexism & other discrimination.
The topsy-turvy nature of this discourse is also demonstrated through the way in which ‘disagreement’ is only an entitlement and exclusive privilege of the dominant group, not of those that contest them.
The emergence of GB "News", which some have called a British version of Fox News (Lewis, 2021), was also met by a somewhat successful campaign by #StopFundingHate to dissuade (some) advertisers from financing the channel.
In a 'media watch' segment on GB News (18 June 2021), Andrew Neil lamented that the companies boycotting his channel ‘have all taken the knee to #StopFundingHate’.
In line with the instigation of moral panics, Neil demonised #StopFundingHate, accusing them of being ‘far left agitators & cranks that push for advertiser boycotts of any media organisation with which it disagrees’. Here, ‘disagreement’ becomes illegitimate, crazy & dangerous.
The quotes above regarding ‘cancel culture’ and the use of metaphors such as ‘public flogging’ or the biblical penitence implied by ‘sackcloth & ashes’ also reveal a deep sense of victimhood that is being expressed.
This represents a common discursive tactic in fascist discourses, as Stanley (2018) convincingly argues; ‘[a]ny progress for a minority group stokes feelings of victimhood among the dominant population’.

(Wodak has discussed the discursive move of 'victim/perpetrator reversal').
In line with van Dijk's argument, discussed above, ‘racism becomes about white distress, white suffering & white victimization’ (DiAngelo, 2018). ‘An aggrieved sense of victimization of dominant majorities can be weaponised for potential political gain’ (Stanley). Clearly, it is.
Besides self-victimisation in the wake of push-back or being called out, free speech as a vital democratic right is also weaponised in this context (by individuals & organisations such as Toby Young's 'Free Speech Union' - neither a union, nor in favour of some forms of speech).
This is used to discursively turn the tables on those who contest hate speech, discrimination and structural racism, sexism and LGBTQ-phobia, as it positions them as 'anti-democratic' and as 'denying others the right to their free speech'.
Illustrative of this is Andrew Neil’s claim that GB "News" aims to ‘expose the growing promotion of cancel culture for the threat to free speech and democracy that it is’ (on GB News, 18 June 2021).
The invocation of democratic civic rights, namely freedom of speech & open democratic debate, goes hand in hand here with anti-democratic aims & values;
that is, claiming the oxymoronic democratic right to fuel hate, and express racist, sexist and LGBTQ-phobic discourses by considering these as equivalent to other views, opinions and political positions out there, and thus up for ‘open’ debate.
This view of needing to be tolerant of intolerance is implicitly supported by UK Education Secretary Gavin Williamson MP, in an open letter in the right-wing newspaper The Daily Telegraph (11 July 2021):
"At the end of the day, this is about respect and tolerance. We should not demonise those who disagree with us. We need to teach students how to disagree civilly, not to ‘cancel’ or condemn." - then UK Education Secretary, Gavin Williamson MP.
We can clearly observe empirical examples of what Krzyżanowski & Ledin have called 'borderline discourses', where the civil is invoked to claim the right to be uncivil - ‘fascists have always been well acquainted with this recipe for using democracy’s liberties against itself’.
In the ‘anti-woke culture war’ discourse, freedom of speech to be racist & discriminatory is thus coupled with a divine freedom & right to insult & to offend others, which often gets coupled with an older metapolitical discourse from the right of ‘political correctness gone mad’.
As the argument goes; ‘nowadays you cannot say anything any longer, you’re not allowed to laugh at anything, whereas in the good old days we could be unashamedly racist, sexist, and/or homophobic - how awful’.
In this regard, columnist Douglas Murray calls the ‘insidious’ woke movement, ‘political correctness on steroids’ (in The Sun, 24 June 2021).
What is also apparent here is that by focussing on freedom of speech & the right to offend, these moral entrepreneurs are also de-topicalising & thereby de-emphasising the ‘bad actions or properties’ of the dominant group, eg:
in this case discrimination, hate speech, racism, sexism, homo- and transphobia, which is an integral part of the oyeran discursive strategy.

Some authors are more explicit in defending hate speech by delegitimating current hate speech laws as impediments to freedom of speech:
"The right to offend people and debate from different perspectives are at the heart of freedom of speech. Hate speech laws on race, gender and other areas have been superficially fully justified." (James Sunderland MP and David Maddox, The Common Sense Group, 2021: 40).
One might think that the metapolitics of the 'anti-woke culture war' is mainly situated at a symbolic level, but this war of position sometimes has concrete impacts on policies.
For example, when it comes to education, the then Minister of Equality Kemi Badenoch MP (Hansard, 2020), fulminated against the decolonisation agenda during a debate on #BlackHistoryMonth in Parliament, issuing the following threat:
"I want to be absolutely clear that the Government stand unequivocally against critical race theory... We do not want teachers to teach their white pupils about white privilege and inherited racial guilt."
"Let me be clear that any school that teaches those elements of critical race theory as fact, or that promotes partisan political views such as defunding the police without offering a balanced treatment of opposing views, is breaking the law" (Badenoch, then Equality Minister).
Kemi Badenoch, whose parents are from Nigerian descent, argues here that white privilege & structural racism are ideological figments of the progressive left-wing imagination, which she deems illegal to teach without giving equal attention to the so-called ‘counter-argument’.
These threats and attempts to 'cancel' critical race theory were subsequently followed up by right-wing commentators claiming that ‘wokeism has *infected* the education system’ (Douglas Murray in The Sun, 24 June 2021) - a particularly salient metaphor during the COVID pandemic.
Disease metaphors go back a long way in political discourse; they are often melodramatic and assume ‘a punitive notion... as a sign of evil, something to be punished’ (Sontag, 1978: 82).

A month later, the UK Education Secretary announced a new HE Bill which he called the Freedom of Speech Bill, giving the Govt, amongst others, the power to sanction universities if they create safe spaces or dare to de-platform speakers with racist, sexist or LGBTQ-phobic views:
"We are taking forward our landmark Higher Education (Freedom of Speech) Bill... to safeguard and protect the great traditions of our universities, and ensure Britain remains a country where free speech can flourish." (Gavin Williamson MP, in The Daily Telegraph, 11 July 2021).
Here again we can observe how free speech is weaponised and used against those that fight discriminations of any kind and advocate for social justice. This again emanates from the textbook of the fascist right who have been doing this for decades.
Gavan Titley convincingly documents how the far-right consistently generates free speech scandals, with the aim ‘to create space for racist speech as a beleaguered expression of liberty, & positions the dissemination of racist discourse as a contribution to democratic vitality’.

• • •

Missing some Tweet in this thread? You can try to force a refresh
 

Keep Current with GET A GRIP - AUSTERITY KILLS

GET A GRIP - AUSTERITY KILLS Profile picture

Stay in touch and get notified when new unrolls are available from this author!

Read all threads

This Thread may be Removed Anytime!

PDF

Twitter may remove this content at anytime! Save it as PDF for later use!

Try unrolling a thread yourself!

how to unroll video
  1. Follow @ThreadReaderApp to mention us!

  2. From a Twitter thread mention us with a keyword "unroll"
@threadreaderapp unroll

Practice here first or read more on our help page!

More from @docrussjackson

Oct 14
Jeremy Hunt co-authored a 2005 policy book calling for our #NHS to be replaced by health insurance:

“Our ambition should be to break down the barriers between private & public provision, in effect denationalising the provision of health care in Britain.”

independent.co.uk/news/uk/politi…
The book was put together by free-market Brextremist UKIPer Douglas Carswell, & in addition to Jeremy Hunt, the book’s other authors also included Michael Gove, Daniel Hannan, Greg Clark, David Gauke, and, of course, Kwasi Kwarteng.
Carswell moved to the USA, to become President & CEO of the Mississippi Center for Public Policy, a free-market, conservative "think tank" which advocates for lower taxes, fewer government regulations, 'religious liberty', 'educational freedom', & free-market healthcare reforms.
Read 5 tweets
Oct 14
Ultra-neoliberal Britain has lost more of its biodiversity than almost anywhere else in western Europe.

Changes in land use & the advent of intensive farming have swept away insect-rich wildflower meadows, which are at around 3% of their former extent.

theconversation.com/solar-farms-a-…
A full or partial switch from agricultural land to solar farms in some places would allow the land to recover. A 2016 paper found that solar farms tended to have more species of plant, insect and bird than equivalent farm fields.

helapco.gr/wp-content/upl…
Earlier research from 2013 compared land used for solar to the surrounding farmland, which the solar farm used to be a part of, & found greater numbers of butterflies & bees on the site. Butterflies & bees are worth around £400 million/year to the UK economy as pollinators.
Read 10 tweets
Oct 13
#THREAD

So Boris Johnson is facing questions over whether he followed rules on paid employment after leaving No 10 after receiving $150,000 (£135,000) for a speech to a group in the US called the 'Council of Insurance Agents & Brokers'... 🤔

theguardian.com/politics/2022/…
The 'Council of Insurance Agents & Brokers', HQ'd in Washington DC, is a global lobbying organization, representing leading insurance agencies & brokerage firms. I'm sure Johnson's chat has got NOTHING to do with the UK's private health insurance boom. 😬

theguardian.com/commentisfree/…
The Council serves as an advocacy group to represent the interests of insurance companies before US state & federal Govts, as well as international Govts. Its political action committee works to support candidates who agree with its views & lobby Congress & international Govts.
Read 4 tweets
Oct 13
#THREAD

The UK has one of the largest prison populations in western Europe - approximately 87,550 people - & a broken criminal justice system, meaning some people will be wrongfully convicted, yet the press no longer seem interested - why not?

theconversation.com/how-the-uk-pre…
The British media has a history of doggedly investigating miscarriages of justice. However, as Jon Robins, a Lecturer at University of Brighton shows, there has been a major – and critical – disengagement in the media’s coverage of such cases over the last 30 years.
Research shows that UK national press coverage of miscarriages of justice has notably decreased.

Between 1992 and 2007, it dropped by as much as 18%.

thejusticegap.com/proof-magazine…
Read 13 tweets
Oct 12
Below is a #THREAD on just one of the articles in the journal 'Discourse & Society' from their new Special Issue on The Normalisation of Far-Right Populism & Nativist Authoritarianism: Discursive Practices in Media, Journalism & the wider Public Sphere/s.

journals.sagepub.com/toc/DAS/current
The introductory article postulates broadening as well as deepening the agenda for critical research on the role of discursive practices in media, journalism & the wider public sphere/s in normalization of far-right populism & nativist authoritarianism.

journals.sagepub.com/doi/full/10.11…
The authors' argument is that, on the rise since the early 2000s & especially from the 2010s onwards, authoritarian & nativist populism has posed some very significant challenges to contemporary media & journalism.
Read 37 tweets
Oct 11
#THREAD

I've seen Eddie Izzard live many times, & loved every show. But I'm really not keen on *anyone* who knows fuck-all about #Sheffield or its people being parachuted in (Eddie did *one* year at Sheffield Uni in the early 1980s) - no matter which Party they represent.
Let's have a look at some proud Sheffielders who have made a significant contribution to Sheffield & its people, standing as candidates to be Sheffield Central's next MP.

First up, qualified teacher, solicitor & community activist, Abtisam Mohamed.

Read 4 tweets

Did Thread Reader help you today?

Support us! We are indie developers!


This site is made by just two indie developers on a laptop doing marketing, support and development! Read more about the story.

Become a Premium Member ($3/month or $30/year) and get exclusive features!

Become Premium

Don't want to be a Premium member but still want to support us?

Make a small donation by buying us coffee ($5) or help with server cost ($10)

Donate via Paypal

Or Donate anonymously using crypto!

Ethereum

0xfe58350B80634f60Fa6Dc149a72b4DFbc17D341E copy

Bitcoin

3ATGMxNzCUFzxpMCHL5sWSt4DVtS8UqXpi copy

Thank you for your support!

Follow Us on Twitter!

:(