Unjust_Social Justice and the Unmaking of America by Noah Rothman
Author:Noah Rothman [Rothman, Noah]
Language: eng
Format: epub
Tags: Politics, Philosophy
ISBN: 9781621579052
Google: PsJkDwAAQBAJ
Amazon: B07F6P8NXL
Goodreads: 40680815
Publisher: Gateway Editions
Published: 2019-01-29T00:00:00+00:00
An Unethical Business Model
Anyone examining the modern social justice movement quickly encounters a chicken-and-egg conundrum. Which came first, a movement that is so myopically obsessed with identity that it canât distinguish a legitimate case of discrimination from a ginned-up contretemps, or the media culture that exploits that obsession for profit? For clarity on this question, consider the rise and decline of Mic.com.
PolicyMic, a website targeting a burgeoning audience of news-consuming millennials, launched in 2010. Like many sites of that period, it cast a wide a net by publishing a lot of material, often with the help of âaggregationââscraping content from other sites with bigger budgets and real reporters and writing some original opinion around it, thereby avoiding the legal mess associated with the outright theft of material. Many aggregators paid their staffers poorly, if at all, but they gave young writers a valuable platform. Their potential in the early age of social mediaâand it was often just potentialâled to speculative ten-figure valuations and venture funding in the tens of millions of dollars.
PolicyMic was one of the more successful such sites. By 2013, it had found its niche as a left-leaning outlet catering to the growing obsession with identity, launching a section dedicated exclusively to Identitarianism and the traffic generated by that special brand of narcissism.
âAt PolicyMic Identities, we aim to feature articles as thoughtful, complex, and unique as the stories of our generation,â read a job listing for that site. âWe examine what itâs like to be a white woman of color, explore what it means to be a male feminist, talk back to the Pope as a young gay man, and reflect on how Abercrombie & Fitch failed you and other homeless youth.â35 Vital stuff.
The site expanded rapidly. By the end of 2013, it published almost a hundred posts per day, generating tens of millions of unique visitors and boasting a network of thousands of writers. That success was reduced to a formula, and that formula was built around the idea that social justice activism was fueled by anxiety, a preoccupation with oneself, and the need for a constant stream of new enemies.
In 2014, PolicyMic rebranded itself âMicâ and dedicated its staff to chasing whatever traffic Facebook had sent its way the day prior. âI think a lot of people in todayâs day and age want to know, âWhat are we supposed to be outraged about?âââ a former Mic staffer told the liberal website The Outline. âMic realized earlier than most places that they could commodify peopleâs feelings about race and gender.â36
Mic relied on rote efforts to stoke angerâanything that encouraged the perception that the Anglo-American West, in particular, is steeped in racial injustice. âââMinority Reportâ Is RealâAnd Itâs Really Reporting Minorities,â read one typical headline. In another, a description in Britainâs Sunday Telegraph of the first female head of the BBC as a âmother of threeâ was described by one no doubt childless Mic reporter as âsexism at its worst.â When the comedian Sasheer Zamata left NBCâs Saturday
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