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  1. title: The forbidden topics
  2. url: https://drewdevault.com/2023/09/29/The-forbidden-topics.html
  3. hash_url: ae2b427ba896475633726fdd731caf09
  4. <p>There are forbidden topics in the hacker community. One is sternly reprimanded
  5. for bringing them up, by their peers, their leaders, and the community at large.
  6. In private, one can expect threats and intimidation; in public, outcry and
  7. censorship. The forbidden topics are enforced by the moderators of our spaces,
  8. taken off of forums, purged from chat rooms, and cleaned up from GitHub issues
  9. and mailing lists; the ban-hammers fall swiftly and resolutely. My last article
  10. to touch these subjects was removed from Hacker News by the moderators within 30
  11. minutes and landed several death threats in my inbox. The forbidden topics, when
  12. raised, are met with a resounding, aggressive dismissal and unconditional
  13. condemnation.</p>
  14. <p>Some years ago, the hacker community possessed near-unanimous praise for the
  15. ideals of free speech; the hacker position was generally that of what we would
  16. now understand as “radical” free speech, which is to say the kind of “shout
  17. ‘fire’ in a crowded movie theater” radical, but more specifically the kind that
  18. tolerates hate speech. The popular refrain went, “I disapprove of what you say,
  19. but I will defend to the death your right to say it”. Many hackers hold this as
  20. a virtue to this day. I once held this as a virtue for myself.</p>
  21. <p>However, this was a kind of free speech which was unconsciously contingent on
  22. being used for speech with which the listener was comfortable. The hacker
  23. community at this time was largely homogeneous, and as such most of the speech
  24. we were exposed to was of the comfortable sort. As the world evolved around us,
  25. and more people found their voice, this homogeneity began to break down. Critics
  26. of radical free speech, victims of hate speech, and marginalized people of
  27. all kinds began to appear in hacker communities. The things they had to say were
  28. not comfortable.</p>
  29. <p>The free speech absolutists among the old guard, faced with this discomfort,
  30. developed a tendency to defend hate speech and demean speech that challenged
  31. them. They were not the target of the hate, so it did not make them personally
  32. uncomfortable, and defending it would maintain the pretense of defending free
  33. speech, of stalwartly holding the line on a treasured part of their personal
  34. hacker ethic. Speech which challenged their preconceptions and challenged their
  35. power structures was not so easily acceptable. The pretense is dropped and they
  36. lash out in anger, calling for the speakers to be excluded from our communities.</p>
  37. <p>Some of the once-forbidden topics are becoming less so. There are carefully
  38. chalked-out spaces where we can talk about them, provided they are not too
  39. challenging, such as LGBTQ identities or the struggles of women in our spaces.
  40. Such discussions are subject to careful management by our leaders and
  41. moderators, to the extent necessary to preserve power structures. Those who
  42. speak on these topics are permitted to do so relatively free of retaliation
  43. provided that they speak from a perspective of humility, a voice that “knows its
  44. place”. Any speech which suggests that the listener may find themselves subject
  45. to a non-majority-conforming person in a position of power, or even that of a
  46. peer, will have crossed the line; one must speak as a victim seeking the pity
  47. and grace of your superiors to be permitted space to air your grievances.</p>
  48. <p>Similarly, space is made for opposition to progressive speech, again moderated
  49. only insofar as it is necessary to maintain power structures. Some kinds of
  50. overt hate speech may rouse a response from our leaders, but those who employ a
  51. more subtle approach are permitted their voice. Thus, both progressive speech
  52. and hate speech are permitted within a carefully regulated framework of power
  53. preservation.</p>
  54. <p>Some topics, however, remain strictly forbidden.</p>
  55. <p>Our community has persistent and pervasive problems of a particular sort which
  56. we are not allowed to talk about: sexual harassment and assault. Men who
  57. assault, harass, and even rape women in our spaces, are protected. A culture of
  58. silence is enforced, and those who call out rape, sexual assault, or harassment,
  59. those who criticise they who enable and protect these behaviors, are punished,
  60. swiftly and aggressively.</p>
  61. <p>Men are terrified of these kinds of allegations. It seems like a life sentence:
  62. social ostracization, limited work opportunities, ruined relationships. We may
  63. have events in our past that weigh on our conscience; was she too drunk, did she
  64. clearly consent, did she regret it in the morning? Some of us have events in our
  65. past that we try not to think about, because if we think too hard, we might
  66. realize that we crossed the line. This fills men with guilt and uncertainty, but
  67. also fear. We know the consequences if our doubts became known.</p>
  68. <p>So we lash out in this fear. We close ranks. We demand the most stringent
  69. standards of evidence to prove anything, evidence that we know is not likely to
  70. be there. We refuse to believe that our friends were not the men we thought they
  71. were, or to confront that we might not be ourselves. We demand due process under
  72. the law, we say they should have gone to the police, that they can’t make
  73. accusations of such gravity without hard proof. Think of the alleged
  74. perpetrator; we can’t ruin their lives over frivolous accusations.</p>
  75. <p>For victims, the only recourse permitted by society is to suffer in silence.
  76. Should they speak, victims are subject to similar persecutions: they are
  77. ostracized, struggle to work, and lose their relationships. They have to manage
  78. the consequences of a traumatic experience with support resources which are
  79. absent or inadequate. Their trauma is disbelieved, their speech is punished, and
  80. their assailants walk free among us as equals while they are subject to
  81. retaliatory harassment or worse.</p>
  82. <p>Victims have no recourse which will satisfy men. Reporting a crime is traumatic,
  83. especially one of this nature. I have heard many stories of disbelief from the
  84. authorities, disbelief in the face of overwhelming evidence. They were told it
  85. was their fault. They were told they should have been in a different place, or
  86. wearing something else, or should have simply been a different person. It’s
  87. their fault, not the aggressor’s. It’s about what they, the victim, should
  88. have done differently, never mind what the perpetrator should have done
  89. differently. It’s estimated that less than 1% of rapes end with the rapist in
  90. jail<sup id="fnref:1"></sup> – the remainder go unreported, unprosecuted or fail after years of
  91. traumatic legal proceedings for the victims. The legal system does not provide
  92. justice: it exacerbates harm. A hacker will demand this process is completed
  93. before they will seek justice, or allow justice to be sought. Until then, we
  94. will demand silence, and retaliate if our demands are not met.</p>
  95. <p>The strict standards of evidence required by the justice system are there
  96. because of the state monopoly on violence: a guilty verdict in a crime will lead
  97. to the imprisonment of the accused. We have no such recourse available in
  98. private, accordingly there is no need to hold ourselves to such standards. Our
  99. job is not to punish the accused, but rather to keep our communities safe. We
  100. can establish the need to take action to whatever standard <em>we</em> believe is
  101. sufficient, and by setting these standards as strict as the courts we will fail
  102. to resolve over 99% of the situations with which we are faced – a standard
  103. which is clearly not sufficient to address the problem. I’m behind you if you
  104. want to improve the justice system in this regard, but not if you set this as a
  105. blocker to seeking any justice at all. What kind of hacker puts their faith in
  106. authority?</p>
  107. <p>I find the state of affairs detestable. The hypocrisy of the free speech
  108. absolutist who demands censorship of challenging topics. The fact that the
  109. famous hacker curiosity can suddenly dry up if satisfying it would question our
  110. biases and preconceptions. The complicity of our moderators in censoring
  111. progressive voices in the defense of decorum and the status quo. The duplicitous
  112. characterization of “polite” hate speech as acceptable in our communities. Our
  113. failure to acknowledge our own shortcomings, our fear of seeing the “other” in a
  114. position of power, and the socially enforced ignorance of the “other” that
  115. naturally leads to failing to curtail discrimination and harassment in our
  116. communities. The ridiculously high standard of evidence we require from victims,
  117. who simply ask for our <em>belief</em> at a minimum, before we’ll consider doing
  118. anything about their grievance, if we could even be convinced in the first
  119. place.</p>
  120. <p>Meanwhile, the problems that these forbidden topics seek to discuss are present
  121. in our community. That includes the “polite” problems, such as the conspicuous
  122. lack of diversity in our positions of power, which may be discussed and
  123. commiserated only until someone suggests doing something about it; and also the
  124. impolite problems up to and including the protection of the perpetrators of
  125. sexual harassment, sexual assault, and, yes, rape.</p>
  126. <p>Most hackers live under the comfortable belief that it “can’t happen here”, but
  127. it can and it does. I attended a hacker event this year – HiP Berlin – where I
  128. discovered that some of the organizers had cooperated to make it possible for
  129. multiple known rapists to participate, working together to find a way to
  130. circumvent the event’s code of conduct – a document that they were tasked with
  131. enforcing. One of the victims was in attendance, believing the event to be safe.
  132. At every hacker event I have attended in recent memory, I have personally
  133. witnessed or heard stories of deeply problematic behavior and protection for its
  134. perpetrators from the leadership.</p>
  135. <p>Our community has problems, important problems, that every hacker should care
  136. about, and we need the bravery and humility to face them, not the cowardice to
  137. retaliate against those who speak up. Talk to, listen to, and believe your peers
  138. and their stories. Stand up for what’s right, and speak out when you see
  139. something that isn’t. Demand that your leaders and moderators do the right
  140. thing. Make a platform where people can safely speak about what our community
  141. needs to do right by them, and have the courage to listen to them and confront
  142. yourself.</p>
  143. <p>You need to be someone who will <em>do something about it</em>.</p>
  144. <hr>
  145. <p><strong>Edit</strong>: Case in point: this post was quietly removed by Hacker News moderators
  146. within 40 minutes of its submission.</p>