Every month,
more than two hundred people from the media, academia, and other
intellectual circles are invited to a private hangout in New York City,
which is known as the Gathering of Thought Criminals. There are two
rules. The first is that you have to be willing to break bread with
people who have been socially ostracized, or, as the attendees would
say, “cancelled”—whether they’ve lost a job, lost friends, or simply
feel persecuted for holding unpopular opinions. Some people on the guest
list are notorious: élite professors who have deviated from campus
consensus or who have broken university rules, and journalists who have
made a name for themselves amid public backlash (or who have weathered
it quietly). Others are relative nobodies, people who for one reason or
another have become exasperated with what they see as rampant censorious
thinking in our culture.The second rule
of the gatherings is that Pamela has to like you. Pamela is Pamela
Paresky, the gathering’s organizer, a fifty-six-year-old psychologist
who lives in Chelsea.Emma Green, The New Yorker
Nessun commento:
Posta un commento