Censorship and political silence

(© Jorm Sangsorn - stock.adobe.com)

For decades, Americans’ trust in one another has been on the decline, according to the most recent General Social Survey. A major factor in that downshift has been the concurrent rise in the polarization between the two major political parties. Supporters of Republicans and Democrats are far more likely than in the past to view the opposite side with distrust.

That political polarization is so stark that many Americans are now unlikely to have friendly social interactions, live nearby or congregate with people from opposing camps, according to one recent study.

Social scientists often refer to this sort of animosity as “affective polarization,” meaning that people not only hold conflicting views on many or most political issues but also disdain fellow citizens who hold different opinions. Over the past few decades, such affective polarization in the U.S. has become commonplace.

Polarization undermines democracy by making the essential processes of democratic deliberation – discussion, negotiation, compromise and bargaining over public policies – difficult, if not impossible. Because polarization extends so broadly and deeply, some people have become unwilling to express their views until they’ve confirmed they’re speaking with someone who’s like-minded.

I’m a political scientist, and I found that Americans were far less likely to publicly voice their opinions than even during the height of the McCarthy-era Red Scare.

The Muting Of The American Voice

According to a 2022 book written by political scientists Taylor Carlson and Jaime E. Settle, fears about speaking out are grounded in concerns about social sanctions for expressing unwelcome views.

And this withholding of views extends across a broad range of social circumstances. In 2022, for instance, I conducted a survey of a representative sample of about 1,500 residents of the U.S. I found that while 45% of the respondents were worried about expressing their views to members of their immediate family, this percentage ballooned to 62% when it came to speaking out publicly in one’s community. Nearly half of those surveyed said they felt less free to speak their minds than they used to.

About three to four times more Americans said they did not feel free to express themselves, compared with the number of those who said so during the McCarthy era.

A pro-life supporter protesting with "abortion is murder" sign
More people are staying away from sharing their viewpoints on hotly contested issues like abortion. (SibRapid/Shutterstock)

Censorship In The U.S. And Globally

Since that survey, attacks on free speech have increased markedly, especially under the Trump administration.

Issues such as the Israeli war in Gaza, activist campaigns against “wokeism,” and the ever-increasing attempts to penalize people for expressing certain ideas have made it more difficult for people to speak out.

The breadth of self-censorship in the U.S. in recent times is not unprecedented or unique to the U.S. Indeed, research in GermanySweden and elsewhere have reported similar increases in self-censorship in the past several years.

How The ‘Spiral Of A Silence’ Explains Self-Censorship

In the 1970s, Elisabeth Noelle-Neumann, a distinguished German political scientist, coined the term the “spiral of silence” to describe how self-censorship arises and what its consequences can be. Informed by research she conducted on the 1965 West German federal election, Noelle-Neumann observed that an individual’s willingness to publicly give their opinion was tied to their perceptions of public opinion on an issue.

The so-called spiral happens when someone expresses a view on a controversial issue and then encounters vigorous criticism from an aggressive minority – perhaps even sharp attacks.

"Stop the Steal" protests after the 2020 election.
“Stop The Steal” was a commonly seen trope used following the 2020 presidential election. (Credit: Trevor Bexon/Shutterstock)

A listener can impose costs on the speaker for expressing the view in a number of ways, including criticism, direct personal attacks and even attempts to “cancel” the speaker through ending friendships or refusing to attend social events such as Thanksgiving or holiday dinners.

This kind of sanction isn’t limited to just social interactions but also when someone is threatened by far bigger institutions, from corporations to the government. The speaker learns from this encounter and decides to keep their mouth shut in the future because the costs of expressing the view are simply too high.

This self-censorship has knock-on effects, as views become less commonly expressed and people are less likely to encounter support from those who hold similar views. People come to believe that they are in the minority, even if they are, in fact, in the majority. This belief then also contributes to the unwillingness to express one’s views.

The opinions of the aggressive minority then become dominant. True public opinion and expressed public opinion diverge. Most importantly, the free-ranging debate so necessary to democratic politics is stifled.

Not all issues are like this, of course – only issues for which a committed and determined minority exists that can impose costs on a particular viewpoint are subject to this spiral.

The Consequences For Democratic Deliberation

The tendency toward self-censorship means listeners are deprived of hearing the withheld views. The marketplace of ideas becomes skewed; the choices of buyers in that marketplace are circumscribed. The robust debate so necessary to deliberations in a democracy is squelched as the views of a minority come to be seen as the only “acceptable” political views.

No better example of this can be found than in the absence of debate in the contemporary U.S. about the treatment of the Palestinians by the Israelis, whatever outcome such vigorous discussion might produce. Fearful of consequences, many people are withholding their views on Israel – whether Israel has committed war crimes, for instance, or whether Israeli members of government should be sanctioned – because they fear being branded as antisemitic.

[Editor’s note: Similarly, many who support Israel are staying away from the conversation, worried that the treatment of Jews and Israel supporters seen in protests at college campuses could extend to them, too. Rather than attempting to educate others on the complex history of Israel or the terrorist organization Hamas, they simply abstain from engaging entirely so as not to put themselves at risk of being shunned.]

Many Americans are also biting their tongues when it comes to DEI, affirmative action and even whether political tolerance is essential for democracy.

But the dominant views are also penalized by this spiral. By not having to face their competitors, they lose the opportunity to check their beliefs and, if confirmed, bolster and strengthen their arguments. Good ideas lose the chance to become better, while bad ideas – such as something as extreme as Holocaust denial – are given space to flourish.

The spiral of silence therefore becomes inimical to pluralistic debate, discussion and, ultimately, to democracy itself.

James L. Gibson, Sidney W. Souers Professor of Government, Washington University in St. Louis. He does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organization that would benefit from this article, and has disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

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6 Comments

  1. Jack thomas says:

    The simple fact is that intelligent engagement is impact based. No impact from what you say? Then No reason to engage. In modern times you need to build “platform” for your engaged opinion/analysis to have impact/traction. The very act of building “platform” is narcissistic and lacks societal altruism in realtime. Platform also negates your view for most people, as anyone with less followers than a kardashian is proven to have irrelevant views because they have less followers, no matter how brilliant the analysis – the kardashians will always win – they are more important/relevant because they have followers. That’s how the ugly side of this works. In essence, the loss of democracy and the degradation of values-based culture leads to social irrelevancy for any opinion non-platformed with mass-following through self promotion. Good values are boring and don’t get clicks. Self promotion almost guarantees the irrelevancy of any position that would otherwise be rational and valued [aka “politicians”]. So the real question is why speak in fake democracy, when voice is wealth/power generated, and when engaging has no impact outcomes. That’s why I don’t speak. Although my thoughts are relevant. None of us do anymore, when the ugliest voice is the only one heard. I call that: “ugly culture”.

  2. Stephen says:

    What else is to be expected when the left calls everyone that doesn’t agree with them a racist sexist nazi transphobe? There is no point talking with these dumb animals anymore, and no point potentially putting a target on your back for the extremist loons.

  3. Mark Breza says:

    The Redcoats are coming the Redcoats are coming !!
    Kick an overpaid cop — Join the Tea Party.
    They dont call them PIGS for nothing;
    first to the trough.
    After the Revolution read your Whiskey Rebellion history,
    where GW & Alexander(central bank)Hamilton
    slammed a federal excise tax on the poor corn farmers
    & backed it up personally with the military force !They are not patriots they are revolutionaries.
    As was the case the first time , this time also the Tea Party will lead to the destruction of the nation.
    Though both the latter & the present were not against their mother country they naively thought
    that they could have a revolution without separation, killing bloodshed, violence, war.
    If you do not know history it will repeat itself.
    NO THE TEA PARTY DOES NOT LIKE AMERIKA It is a sick bird; AN ILL EAGLE !!!

  4. Marko says:

    McCarthy was right!

  5. Tom Kraft says:

    There is more to fear from a group of purple haired crazies than a white haired retired plummer.

    1. TSDavid says:

      100%