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Cancel Culture

Canceling an Artist Because He's Russian Is Nothing Short of Bigotry

And it will only drive people further into the arms of President Vladimir Putin.

Billy Binion | 3.17.2022 5:28 PM

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thumbnail (3) | Wikimedia Commons
Alexander Malofeev (Wikimedia Commons)

The war in Ukraine is an atrocity. Sadly, so are some of the attempts to show solidarity with the Ukrainian people.

Russian restaurants in the U.S. have had windows smashed in and received bomb threats—when their owners have not only condemned the war but aren't even from Russia. Buildings with Russian cultural ties have been defaced. Much of the world is severing academic and professional ties with Russians, employing a nationality-based litmus test to punish people for a war they did not start and may not support.

The world of classical music took another embarrassing turn in that narrow-minded direction last week when a 20-year-old Russian pianist lost a string of engagements across Canada, with both the Vancouver Recital Society and the Orchestre symphonique de Montréal (OSM) saying it would be inappropriate to host a Russian artist at this time or in the near future. "Considering the serious impact on the civilian population of Ukraine caused by the Russian invasion," the OSM wrote in a statement, it "must announce the withdrawal of pianist Alexander Malofeev."

There are several immediate problems with that approach, but the most glaring: Malofeev condemned the war in Ukraine—not an easy task for someone who lives in the heart of a murderous authoritarian regime where dissidents are sometimes imprisoned, poisoned, or killed. It should be difficult to sell repackaged racial and ethnic discrimination as a brave stance against oppression, but, somehow, people are buying it.

That this is what's happening is not really up for debate. For its part, the Vancouver Recital Society originally nixed Malofeev under the guise that he hadn't spoken out forcefully enough against the war. Then he did. But while the organization said they "appreciate his words"—words that can come with quite the high cost—they stood by their decision. The society notes that it will stand in solidarity with Ukraine, apparently by ostracizing and alienating all Russians, making them global pariahs, and thus driving them further into the arms of President Vladimir Putin.

Over at the OSM, the famed conductor Michael Tilson Thomas, who is battling aggressive brain cancer, was supposed to conduct the young prodigy. He lost the opportunity. "It is regrettable that political situations have made it impossible," Thomas said in a statement. But did they?

If you ask JoAnn Falletta, music director of the Buffalo Philharmonic Orchestra, the answer would be a pretty simple no. The group declined to cancel performances with Malofeev earlier this month, despite some community pressure to do so. And the world kept on turning.

Malofeev's recent firings neatly coincided with another puzzling decision: The Cardiff Philharmonic Orchestra last week opted to remove composer Pyotr Tchaikovsky from its Tchaikovsky concert, describing the music as "inappropriate at this time." But the well-intentioned choice is misguided for a host of reasons, most notably the fact that the famed Russian composer, who died over a century ago, said he belonged in Ukraine and wrote some of his music around Ukrainian folk songs.

Such is the sort of bridge-building you'd assume we need right now: regardless of nationality, where you were born, or where you live, you can stand united in opposition to evil. Music transcends cultural and geographic boundaries. So, too, can opposition to war.

"I still believe Russian culture and music specifically should not be tarnished by the ongoing tragedy, though it is impossible to stay aside now. Honestly, the only thing I can do now is to pray and cry," Malofeev said in a Facebook post last week. "It would seem that there are obvious conclusions: no problem can be solved by war, people cannot be judged by their nationality."

Choosing to travel the latter road that Malofeev describes—one where someone is deemed complicit because of their birthplace and heritage—is bigotry masquerading as bravery. Courage is rebuking a dictatorial regime in spite of your nationality. Terminating someone because of their nationality? That's nothing short of cowardice.

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NEXT: The New York Times Belatedly Admits the Emails on Hunter Biden's Abandoned Laptop Are Real and Newsworthy

Billy Binion is a reporter at Reason.

Cancel CultureRussiaUkraineWarCanadaVladimir PutinMusic
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  1. Á àß äẞç ãþÇđ âÞ¢Đæ ǎB€Ðëf ảhf   3 years ago

    While boycotts are mostly useless, I would far rather have individual people and organizations boycotting on their own, than depend on a monolithic government deciding who is the fashion of the day on behalf of everybody.

    This way, people and their governments can get a much better sense of what those people actually think of foreign matters.

    It’s freedom of association writ large. Get rid of mandated affirmative racism, which is just the flip side of mandated segregation. Get the government out of it altogether. Restore freedom of association.

    1. Megan T. Ledezma   3 years ago

      Easily work do it for everyone from home in part time and I have received 21K$ in last 4 weeks by easily online work from home. fgb I am a full time student and do in part time work from home. I work daily easily 4 hours a day in my spare time.
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    2. Ignore me!   3 years ago

      It may be freedom of association, but it’s still a shitty, craven decision. The Vancouver Recital Society and the Orchestre symphonique de Montréal should be ashamed.

  2. OpenBordersLiberal-tarian   3 years ago

    When we Koch / Reason libertarians explicitly aligned ourselves with the progressive / neocon / corporate #Resistance and its #RemovePutinsPuppetAtAllCosts agenda, we had to know it would eventually come to this. We’re seeing the inevitable result of 5+ years of (accurately) portraying Russia as the primary force of evil in the world.

    Don’t wimp out now, Billy. 🙂

    #LibertariansForGettingToughWith(Ordinary)Russia(ns)

  3. Trollificus   3 years ago

    This is the spread of the “Virtue Signal” virus from the Twitterati to organizational spaces. It operates as one would expect brain weevils to operate, if they existed.

    No thought, analysis, or principles are involved; no examination of the actual effect, no concern with whether the signaling helps anyone, no, no, no. Just, if you see a way in which you can make yourself appear virtuous…go for it. As we see here, it costs nothing and helps no one except the person ostentatiously pointing out their virtue.

  4. Diane Reynolds (Paul.)   3 years ago

    Just so everyone knows, I wouldn’t have supported putting the Japanese in internment camps. I would have been on the right side of History.

    1. CE   3 years ago

      which according to most of President Biden’s examples, is against the Democrat at the time.

    2. Hank Ferrous   3 years ago

      I will go on the record stating that I would have supported the Sith over the whiny fucks, as long as they were not themselves whiny fucks, in the whiny fuck disney Star Wars movies. I would have been on the wrong side of history, but against the woke cult.

  5. Dillinger   3 years ago

    Borg is eternal.

  6. Catch33   3 years ago

    Another “freedom fries” type moment should be coming any minute now…

    1. VULGAR MADMAN   3 years ago

      As goofy as that shit was, I’d say discriminating against people because
      they were born in a certain country is much worse.

    2. okaro   3 years ago

      I fail to see the connection. That was because France did not want to go into a war. Now Russia has started a war.

      1. VULGAR MADMAN   3 years ago

        So if your country of origin starts a war, you’re on the hook?

      2. Catch33   3 years ago

        Sigh… I’m talking about people, without thinking it through first, coming up with stupid shit to protest something they don’t like.

    3. Hank Phillips   3 years ago

      We need a Salisbury steak with lettuce, mustard and onions for Yossarian at table 33.

  7. Catch33   3 years ago

    So does this mean I can’t listen to Shostakovich anymore? Of course, getting canceled over this is something Dimitri would have probably found deeply ironic…

    1. VULGAR MADMAN   3 years ago

      The people who would have canceled today are so much more enlightened than the people who would have canceled him in the 50’s

      1. VULGAR MADMAN   3 years ago

        “Canceled him”

        1. Diane Reynolds (Paul.)   3 years ago

          “him”

          1. VULGAR MADMAN   3 years ago

            He was a chick?

            1. Diane Reynolds (Paul.)   3 years ago

              “chick”

  8. Fist of Etiquette   3 years ago

    What kind of people would do that to a 12-year-old?

    1. Diane Reynolds (Paul.)   3 years ago

      The right-side-of-history people.

    2. Hank Phillips   3 years ago

      Assassins of Youth?

    3. Hank Ferrous   3 years ago

      The by any means necessary, the ends justify the means, everybody who questions us is a thought-traitor, people. Progressives.

  9. Moonrocks   3 years ago

    Canceling an Artist Because He’s Russian Is Nothing Short of Bigotry

    Watch it, that’s treason talk these days.

  10. Rev. Arthur L. Kuckland   3 years ago

    It’s those racist Americans looking for an excuse to attack those blind hair blue eye brown people. Same as after 911

    1. Renegade29   3 years ago

      You kid, but this feels like a logical consequence of a hyper-identity conscious society.

  11. Cal Cetín   3 years ago

    Today, in solidarity with the brave people of Ukraine, I’m pouring all my vodka down the drain and drinking nothing but pure Irish whiskey!

    1. Cal Cetín   3 years ago

      The leprechauns are applauding my stance, thanks guys!

    2. Diane Reynolds (Paul.)   3 years ago

      I’m sticking to Manischewitz.

  12. Vesicant   3 years ago

    >wrote some of his music around Ukrainian folk songs

    Yes, and that symphony is named “The Little Russian,” not “The Little Ukraine.” By your logic, WWII was wrong because neither the Germans nor the Japanese should be blamed for their leaders. Funny how you don’t mind blaming people who support Trump.

    1. Hank Phillips   3 years ago

      Someone fetch a can of butthurt salve for the poor, vessicated Trumpanzee on aisle five! I haven’t laughed at so many crybabies since Slick Willie’s other galpal got slapped down by libertarian spoiler votes. Boo hoo hahahahah!

  13. Hank Phillips   3 years ago

    All my Russian and Ukrainian friends are ashamed of the governments they once lived under. The spitting match is between two oppressive regimes, both of which enforce prohibition laws Lysander Spooner defined as antithetical to individual rights. So tell me, is this Sinfest cartoon (https://tinyurl.com/2p96ecs9) making fun of Ukraine, Russia, Texas or all three?

  14. Homple   3 years ago

    Remember after 9/11 when anyone who looked squiggle-eyed at a Muslim was on their way to the hoosegow?

    The times, they have a’changed.

  15. NOYB2   3 years ago

    Canceling an Artist Because He’s Russian Is Nothing Short of Bigotry

    :O

    (That’s my shocked face emoji.)

    And it will only drive people further into the arms of President Vladimir Putin.

    So do economic sanctions and shipping weapons to Ukraine, and you like those.

    But, I suppose when it affects your fellow educated elites, like classical musicians and writers, it’s a whole different matter, isn’t it?

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