There’s yet another superhero film coming out soon, but
instead of the endless Spider-Man or Batman retreads, Wonder Woman is being brought to the big screen.
Alamo Drafthouse Cinema has managed
to call attention to its showing of the film by hosting several women-only screenings that
will raise money for Planned Parenthood. Of course this has produced a needless
shitstorm of controversy as any explicit expression of identity politics is
wont to in these contentious times.
Raising hackles against the screenings is a lot of pointless
blather. This is at best a cheap publicity stunt (that has so far worked
brilliantly). If it really bothers you, you should be extra sure not to give
the organizers the attention they crave.
And it obscures a larger issue that this gives us cause to
address: Freedom of association is a universal human right.
It’s a right of all free people to live as they choose among
whom they choose. It’s a building block of any community. Because just as a
community of free people defines who they are, they also define who they aren’t.
The Alamo Drafthouse Cinema is not taxpayer-funded or given exclusive license
of any kind by the government. It’s a private business. If it wants to ban men
for a few screenings or a week or a year or forever, it can. There’s a distinct
difference, not commonly understood, between the obligations of a
publicly-funded entity and the rights of individuals.
Private businesses have a right to be as discriminatory as
they like. You don’t have to let Mexicans into your house or fat people into
your store. We agree that this kind of blanketed bigotry is morally wrong. There’s
a quintessentially American value to want judge all people by their individual merits
and not by some tribal calculus. But we all have the freedom to live however we
want, and if that means being prejudiced, then that’s an individual’s right
over their own private property and life.
Let’s use this as a “teachable moment” as they say, and
point out that the same right women have to hold a women’s only event applies
to both genders and any other personal classification you care to make. No one
coming to the defense of the Alamo Drafthouse would have a leg to stand on
should some of their critics hold a “men only” event. I don’t want to attend a
sausage party movie screening just to make some kind of\ point, but if that’s
your scene, have at it. In a free country, you have the right to be a bigot if
you want to be, whether that’s based on gender, race or anything else.
Freedom of association is a universal right. That means if
you believe in human rights, you have to defend the exercise of that right,
even if you condemn the sentiment behind it. If you try to stop people from
exercising their rights, no matter how virtuous your intentions seem, you are
the villain.
I don’t think the powers that be at the Alamo Drafthouse
hate men; in fact the owners are men. I think they are savvy businesspeople who
managed to wring a ton of free publicity for their screenings of yet another
superhero film. The public will likely forgive this strategically-timed
chauvinistic bent; and they’ve won the hearts of a lot of women who may
occasionally go out of their way to bring them business.
We will make some real progress if these screenings can make
our more progressive friends “woke” to the fact that freedom of association is
a great freedom to have and has to be protected.
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