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No one has been cancelled just for saying ‘Free Palestine’

When there’s backlash, it’s inevitably because a line has been crossed

July 4, 2025 17:27
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LONDON, ENGLAND - JULY 4: Protester demonstrates outside the High Court as Palestine Action challenges proscription on July 4, 2025 in London, England. The High Court is holding an urgent hearing over Palestine Action's application for judicial review, following the government's decision to proscribe the pro-Palestinian campaign group. Home Secretary Yvette Cooper laid the prescription order after activists from the group broke into RAF Brize Norton and spray-painted two Voyager aircraft on June 20. The ban, which critics have called draconian, will make it illegal to be a member of the group, or to invite support for it. (Photo by Dan Kitwood/Getty Images)
3 min read

You’d think that after nearly 2 years of war, we may have reached a point where this story slowed down. We may have arrived at a point where the Jewish community both in Israel and the Diaspora might be given some level of respite from the daily drumbeat of stories somehow related to Israel, Gaza, October 7 or antisemitism. But alas, here we are, three months away from the second anniversary of the worst massacre of Jews since the Holocaust and we’re still somehow being forced to deal with yet more abuse, discrimination and frankly, BS of the sort that very few minority communities ever have to.

The events of Glastonbury last week are well known. Man says something stupid, man faces consequences or as the kids say ‘F*ck around and find out.’ The fact that Bob Vylan’s tour dates have been cancelled and they’ve been dropped from their record label is not particularly surprising. Public discourse in this country may have coarsened over the last decade, but you still probably can’t get on stage and chant for the deaths of thousands without facing a smidge of backlash. I think we’re on pretty safe ground with the general public on this one.

But since his fall, I’ve been reminded of an insidious trend that we’ve seen since the start of the war. You see it all the time, people pretending that the act of speaking out for the Palestinians is all they’re guilty of, that taking their preferred moral stance is enough to get them thrown in the gulags of cancelled gigs and lost record deals. But that’s not true, is it?

There’s no cabal of Jews who all get together and decide to banish musicians after they dare to criticise Israel. Israel is probably the most talked about state in the world and most people are able to discuss it without veering outside the boundaries of acceptable public speech. It’s only when people step over this line into, I don’t know, justifying the crimes of October 7, that people have a problem with it.