In full daylight
Just one paragraph from the Everyday cancellation article:
A criticism of SEEN in Publishing, a sex equality and equity network for publishing professionals, was that its organisers chose to remain anonymous, but reactions from the industry – including naming it a “vile TERF publishing group” (commissioning editor) and a “nasty, anonymous, hate-filled little network” (editor), and telling its members to “get fucked” (publisher) – show why it has been necessary for them to do so. “I was really scared,” said a representative of SEEN in Publishing of her decision not to reveal her identity. She pointed out that most of the abuse directed online at the network had been sent from social-media accounts that were linked to their employers in the publishing industry. It is striking that calling people disgusting, nasty bigots can be done in full daylight, while joining a network that believes in the material reality of sex requires secrecy to protect those joining it from the perpetrators of this open abuse.
Astonishing, isn’t it? Women who don’t believe in magic gender are forcibly silenced, while people who call those women horrible names are flattered and assisted and welcomed to throw verbal shit at those silenced women.

“B-b-b-ut Cancel Culture doesn’t exist! I know because Owen Jones and David Klion said so!”