It's absolutely crazy this lady wouldn't talk to him first to see if it's true.
I'd say not so much funny as careful and perspicacious. All of these expressions (political correctness, SJWs, cancel culture, virtue signaling, even the skeptic's own lamentable 'woo-woo') exist to put people on their back feet, and where they're effective they are subject to semantic expansion. I had a sense of what people meant by 'political correctness' when I first heard it, and it rapidly expanded to cover a lot of behavior beyond that. Twenty years later, that was replayed with SJW. I don't use any of these vague taunts, because I'm not an idiot.
I do think there's a problem with people ginning up false outrage to get people they perceive as enemies fired (or worse) for innocuous comments (or in this case, a pretty decent joke), and I think that poses a threat to a culture of free speech. I'm just not going to refer to that as 'cancellation', because...I'm still not an idiot. But hope springs eternal.
Such a bizarre analogy.
The fact that he doesn't think he was "cancelled" (because he thinks that term defies analysis) doesn't imply that there isn't a problem for a culture of free speech.I’m not sure how free speech is being threatened considering that in this specific example the person who was supposedly “cancelled” a) doesn’t agree that he was “cancelled”, and b) seems to be speaking rather freely.
We were talking about cancel culture. This is a thread about cancel culture.
Cancel culture definitely has run amok. A lady expressed the opinion that congress people and VP Pence should be lynched and some DC cop cancelled her with a bullet! God damned libs are ruining everything.
Who will be next ?
Leftists canceling leftists.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=l1D...bxiDoRCXR3sPobspXt3JEa0Ch_VfQfcguDQLhgkfhGU_0
Best to assume bad faith, eh? No need to engage.
The fact that he doesn't think he was "cancelled" (because he thinks that term defies analysis) doesn't imply that there isn't a problem for a culture of free speech.
And yes, he's speaking freely, but that's because he doesn't have his job anymore. There's an incentive structure created by mobs being permitted to go after people's livelihoods for the innocuous things they say.
That's fair, that was a pointless jab not really meant to do much.
on a more serious note, we're probably days away from right wingers screeching "cancel culture" in response to the backlash against Marjorie Taylor Greene's unhinged past statements about conspiracy theories and endorsing political violence.
After all, if you can't claim that (((George Soros))) started the California wildfires or that the Parkland shooting was a false flag, then civil discourse is dead in this country.
"Cancel culture" has always been an attempt by people espousing reprehensible, dangerous ideas to paint their critics as the unreasonable people. MTG's comments endorsing political violence to her peers in Congress are fine, but those reacting to this credible danger to their lives are hysterical wokescolds.
No, I'm saying that mobs getting people fired for no good reason is a problem. Sometimes people point to that and say "cancel culture". I don't think "cancel culture" is a unified or specific phenomenon, but to the extent that we're talking about ginning up false outrage to get people fired for doing innocuous things, there's a problem there. It's a mistake to handwave it just because someone called it "cancel culture".You’re hinting at what seems to be at the heart of most “cancel culture” claims: That “mobs” are somehow coercing corporations and businesses into firing people.
Don't you think the discussion of cancel culture would be more interesting if we picked the hard cases (where it's not obvious someone deserves or deserved to be sacked) rather than the easy ones?...we're probably days away from right wingers screeching "cancel culture" in response to the backlash against Marjorie Taylor Greene's unhinged past statements about conspiracy theories and endorsing political violence.