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Jim Trageser's avatar

The Dixie Chicks analogy significantly weakens your otherwise outstanding argument; people choosing not to buy something is wholly different from trying to stop others from having the opportunity to buy it. A boycott is fundamentally and qualitatively different from a ban: If people were urging record stores to not carry their albums (and that may have happened; I don't recall it, but that doesn't mean it didn't), that would be different from a boycott. Because if choosing not to buy someone's records is censorship, then I've been "censoring" Yoko Ono for more than 40 years now.

On a serious note, Wilkinson's tweet was actually funny for anyone who has a sense of humor, whereas the tweet from his former boss was simply angry and hateful.

The answer to cancel culture is for people in positions of power to stop caring what is on Twitter. Just. Stop.

And those of us appalled by all of this should stop spending our money on organizations that indulge this crap.

Which mean, Glenn, we boycott businesses like Amazon, Google and Twitter - not to "cancel" them, but to spend our money on businesses whose practices don't contribute to cancel culture.

Again, it's important to differentiate between boycotts and bans.

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SimulationCommander's avatar

Very few people actually have the courage to stand against their peers and proclaim something is wrong.

I'm very happy that GG is one of those people.

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