Many fans of cancel culture have mentioned that it's mostly powerful people publishing opinions about it, as if that were some kind of contradiction. Of course it's mostly powerful people who are speaking openly about a phenomenon that gets less powerful people fired.
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Keyword being ”seeming” and then rile up a mob (ie. On twitter) and make it a sport to go after them
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Or is it revealing people and businesses for who they really are so that when they look for support from others, others know who and what they're supporting?
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Your definition is unclear. Is Amy Cooper a victim of cancel culture? Is it wrong that she lost her job?
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Was Tucker Carlson's writer cancelled? Milo Yiannopoulos? The recent CEO guy caught yelling at an Asian family in a restaurant?
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This is a gross mischaracterization of a phenomena that has a rightful place in civil discourse. Being called out for differences of opinion (which can lead to a person getting fired) is an essential part of expression. Words have meaning.
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