thats not cancel culture, an employer can fire you for just about any reason they want, including but not limited to social media posts. do I agree with that? personally, no - but this is the sort of risk you run when you use your real name and information on a website such as facebook or x
So then
Gina Carano and that
teacher in Virginia, both of whom won their "wrongful termination" suits, are actually not victims of cancel culture after all? Glad we can finally come together as a country on that issue, I know it was dividing us for such a long time.
Now this on the other hand, is a slightly different situation. I never liked Kimmel & hardly ever watched his garbage late show, but I certainly don't think it should be taken off air for speaking his mind. Realistically though, he was employed by a network who follows FCC guidelines - they didn't like what he said so they suspended him. Again, an employer can fire or suspend you for just about whatever reason they want. Maybe he should start his own podcast or independent show where he can say what he wants without a big name network breathing down his neck.
Youre mixing apples and tear gas here. The FCC isnt a boss with an HR department, its a federal agency that my taxes pay for. They dont decide which hosts ABC keeps or suspends. Disney and ABC are the ones who pulled Kimmel, not the FCC. Pretending "well, his employer can do whatever they want" is missing the point: his employer only did it after political pressure from the FCC chair, which makes it a government-driven punishment for speech. Thats not a private HR issue, thats the state leaning on media. Exactly the kind of authoritarianism conservatives pretend to be terrified of when its anyone but their guy in power.
If you defend this, just know, you are defending demonstrable infringement on freedoms of speech and expression way, way, way more important than Mod-man being allowed to say the N-word with his homies.