If Mort Divine ruled the world

I don't know, I fucking hate her and wish she would just disappear. I just don't agree with what happened to her. And looking at news searches to find examples of her being hypocritical, she has been in the media before this incident, so apparently something.
the studio didn't say "we fired sara silverman"
it's just sara saying "i got fired" without actually naming the movie
if the studio came out and said "we did this" then i'd be less likely to believe this is a publicity stunt
right now i'm still not quite 100% sure sara actually got fired from any movie
 
I fucking hate you for making me watch several videos about Sarah Silverman to see if she really did contradict herself. But she didn't. She just talks about what is appropriate or not in PC culture, and says that modern times call for modern jokes, more or less. There is nothing in those bits about blacklisting people for what they said in the past. Just because she likes being PC does not mean she supports cancel culture, and based on those interviews I bet if she were asked about it she would say it's wrong. I actually wished that you would have been right, but unfortunately your anti-PC blinders are dialed in too high.

You're being a bit of an pedantic faggot right now, man. Did she say she supports people being "cancelled" over offensive statements/sketches/etc? No, I was wrong to say she said she essentially supports this exact kind of 'cancel culture' practice, but she has stated multiple times her pro-PC position and whether she likes it or not, you can't pick and choose which bits of PC culture affect you. Once you jump on that wagon, you take the whole enchilada.

It's like you join a gang because you like the communal aspects of it, but then you get shot by another gang and say "well, all the violence sucks." Yeah no shit, but when you get into gang culture that's an inherent part of it, just like censorship is an inherent part of PC culture.

All I see is Silverman taking a second look at something she supports after it bit her. In the third video I shared, at 1:22 she says she knows she's right that PC-culture isn't ruining comedy, and getting fired for old jokes and punished if you don't "move with the times" isn't somehow completely contradictory to that point? She's in denial and trying to have it both ways.
 
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You Can Definitely Skip Dave Chappelle's New Netflix Special 'Sticks & Stones'
The comedian doubles down on misogyny and transphobia in both the special and the hidden bonus scene that follows.

Dave Chapelle's New Standup Is Offensive in All the Wrong Ways
The jokes were mean and lazy. They were something I never thought I'd see: Dave Chappelle punching down.

Sounds like Mr. Chappelle needs to have a sit down with Sarah Silverman and get fucking woke.

The first article's author said something interesting when she shared her drivel on Twitter also: Who would have thought that transphobic jokes would be the hill that such a smart talented comedian needs to die on?

"NEEDS TO DIE ON" :err:


Edit: lmao Michael Rapaport chimed in.

dddd.jpg
 
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oh come on
SJW bullshit needs to stop
"feminists" are still pissed about dave chappele's ancient "whore's uniform" joke
 
http://archive.is/zHILZ

For years, New York City has essentially maintained two parallel public school systems.

A group of selective schools and programs geared to students labeled gifted and talented is filled mostly with white and Asian children. The rest of the system is open to all students and is predominantly black and Hispanic.

Now, a high-level panel appointed by Mayor Bill de Blasio is recommending that the city do away with most of these programs in an effort to desegregate the system, which has 1.1 million students and is by far the largest in the country.

...

The plan includes all elementary school gifted programs, screened middle schools and some high schools — with the exception of Stuyvesant High School and the city’s seven other elite high schools, whose admission is partially controlled by Albany.

Stuyvesant is the school of choice of the Jewish elite, btw. Jewishness is by definition a form of racial supremacy.
 
https://twitter.com/Glos_Police/status/1166201977602224129

Third-world savage stabs and kills another part and parcel in front of a sign containing the phrase 'Halal Butcher', while the native Brit attempts to defuse the situation and disarm the attacker. Disarmament doesn't seem to work, but a third third-worlder takes the opportunity to attempt disposing of his own knoife in a handy knoife bin. UK police ask that you not share the video.
 
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I'm just going to leave this here without input:

https://www.theatlantic.com/ideas/archive/2019/08/whites-refer-to-the-n-word/596872/

It’s one thing to ban a word because it is a pitiless slur often used amid physical violence. That black people use it—and have forever—as a term of endearment among one another complicates matters somewhat, but whites who ask “Why can’t we use it if they do?” have always struck me as disingenuous. It isn’t rocket science to understand that words can have more than one meaning, and a sensible rule is that blacks can use the word but whites can’t.

However, since the 1990s this rule has undergone mission creep, under which whites are not only not supposed to level the word as a slur, but are also not supposed to even refer to it. That idea has been entrenched for long enough now that it is coming to feel normal, but then normal is not always normal. It borders, as I suggested above, on taboo.

There are societies—such as many in Australia—in which it is forbidden to use ordinary language with in-laws, and this taboo is often extended even to referring to in-laws in conversation. Upon marrying, one must master a whole different vocabulary for talking to and/or about, for example, one’s mother-in-law. Many are familiar with the click sounds in Xhosa. However, clicks didn’t originate in Xhosa, but in lesser-known languages spoken by hunter-gatherers. Xhosa speakers, it is thought, adopted clicks from these other communities as part of an effort to create avoidance language, substituting them for ordinary sounds in Xhosa.

Practices like this sound neat to Americans—but also arbitrary. We understand that the practice is rooted in respect, but can’t help thinking that the official practice has drifted somewhat beyond what logic would dictate. The idea that nonblacks cannot even soberly refer to the N-word verges on this kind of thing. Note the word verges: The N-word is a slur and loaded in a way that, say, asking your mother-in-law what she’d like for dinner is not; sparing usage and serious caution are warranted. Respect, nevertheless, has morphed into a kind of genuflection that an outsider might find difficult to understand.