Cancel Culture Is a Marketing Grift
Getting “Cancelled” has become a mark of prestige within certain, more radicalized segments of the population, especially for those insulated with cash
Dave Chappelle is touring the nation to discuss cancel culture. “If this is what being canceled is, I love it!”
The term “cancel culture” has been in our vernacular since 2016 and is often used as a shield by celebrities and politicians who demonstrate harmful behavior to dismiss critics as triggered radicals, the reality of it remains unchanged: Cancel Culture doesn’t exist.
At least not in the frame that has it been presented to the public- always by a high profile figure being held accountable for their venomous words or egregious actions that inflict distress on a person or communities of people in the general public.
From some perspectives, criminals like R. Kelly, Harvey Weinstein, Bill Cosby, and even Jefferey Epstein are victims of Cancel Culture rather than participants in their own demise. According to Insider, the origin of Cancel Culture emerged as adjacent to the #MeToo movement, wherein powerful and influential men who had committed abusive, threatening, or oppressive acts weaponizing sex or sexual harassment were called out by the victims after…