Today, We See Extreme Bullying Disguised as Social Justice

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Cancel culture started out with people calling out public figures, celebrities, and big companies for wrongdoing. It began gaining traction on Twitter and it was intended to call out offensive behavior and teach big-wigs a lesson anytime they made a racist or homophobic remark. However, it is now used as an excuse to cyber-bully and dox anyone for anything- anyone, including private citizens.

All that needs to happen is for someone either not to like or hate someone. Or maybe someone stands up to “the wrong person.” Maybe a person says something that someone else does not like or is taken the wrong way. Or maybe someone wears the wrong color T shirt.

Maybe the wrong person finds an old photograph from way back in 1983- a photograph of the person they hate dressed as Michael Jackson on Halloween and accuses him of blackface, never mind that, at the time, the guy might have ban a huge fan of the singer and wanted to dress up as him for the  occasion. Whatever the perceived infraction, the target risks being cancelled, doxxed, and having their lives ruined. This is indeed a dangerous world we live in today.

When cancel culture first got started in 2017 with the advent of trending hashtags, it was focused on calling out a person committing an infraction, even if they never meant to. All it took to get back into the good graces of the public was to issue a public apology and do better not to get out of line again. Once you made your apology, all was well, and you can get on with your life. But not so anymore.

Now, cancel culture is focused on destroying the lives of the person on the receiving end and a public apology no longer suffices. It’s a shame that human beings can no longer make mistakes without others ruining their lives over it.

Now, the cancel culture crowd cancels people in hopes that they can drive their targets to commit suicide. To me, that’s an indirect form of attempted murder.

Granted, some deserve to have their lives ruined- those who are pedophiles and those who promote child porn and human trafficking. But it seems awful strange that people who are known pedos and who promote such unspeakable things are never the ones who get cancelled. Now how is that? And, more importantly, why? I wonder.

Just a few days ago, I listened to a YouTube video of Stefan Molyneux. In the video, he stated that cancel culture was a dress rehearsal for mass murder. Up until I heard him speak, I never thought about it, but he certainly has a point.

His talk made me think back to when I studied history in school, and it brought back some of the lessons in that class. Yes, cancel culture did exist back in the early 20th century, only it had different names. It will only escalate if it isn’t stopped.

What happens when society gets bored with today’s cancel culture and decides that not even destroying someone’s life is enough and that they should start trying to kill them or have them killed?

Any type of bullying, including cancel culture, only escalates if it’s left unchecked. Cancel culture has happened down through history. Just do your research on Hitler’s Nazi Germany, Mussolini’s Fascist Italy, and the former Soviet Union. They are proof that cancel culture is a precedent to mass murder. We know that the last escalation point of bullying is always murder if the person doesn’t commit suicide first.

So, how bad does it have to get before people wake up and realize that they’ve only opened a Pandora’s box?

And when will people start cancelling those who deserve it- pedophiles and others who promote child porn and human trafficking?

As to why they don’t cancel them, could it be because of who a lot of the customers are? That some of the customers are some very popular and powerful people?

It sure makes you wonder why the very people who need to be cancelled are the ones who escape it.

I’ll leave you to ponder the questions in the post because they’re very important questions. Although critical thinking and asking questions are strongly discouraged today, it’s what’s needed in order to heal our world.

With knowledge comes empowerment!

0 thoughts on “Today, We See Extreme Bullying Disguised as Social Justice

  1. 80smetalman says:

    Yes cancel culture needs to be cancelled. You could have said something that wasn’t intended to cause offense ten years ago but you can still be hung, drawn and quartered for it today.

  2. Nautilus says:

    I don’t know much thing about this “cancel culture”, but I wonder if the some of those “canceled” people of the western world would use their talent, intelligence, and creativity to be successful in some other places (let’s say Russia, China, Iran, or the world of organized crime?).

  3. Sue Gallagher says:

    Hate and killing others is wrong. In the hierarchy of wrongs , they are at the top. I think too many people are hiding behind ‘terms’ including slangs and jargon to make convoluted arguments to justify their conduct. A direct cause is a direct cause.Pedophiles aren’t murderers. Let us not ignore the forests for the trees. If we perpetuate hateful causes, we need to look inward not deflect. I think all of us have lost our way.

    • cheriewhite says:

      Thank you for your comment. However, pedophiles might as well be murderers because they kill the spirit of a child. They set the child up for a lifetime of mental health issues, fear, and insecurity. They may not kill the physical body, though some do to keep the child from talking, but they kill the spirit, Sue. In my opinion, chemical castration would be a good penalty for them. And I’ll tell you the truth- if I ever caught anyone sexually abusing one of my grandchildren or one of my children when they were growing up. I would’ve blown…that pedophile…away!!! – as any parent or grandparent would. I’m being honest here!

  4. Miriam says:

    What a crazy mixed up dangerous world we live in. There needs to be lines drawn. However pedophiles and those involved in child trafficking deserve to have their lives ruined. No excuses. It’s a dark time we’re living in, though I prefer to focus on the light and the good. A thought provoking post. 🙏

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