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Cafe Comments by Lauri Harris's avatar

“…the way our idioms convey our cultural norms. We used to say things like, “Everyone is entitled to their own opinion,” “It’s a free country,” “Who am I to judge?” and “Different strokes for different folks,” much more often than we do now, and our culture reflects that.

We should consider collectively bringing those idioms back with greater emphasis so our culture can begin to reflect something we’re more comfortable seeing.”

You are right. I used to hear those idioms all the time. As a kid we used to say: “I may not agree with what you have to say, but I’ll defend your right to say it.” There was an implied and I expect the same respect from you for what I have to say.

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Fred's avatar

Have you seen the book "The Case for Cancel Culture: How This Democratic Tool Works to Liberate Us All" by Ernest Owens? It provides a poor definition because the author defines "cancel culture" way too broadly. The author includes the Boston Tea Party and the case against Bill Cosby as cancel culture cancelations. Ironically, one reviewer of the book at the web site Goodreads wrote: "no rating no review because of the Saint Martin Press boycott." The boycott is an attempt to cancel the publisher because of one of their employees making an allegedly Islamophobic social media post. So, I assume there are a number of people who didn't read the book because of the "cancelation."

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