Right, left and or Center. We need to come together on this and tell the SJWs to pound sand. Bill Maher is a Democrat and frequently eviscerates Trump. But he and Trump agree on at least two facts. First is that endless wars are stupid. Second is that cancel culture is destroying America.
I expect assholes like JoeB, Mac and Candycorn to take the opposite view as they are shameless
Leftist assholes. But can rest of us agree on this please?
80% of Americans believe that cancel culture is a problem in this country but we won’t stand up to the 20% who tell us otherwise. Enough is enough.
Let’s unite against cancel culture

You guys crack me up. You rail against "cancel culture" but happily voted for the biggest purveyor of it...
A non-exhaustive list of people and things President Donald Trump has tried to "cancel," as he now decries "cancel culture."
www.usatoday.com
Nothing to do with Trump. He lost. I have Never advocated for cancelling anyone for their political views. Maher is no Trump fan. You knew that and decided to troll anyway. Why?
It's not trolling to point out rank hypocrisy. Trump and his psychophants LOVES them some "Cancel Culture" when he's the one doing it.
What did he cancel? Be specific. You’re such a deranged leftist that it amuses me.
Does the name Colin Kapernick ring any bells?
Here are just the most recent...
September 2016: After the Dallas Morning News and Arizona Republic newspapers endorse Hillary Clinton for president and USA Today
declares Trump unfit for the office, Trump
says, "The people are really smart in cancelling subscriptions to the Dallas & Arizona papers & now USA Today will lose readers! The people get it!"
September 2017: Trump
tweets that NFL players and other athletes who don't stand for the National Anthem should be told, "YOU'RE FIRED." He
says in another tweet, "Fire or suspend!" And at a rally, he
says, "Wouldn't you love to see one of these NFL owners when somebody disrespects our flag to say, 'Get that son of a ***** off the field right now, out, he's fired, he's fired.' "
October 2017: Suggesting he could use the power of the state against media entities he dislikes, Trump
muses about challenging the broadcast licenses of NBC and other networks over their news coverage. (He again
broached the subject of reviewing NBC's license in September 2018.)
November 2017: Trump
calls for a boycott of CNN.
August 2018: Trump
tweets, "Many @harleydavidson owners plan to boycott the company if manufacturing moves overseas. Great! Most other companies are coming in our direction, including Harley competitors."
June 2019: Trump
suggests people stop "using or subscribing" to AT&T to pressure the company to make changes at CNN, which it owns.
September 2019: Trump suggests that actress Debra Messing
should be fired for calling on a news outlet to publish the names of people attending a Trump fundraiser and for a tweet promoting a church sign that said "a black vote for Trump is mental illness." (Messing h
ad apologized for the tweet about the church sign.)
January 2020: Trump
says The New York Times should fire columnist Paul Krugman, a winner of the Nobel Prize in economics, for having incorrectly
predicted a global recession after Trump's victory in 2016.
May 2020: The day after Twitter
appended a fact check link to dishonest Trump claims about mail-in voting, Trump
threatens to shut down social media companies: "Republicans feel that Social Media Platforms totally silence conservatives voices. We will strongly regulate, or close them down, before we can ever allow this to happen."
May 2020: Trump
seeks the firing of Chuck Todd, host of NBC's "Meet the Press," for the show playing a misleadingly
shortened clip of comments by Attorney General William Barr. (Todd
apologized, saying it was an inadvertent mistake.) Again broaching the power of the state, Trump tags the accounts of the Federal Communications Commission, which regulates television, and its chairman, Ajit Pai.
President Donald Trump is now campaigning as a warrior against what he says is a left-wing "cancel culture" that seeks to get people punished or banished for supposedly objectionable words or acts.
www.cnn.com