- Mar 14, 2021
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You might be raising a good question. Let me ask another though. When entertainer Madonna said at a rally (when Trump was President) that she felt like blowing up the White House and she said the next day,
"However I want to clarify some very important things. I am not a violent person, I do not promote violence and it's important people hear and understand my speech in it's entirety rather than one phrase taken wildly out of context"
No one blew up the white house though.
So the question....are you and others OK with that? Or what Cathy Griffin did which I won't go into to speak about. If some of their followers and I don't think anyone can argue that Madonna doesn't have influence if some supporters sought to carry out what she expressed.....does she get off by just claiming she's not a violent person?
Consequences are what matter, with the examples you gave it was entertainers being dramatic and it seems people saw that and no violent actions followed. An example of that on the other side would be a country star saying he would shove his gun in Hillary's body if she tried to take it away.
So if we're going to talk about subjects like this including penalty and punishment are we all agreed it should go right across the board, no exceptions? Are we going to go for an allowance for some and not others?
This isn't partisan, this is the ethics board, it's very telling that you think it is though.
Either way, what are your thoughts on that scenario? Is a leader responsible for the actions of their followers if the followers felt that the actions were orders?
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