There is more than one way to compel speech. Canada has legislation prepared to jail someone for life if they advocate for ‘genocide’ or engage in ‘hatred’, two words that are so vague they have no definition. HR 6090 in the U.S. is a similar piece of legislation meant to stop ‘antisemitism’. But speech can be compelled and policed in other ways too, with things like atrocity propaganda or ideological cult beliefs. Someone’s reaction to a person not falling for a narrative, even an alternative narrative, is usually aggressive, often violent, and one that seeks to cancel their existence. Any suggestion that Slovakia's Prime Minister and Iran's President were both shot or killed as part of some larger conspiracy is mocked as insane despite the overwhelming non-coincidental nature of the two cases. Israel’s President Isaac Herzog claimed Shani Louk was decapitated by Hamas, but now it turns out her body was found without any glaring abuse. Just as Israel stood down in October, the government also lied about decapitated babies. Despite these now known facts, anyone who disagreed with the narratives initially was marginalized and censored. The same goes for the lies told about and by Ukraine. Another example is the Harrison Butker speech at Benedictine College. After congratulating women on graduation, he ventured to guess many would like to have children and get married too. He said men should not apologize for being masculine. He then went on to thank is wife for her support and love. In response, a petition was drafted to terminate his contract from the Kansas City Chiefs - as kicker - the city itself doxed him on X, and social media users accused him of being a closet homosexual with a history of having sex with men. The NFL distanced themselves and said they stand for inclusion, despite the fact that the league is more than half black and that Butker is an ultra-minority due to his beliefs and skin color. Furthermore, the NFL demeaned all their players who also have wives and kids, something that has otherwise destroyed black communities in particular. These types of vicious attacks, however, can be found from Catholic Conservatives too who will defend like a cult any criticism of Donald Trump or the Church, even against facts of reality. They can also be found in the vaccine debate. After Alice Stewart of CNN died this past week, many were quick to point out she had a vaccine in 2021 and claimed this is why she ‘died suddenly’ in 2024, which is just a ridiculous claim that, if you call it out, does not mean you don’t think vaccines cause side effects. Common sense and objectivity have been lost in the translation of cult ideology.
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