Welcome to America, the land of the perpetually whiny and offended

Sarah Silverman has been canceled. A Hollywood director fired the progressive comedian because of a sketch she performed a dozen years ago.

“I recently was going to do a movie ... a sweet part,” Silverman said on a podcast this month. “Then, at 11 p.m. the night before, they fired me because they saw a picture of me in blackface from that episode.”

The Comedy Central sketch lampooned a well-intentioned liberal who stupidly wore blackface to better empathize with African Americans.

“I was doing an episode about race,” she explained. “It was like, I’m playing a character, and I know this is wrong, so I can say it. I’m clearly liberal. That was such liberal-bubble stuff, where I actually thought it was dealing with racism by using racism.”

Silverman may have lost a movie role, but at least she still has a career. Not everyone targeted by the “cancel culture” has been so lucky. Just look at Roseanne Barr, who was fired from her TV show for a bad tweet.

No one is immune from cancel culture

All comedians are watching their backs these days. Kevin Hart was fired as an Oscars host because of old jokes, and Aziz Ansari spent a year in professional hiding after a date gone wrong got him lumped in with the #MeToo backlash.

Silverman now regrets the blackface skit but fears more fallout. “I think it’s really scary, and it’s a very odd thing that it’s invaded the left primarily and the right will mimic it.”

Sarah Silverman is honored with a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame on Nov. 9, 2018 in Hollywood, California.
Sarah Silverman is honored with a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame on Nov. 9, 2018 in Hollywood, California.

She didn’t have to wait long for conservatives to join cancel culture.

A trailer for the upcoming film “The Hunt” was released online and controversy followed. The horror film shows wealthy liberal elites hunting a ragtag group of red-state “deplorables” before the backwoods heroes start fighting back. Despite its portrayal of rural conservatives taking down villainous progressives, several right-wing media stars were outraged.

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Even the president joined the backlash. “Liberal Hollywood is Racist at the highest level, and with great Anger and Hate!” President Donald Trump said on Twitter. “They like to call themselves ‘Elite,’ but they are not Elite. In fact, it is often the people that they so strongly oppose that are actually the Elite. The movie coming out is made in order to inflame and cause chaos.”

The movie didn’t seem to deal with race one way or the other, but the studio took the hint. Within a day, it pulled the film.

What happened to grace, forgiveness?

Cancel culture is spreading for one simple reason: It works. Instead of debating ideas or competing for entertainment dollars, you can just demand that anyone who annoys you be cast out of polite society.

Way back in the mists of time, say five years ago, if you didn’t like a TV show or movie, you wouldn’t watch it. Now you can ensure that no one watches it, just by slinging some outrage on social media.

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Our woke mentality is America’s new Puritanism. Instead of a handy list of sins written thousands of years ago, modern sins are ever-changing. A joke that was deemed progressive a decade ago is retroactively condemned as hate speech.

“If you say the wrong thing,” Silverman said, “everyone is, like, throwing the first stone. It’s a perversion. It’s really, ‘Look how righteous I am, and now I’m going to press refresh all day long to see how many likes I get in my righteousness.’ ”

When the mobs b one witch, they tighten the buckles on their hats and pore through old YouTube videos for their next victim.

It’s time for the perpetually offended on the left and right to bring back two concepts the Puritans were at least familiar with: grace and forgiveness.

Jon Gabriel, a resident of Mesa, Arizona, is editor in chief of Ricochet.com and a contributor to The Arizona Republic, where this column originally appeared. Follow him on Twitter at @exjon

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This article originally appeared on Arizona Republic: 'Cancel culture' spreads because we like being constantly offended