Bustem' Down said:I'm not telling you to buy thier stuff. Don't, it's your choice. I'm saying the whole idea of "they're celebrities, so they can't speak thier mind to the public" is crap. They have a right to speak thier mind and you have a right not to buy thier stuff. That's the kind of thing that gives celebrities the idea that thier so much better than us that they can go on peace marches before a war.
I'm slightly split on that aspect. I don't have a podium or a pulpit to stand on, so if I think the President ordered the planes to fly into the WTC, I can't say anything about it, but Charlie Sheen can. Of course, he's *always* been an idiot, which doesn't help his side, but to me it's like someone having the chance to tell the whole world the Holocaust didn't happen. If you said it in a newspaper - you'd be out of business, because you can't print stuff like that without a little bit of evidence (unless you're a private racist tabloid with a small circulation). You couldn't say that if you were in public office or sitting on a court bench.
If you're just about anyone BUT a celebrity, just about the only way you get a bully pulpit is by earning it. You can still be full of BS, but at least you get to the microphone by your own honest effort.
On the other hand, I'm all for freedom of speech. I forget how Jefferson said it, but he once said something to the effect of that generally people are smart enough to tell sh!t from shinola and let them all speak and people can choose for themselves - in a nutshell (ok, so he didn't use those words). But basically, idiotic opinions need to be out there too, so that people can ignore them - but don't shut them out, it gives them *more* strength, and not the paltry amount they'd gain if it was just on its own merit.
On the OTHER hand - how many hands do I get? - celebrity carries with it SOME weight. Otherwise, we wouldn't have them endorsing things out there. We wouldn't have Hollywood actresses out who don't star in movies any more with a political blog on the Web. We wouldn't have athletes endorsing shoes and clothing and food and energy supplements and soft drinks. We wouldn't have actors commenting in public service announcements.
There is a small enough fraction of the public that tends to believe Oprah more than the President, no matter who is in that office. They will listen to a guy who PLAYS the President on TV more than someone who's actually BEEN President. It always scares me that these morons have the ability to cancel my vote.
Since they do hold some of that ability, it behooves them to act responsibly. If they're getting up on a pulpit, their reaction ought to fall into two categories:
1) As a legitimate "voice" of an issue - they carry the responsibility to be able to back up what they say with rational argument and legitimate evidence. They don't go around with half-baked BS about missiles flying into the Pentagon. As such, they get scrutinized and challenged - and debunked - like any other voice on the air. If they make outrageous claims or statements like having a Congressman taken out and stoned with his whole family - they should face the same consequences as if they were a TV anchor saying the same thing.
Or
2) They're private citizens just voicing their views, however stupid they might be. They should therefore expect that their popularity as a public figure will take a hit. They shouldn't bemoan the fact that people no longer want to see their movies or listen to their music because they aired their political or social views. Private citizens deal with this sort of thing in real life as well. They just DEPEND on public support more than the guy who works in an office.
Overall, they'd make better money if they just smiled and ignored questions about their politics - but if they do talk about it, all bets are off.