

Ep. 1207 - The Book Burners Are Here
Mar 3, 2021
Six Dr. Seuss books have been withdrawn from circulation, igniting a debate on censorship and its consequences for artistic expression. The discussion highlights how cancel culture prioritizes individual feelings over collective creativity. Parallels are drawn between book censorship and individual rights, including the Second Amendment. The conversation extends to how technology and societal pressures are transforming children's literature, questioning the motivations behind this ideological shift. The podcast also examines the political implications of COVID-19 governance and vaccine disparities.
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Dr. Seuss Cancellation
- Six Dr. Seuss books, including "And To Think I Saw It on Mulberry Street" and "If I Ran the Zoo," will no longer be published.
- Ben Shapiro argues this is a form of "book burning" due to the books' sudden unavailability.
Digital Book Burning
- Digital book burning is easy due to a "delete button."
- Ben Shapiro advises buying hard copies of books and movies to avoid this.
Justification for Removal
- Dr. Seuss Enterprises claims the books portray people in "hurtful and wrong" ways.
- Shapiro contends no one has been demonstrably harmed by these books.