Of course I do.
It's why I'm for socialist economic policy (free college/healthcare/UBI/slavery and conquest reparations, all for all for all of these).
Well, very nice.
Forgive me if I'm wrong but I interpret your response as a sort of "gotcha" attempt because of your supposition that I'd be some sort of capitalism-fan or what have you, and you couldn't be further from the truth.
It was more of a "I see you don't appear to have considered that their interest is purely based on economic reasons or maintaining their current power. Perhaps consider this more deeply!" kind of gotcha, I didn't say it supposing you'd be a corporatist of any kind
That said, it was still kind of a gotcha statement, which is unprofessional and kind of unfair, so I very much apologize. It was rude of me.
Recently I've heard the term "class-reductionist" which I do embrace wholeheartedly. The idea that it's not about identity politics issues and what have you, that if we fixed the economic issues everything else would fix itself too. Yep, I'm smack dab in the middle of that.
Eh, I half agree.
Fixing the underlying inequality of power/class would solve a LOT of the world's social problems. Absolutely not all of them, there are hateful bigots out there who hate others purely because they were taught to, after all. I highly doubt that "confederate flag karen" type people will stop thinking black people are inferior even if she gets a living wage, healthcare free at point of service, and a universal basic income.
I'm just also a fan of art and freedom of expression though, so I am not for cultural marxism, which is what cancel culture is a spawn of. I don't wanna eat the rich, I just wanna shave off their diamond mansion a bit and allow folks to live in reasonable comfort and dignity.
I assure you, most people saying "eat the rich" are saying it for shock value and to make people pay attention to the discontent of the people suffering inequality, and that most of them would be totally fine with millionaires existing, so long as the system was made much more equitable.
That said, I don't blame "cultural marxism" (whatever that acutally is, I've heard a load of definitions, many of them gross or nonsense) for cancel culture. See the rest of my post talking about how we've been cancelling/exiling/etc people since early society.
So yeah, to reiterate, this is about giving these people and corporations the motivation to suffer the economic damage accompanying being for free speech and freedom of the arts and of expression. To solemnly nod and tell them they're doing the right thing and that they have powerful support.
I really don't think that's possible for large businesses and groups, especially any that have any degree of prominence. Especially for publically traded businesses, whose entire reason to exist is to make more money for the shareholders and investors.
Smaller groups that only need and want to appeal to certain niches can and do take stands on stuff....But the larger you get, the less people you can afford to risk angering.
EDIT: That said, if there's the sweeping massive overhauls done that capitalism needs in order to be on strict enough guard rails that it can't exploit the hell out of people just to have better quarterly reports, maybe that'll change.