Gina Carano Calls For “Conversation Over Cancellation” After Whoopi Goldberg Was Suspended From The View

Ed Skrein and Gina Carano speaking at the 2015 San Diego Comic Con International, for "Deadpool", at the San Diego Convention Center in San Diego, California. Photo Credit: Gage Skidmore from Peoria, AZ, United States of America, CC BY-SA 2.0 <https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/2.0>, via Wikimedia Commons

Ed Skrein and Gina Carano speaking at the 2015 San Diego Comic Con International, for "Deadpool", at the San Diego Convention Center in San Diego, California. Photo Credit: Gage Skidmore from Peoria, AZ, United States of America, CC BY-SA 2.0 , via Wikimedia Commons

Terror on the Prairie actress Gina Carano responded to the recent suspension of Whoopi Goldberg following her comments about the Holocaust on The View calling for “conversation over cancellation.”

Goldberg was suspended two weeks by ABC News President Kim Godwin who stated, “Effective immediately, I am suspending Whoopi Goldberg for two weeks for her wrong and hurtful comments.”

“While Whoopi has apologized, I’ve asked her to take time to reflect and learn about the impact of her comments,” Godwin added.

She concluded, “The entire ABC News organization stands in solidarity with our Jewish colleagues, friends, family and communities.”

RELATED: Star Trek: Picard Actress Whoopi Goldberg Suspended From The View By ABC News President Kim Godwin Over Comments About The Holocaust

The suspension came after a discussion about the removal of graphic novel Maus from a Tennessee school district’s curriculum. 

During the discussion Goldberg stated, “If you are going to do this then let’s be truthful about it because the Holocaust isn’t about race. No, it’s not about race.”

When Joy Behar countered saying, “They consider Jews a different race,” Goldberg responded, “It’s not about race. It’s not about race.”

https://youtu.be/AhITfM4bqO8

When asked what she thinks the Holocaust is about, Goldberg answered, “It’s about man’s inhumanity to man. That’s what it is about.”

“These are two white groups of people,” she then asserted. “But you are missing the point. You’re missing the point. The minute you turn it into race, it goes down this alley.”

“Let’s talk about it for what it is. It’s how people treat each other. It’s a problem. It doesn’t matter if you are black or white. Because black, white, Jews, Italian, everybody eats each other,” she continued.

“If you are uncomfortable if you hear about Maus should you be worried? Should your child say, ‘Oh my god, I wonder if that’s me?’ No, that’s not what they’re going to say. They’re going to say, ‘I don’t want to be like that.’ Most kids they don’t want to be cruel,” she added.

After Ana Navaro asserted, “It is necessary for kids to learn about the Holocaust,” Goldberg added, “To learn about man’s inhumanity to man however it exposes itself.”

Goldberg would then apologize for her comments on Twitter stating, “On today’s show, I said the Holocaust ‘is not about race, but about man’s inhumanity to man.’ I should have said it is about both.”

“As Jonathan Greenblatt from the Anti-Defamation League shared, ‘The Holocaust was about the Nazi’s systematic annihilation of the Jewish people – who they deemed to be an inferior race.’ I stand corrected,” Goldberg stated.

“The Jewish people around the world have always had my support and that will never waiver. I’m sorry for the hurt caused,” she concluded. “Written with my sincerest apologies, Whoopi Goldberg.”

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Goldberg would then appear on The Late Show with Stephen Colbert, where she further elaborated on her thoughts about the Holocaust and her comments she made on The View.

Goldberg told Colbert, “Because I feel, being black, when we talk about race, it’s a very different thing to me. So I said I felt that the Holocaust wasn’t about race. And people got very, very angry and still are angry. I’m getting, you know, all of the mail from folks, and very real anger because people feel very differently.”

“But I thought it was a salient discussion because, as a black person, I think of race as being something that I can see. So I see you and I know what race you are. And the discussion was about how I felt about that. I felt that it was really more about man’s inhumanity to man and how horrible people can be to people, and we’re seeing it manifest itself these days,” she added.

Goldberg went on, “But people were very angry and they said, ‘No, no we are a race.’ And I understand. I understand. I felt differently. I respect everything everyone is saying to me, and, you know, I don’t want to fake apologize.”

“I’m very upset that people misunderstood what I was saying. And, so, because of it, they’re saying I’m anti-Semitic, and that I’m denying the Holocaust and all these other thing, which, you know, would never occur to me to do. I thought we were having a discussion about race, which everyone I think is having,” she stated.

Colbert would then chime in claiming “whiteness is a construct created by colonial powers during the beginning of colonial imperialist era in order to exploit other people and that they could apply it to all different kinds of people. That idea of race. And the American experience tends to be based on skin.”

Goldberg responded, “Yes, and so that is what race means to me. When you talk about being a racist, I was saying, you can’t call this racism. This was evil. This wasn’t based on the skin. You couldn’t tell who was Jewish. They had to delve deeply to figure it out.”

After Colbert talked about the Nazis identified Jews and made them wear a yellow star, Goldberg stated, “My point is, they had to do the work. If the Klan is coming down the street, and I’m standing with a Jewish friend and neither one — well, I’m going to run — but if my friend decides not to run, they’ll get passed by most times because you can’t tell who is Jewish. 

She elaborated on that point, “It’s not something that people say, ‘Oh, that person is Jewish or this person is Jewish.’ And so that’s what I was trying to explain. And I understand that not everybody sees it that way. And that I did a lot of harm, I guess, to myself.

“And people, you know, decided I was all these other things. I’m actually not, and I’m incredibly torn up by being told these things about myself and I get it folks are angry. I accept that and I did it to myself. This was my thought process and I will work hard to not think that way again,” she asserted.

Colbert would then ask if Goldberg now realizes that the Nazis saw it as race. She responded, “Well see, this is what’s interesting to me because the Nazis lied. It wasn’t. They had issues with ethnicity, not with race. Because most of the Nazis were white people and most of the people they were attacking were white people.”

She went on, “So to me, I’m thinking how can you say it’s about race if you are fighting each other. It all really began because I said how will we explain to children what happened in Nazi Germany? I said this wasn’t racial, this was about white on white. And everybody said, ‘No, no, no. It was racial.’ And, so, that’s what this all came from.”

“So, once again, don’t write me anymore. I know how you feel. I already know. I get it. And I’m going to take your word for it and never bring it up again,” she concluded.

RELATED: Twitter Falsely Claims Gina Carano Was Fired For “Comments Comparing COVID-19 Restrictions To The Nazis’ Treatment Of Jewish People”

Carano responded to Goldberg’s suspension on Twitter writing, “I want to send blessings & love out to the Jewish community. When I was being smeared, cancelled & misunderstood, it was a Jewish man Ben Shapiro who reached out & asked if I’d like to talk about it.”

“Maybe Whoopi Goldberg could talk to Ben,” she added. “Conversation over cancellation.”

Shapiro, for his part, described Goldberg’s comments as “insidious.”

He wrote on Twitter, “Whoopi Goldberg explaining that the Holocaust wasn’t about race because these were ‘two groups of white people’ isn’t just insipid, it’s insidious. It’s downplaying the minority status of Jews in order to uphold bullshit intersectional arguments that justify anti-Semitism today.”

He elaborated in a short thread stating, “The intersectional argument is that Jews are white people , and that Jews are disproportionately successful thanks to “white supremacy.” Because racism is “animus plus power,” and Jews are powerful because they are white, anti-Semitism from non-white supremacists isn’t bigotry.”

“This logic is why the Left will condemn anti-Semitic attacks like the one at the Tree of Life but quickly memory hole anti-Semitic attacks by Black Hebrew Israelites in NJ or radical Muslims in TX,” he added.

He elaborated, “This logic is also why the Left will embrace and/or justify radical Islamists who wish to destroy the State of Israel rather than siding with a liberal democracy that includes a significant Muslim minority.”

“Anti-Semitism, in this theory, is only present when it springs from actual white supremacists,” Shapiro explained. “Other acts of anti-Semitism are just a reflection of the dispossessed lashing out against those who have more institutional power.”

He concluded, “The attempt to abstract the causes of the Holocaust from Jew-hatred to ‘man’s inhumanity to man’ is actually a way of obscuring and covering for anti-Semitism.”

In another tweet, Shapiro wrote, “If Whoopi Goldberg had ever expressed sympathy with a conservative cause in her entire life, she’d be out of a job today. But Leftism confers immunity from anti-Semitism concerns, as we already know from Ilhan Omar and Rashida Tlaib.”

He would also describe her comments as “anti-Semitic in response to National Review Editor Rich Lowry writing, “Whoopi Whoopi Goldberg says something actually anti-Semitic — no problem. Ilya Shapiro says racism is bad — problem.”

What do you make of Carano’s call for conversation over cancellation?

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