Jon Cooper Twitter



I know we’ve talked about this ad nauseum on MetalSucks, but I think it’s important we all* actually take a few seconds out of our day to read the First Amendment:

Cooper (born August 23, 1967) is a Canadian-American professional ice hockey coach who is the head coach for the Tampa Bay Lightning of the National Hockey League (NHL). He won the Stanley Cup in 2020 as the Lightning head coach, and is currently the longest-tenured coach in the NHL. View the profiles of people named Jon Cooper. Join Facebook to connect with Jon Cooper and others you may know. Facebook gives people the power to share.

“Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government for a redress of grievances.”

Records of Jon Cooper, a hockey coach from Prince George, BC born Aug 23 1967 who was active from 2000 to 2021.

In other words, the First Amendment is meant to protect people from censorship by the government. That’s it. It doesn’t mean other people can’t be offended by what you say. It doesn’t mean other people can’t tell you you can’t say anything you want anytime you want anywhere you want. If you go into a place of business and start screaming something insane and that business escorts you to the exit, you have no legal recourse. Sorry bruh.

Why am I rambling about all this? Because John Cooper, singer and bassist for the Christian band Skillet and apparent inspiration for Alexander Skarsgård’s performance as ‘Randall Flagg’ on The Stand, is the latest dumb-dumb to put Twitter on blast for shutting down Donald Trump’s account (a mere five years too late!), calling it “censorship” (it’s not) and claiming it’s a violation of the freedom of speech (it isn’t).

And I guess I shouldn’t expect anything more from a dude who named his band after a cooking utensil, but still… this kinda thing is really irksome (to put it mildly).

On a recent episode of his podcast, Hangin’ with Mr. Cooper, the singer/bassist advocated for “revolution” before saying the below stupendously stupid shit (accompanied by my own thoughts, natch):

“Look, I don’t follow Trump on Twitter. I’m not into it. Some people love it; some people hate it; some people are in between…”

Congrats on successfully identifying all the ways someone could possibly react to Trump’s tweets. Not a waste of breath at all.

“…whatever you are, censoring the president from Twitter, no matter what they’re saying…”

Download geometry dash mac. If the next part of this sentence was “is perfectly within Twitter’s legal right,” that would be swell. Of course, that is not the next part of this sentence. I also take immediate issue with the “no matter what they’re saying” bit. It makes me wonder where Cooper would draw the line. If Trump went on Twitter and incited violence against Christians, would he still be cool with that?

“People say all sorts of weird stuff on Twitter — all sorts of violent, inflammatory stuff.”

Yeah, people, not THE PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES, you fucking cretin. The title, in theory, gives Trump a certain amount of cred — which is to say, people take him seriously. He’s not just some guy ranting on social media. Cooper either understands this and is being disingenuous here, or he’s an imbecile. Neither possibility makes him look great.

“Look, I get it. But that is not gonna lead to somewhere good, and I think it’s got a lot of people really freaked out.”

He’s right. Letting a mentally-ill sociopath with a ton of power continue to lie to people and say the election was fixed will lead somewhere much more positive than letting that guy continue to congregate angry mobs which he then directs like a hit squad.

“To me, that’s not the freakiest thing. The freakiest thing to me is all the subsequent things. I’m, like, wait a minute — what does this mean?”

It means Donald Trump will have to find another platform from which to scream his bullshit. That’s about it.

“If Twitter has the power to censor the president, what does that mean?”

It means Twitter has the power to censor the president. I’m not sure what he’s confused about here.

“I think that’s what people are freaking out about.”

I think maybe 1-2% of people who are freaking about this are freaking out because they think it’s censorship, and those people are badly misinformed. The rest may be saying that’s why they’re freaking out, but consciously or not, they’re lying — they’re freaking out because Donald Trump and his rhetoric represent, in their minds, their privileged positions as white heterosexual Americans. The potential loss of that unearned privilege is the fear that truly drives these people.

“There’s tons of people that are conservative that don’t like Trump’s tweets. There’s tons of people that kind of wish he wouldn’t tweet so much.”

Possibly the first and last accurate thing Cooper said here.

“I don’t think that’s what people are freaked out [about]. I think people are, like, ‘Wait a minute. If they can do it to him, what does that mean for everybody else?’”

Twitter

Literally nothing has changed since Trump’s account was suspended. A month ago, you couldn’t say certain things on Twitter; you still can’t. A month ago, that was legal; it still is. You might as well lose your shit because you just noticed they sell fruit at the grocery store. “Wait a minute. If they can sell fruit here, what does that mean for everywhere else?”

“Already, people are losing their jobs — it’s been on the news; I’m sure you’ve seen it — people are losing their jobs depending on what they have supported.”

They’re losing their jobs if they do something stupid and bigoted… and, again, it is within the right of their employer to fire them for doing so. If supporting Trump has become a proverbial line in the sand, that’s because Donald Trump is an aspiring autocrat who uses racism as a tool to amass power for himself. He’s not making legitimate political assertions; most of his opinions aren’t even based in reality. There is, in other words, no basis upon which to form an actual debate. I’m all for compromise and finding a middle ground, but what is the middle ground with someone who keeps shouting “UP IS DOWN AND WATER IS DRY!”? Especially when they’re arguing for violence against their political enemies?

John Cooper Twitter Skillet

Jon cooper twitter

Pat Harty Twitter

“Because, basically, the idea is that if you are conservative, then that means you support the violence; you’re responsible for the violence. If you are conservative, then you support the violence, which is a product of white supremacy now — is what they’re saying.”

Well, the violence is a product of white supremacy. That’s why they’re saying that. You can tell from all the goddamn white supremacist groups involved in the Capitol mob.

But also, I don’t think anyone is saying “if you are conservative, then that means you support the violence.” I think if you’re conservative, you have a duty to stand up right now and explicitly say you do NOT support the violence, and Trump does NOT represent your political beliefs.

I do think conservatives should feel “responsible for the violence” if they haven’t denounced Trump prior to this time. We’ve all known his presidency would end this way for a long time; it’s never been a secret that he’s a selfish lunatic. Fox News culture absolutely aided in bringing us to this point, and I think asking them to feel a little guilty isn’t so out of line.

“Freedom of speech is gonna be gone.”

Again, Mr. Black Hair Dye doesn’t understand what freedom of speech is.

“I don’t know if you know, people are calling — even CNN and other famous people; we’re not talking about just nobodies; we’re talking about influential people in the cultural elite — calling for news sources to be yanked down. Even CNN is calling for Fox News to be yanked down from the cable stations.”

Cooper is referring to an editorial in which CNN’s Oliver Darcy said “It’s hard, for instance, to imagine [cable providers would] carry a fringe and conspiratorial network like InfoWars,” and wondered why, despite this, they carry Fox News. Fox News’ Tucker Carlson, an inveterate liar, subsequently claimed the company has been making telephone calls to said cable providers. His assertion remains unconfirmed.

Jon cooper on twitter

Again, Fox News, which is a network devoted to spreading propaganda, helped get us to the shitty place in which we now find ourselves. You wanna talk about misunderstanding the issue at hand — people aren’t pissed that Fox is conservative, they’re pissed that Fox is fascist. There’s a difference. Only one of those positions involves the use of hatred and lies as a matter of course.

(Quick side note: Cooper uses the term “cultural elite” as though his band hasn’t sold millions of records and won multiple Grammys. This is typical right-wing posturing bullshit.)

“I don’t know what this is gonna mean.”

Again, it’s not gonna mean anything. From a legal standpoint, absolutely nothing new has occurred. In fact, as long as Fox News keeps making money, I’m willing to bet it will continue to exist, no matter who calls and demands it be taken off the air. Some things in America are in no danger of changing anytime soon.

Don’t be mistaken about this: John Cooper gives zero fucks about freedom of speech. He may not follow Trump on Twitter, but his statement makes it clear which side of history he’s on. Oh well. At least his music blows.

*And by “we all,” I mean “some of us.”

*And by “some of us,” I mean “all you morons who still befuddled by the meaning of the freedom of speech as defined by the United States Constitution.”

[via]