Alec Baldwin SLAMS cancel culture as ‘a forest fire in constant need of fuel’ on Twitter after his wife Hilaria’s fake Spanish heritage scandal
Alec Baldwin once again slammed the concept of cancel culture.
The 62-year-old actor took to Twitter to call out social media users who want to ‘destroy the undeserving and deserving alike.’
In a heated message, he wrote: ‘Cancel culture is like a forest fire in constant need of fuel. Functioning objectively. No prejudice. No code.
Calling out cancel culture: Alec Baldwin, 62, once again slammed the concept of cancel culture for its unrelenting nature, taking to Twitter to call out social media users who hold people in power accountable for their past actions; the star is seen in 2019
TweetL ‘Cancel culture is like a forest fire in constant need of fuel. Functioning objectively. No prejudice. No code,’ he wrote in a heated message on the platform
‘Just destroy. The deserving and the undeserving alike,’ the 30 Rock star added.
On Thursday evening he tweeted: ‘There appears to be a zero tolerance policy for bad behavior everywhere except where it matters most: the US Congress.’
The pointed message comes months after his wife Hilaria’s heritage fell under question when a social media thread pointed out inconsistencies in stories she had told the media about her upbringing.
A number of her childhood peers said she grew up in Boston under the name Hillary Hayward-Thomas, and did not speak with a Spanish accent in those years.
She was seen in a 2015 Today show clip seemingly forgetting the world ‘cucumber’ in a cooking segment, which became a social media focal point as the scandal contained to make headlines.
Controversy: The pointed message comes months after his wife Hilaria’s heritage fell under question when a social media thread pointed out inconsistencies in stories she had told the media about her upbringing; the couple appear in 2016
She told The New York Times of the scandal, ‘There is not something I’m doing wrong, and I think there is a difference between hiding and creating a boundary.’
‘I was born in Boston. I spent time in Boston and in Spain. My family now lives in Spain. I moved to New York when I was 19 years old and I have lived here ever since,’ she told the paper. ‘For me, I feel like I have spent 10 years sharing that story over and over again. And now it seems like it’s not enough.’
Hilaria apologized on Instagram for misleading her followers, saying on social media, ‘The way I’ve spoken about myself and my deep connection to two cultures could have been better explained – I should have been more clear and I’m sorry.’
‘I’m proud of the way I was raised, and we’re raising our children to share the same love and respect for both.’
Apology: Hilaria apologized on Instagram for misleading her followers, saying on social media, ‘The way I’ve spoken about myself and my deep connection to two cultures could have been better explained – I should have been more clear and I’m sorry’
In March, Alec posted a 14-minute video rant on Instagram, hitting out at cancel culture and defending due process amid sexual misconduct allegations leveled at New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo and Woody Allen.
He lambasted social media users – this time targeting those who are eager to ‘cancel’ famous men on the basis of unproven allegations.
Although he did not mention any names specifically, Baldwin appeared to be referring to both Cuomo and Allen.
He began the clip by stating: ‘I do have a few people going at me for defending people who have been accused of crimes… Well, I’m not defending someone who is guilty of something. I’m choosing to defend someone who has not been proven guilty of something.’
Not the first time: In March, Alec posted a 14-minute video rant on Instagram, hitting out at cancel culture and defending due process amid sexual misconduct allegations leveled at New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo and Woody Allen; they are pictured on set together in 2011
Cuomo has been accused of sexual harassment by numerous women, while Allen has been accused of sexually molesting his adopted daughter, Dylan Farrow.
Baldwin told his followers that immediately condemning such men without evidence was an example of cancel culture.
‘The cancel culture thing has revved up during COVID. They [people] have a lot of times on their hands… They want to get on their computer and they want to take on people like me and they want to say every horrible thing that you can possibly imagine about defending someone whose been accused of a crime,’ he said.
‘The COVID has exacerbated everything bad in our society. People are angry and bitter. They’re p**ed off’.
Baldwin said he would no longer defend those who had been proven guilty beyond a reasonable doubt.
‘If it was proven beyond a reasonable doubt that this person was guilty, I would certainly be open to changing my tune and even apologizing to victims,’ the star declared. ,
‘I’m all in favor of tough laws on people who sexual harass or abuse, but it has to be proven.’
Alec clearly has a love-hate relationship with Twitter. He has quit the social media platform multiple times this year, as well as in 2017, 2014, 2012 and 2011.
Also in March, he shared a 10 minute Instagram rant after deleting his Twitter account.
He claimed that Twitter ‘is where all the a**holes in the United States and beyond go to get their advanced degrees in a**holiness.’
He added: ‘The problem with Twitter is, Twitter is a lot of haters.’
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