Bill Maher complains: 'No One Is Canceled For Being Too Woke’

The popular host complained about cancel culture in an interview with Fox Nation's Pierce Morgan.

Bill Maher is not a best friend of "woke" culture and has repeatedly made this known. This time, the popular host stopped by Pierce Morgan's show on Fox Nation, where he analyzed cancellation culture and drew the following conclusion: "No one gets canceled for being too woke."

Maher took part in the interview series Pierce Morgan Uncensored in which both presenters informally chatted about a variety of topics, including American culture. According to Maher's analysis, cancellation culture does not seem to affect those "woke" activists who go overboard with their comments.

"Nobody ever gets canceled for being too 'woke.' So you can say the craziest thing, like 'men can have babies,' [...] and even though people are thinking, 'Well, that's kinda nuts.' Nobody'll say it, they'll just fall in line," the Real Time host said.

"'Uh, yeah, exactly, that's what I've always thought. Men can have babies. Sure. I saw a dude who was glowing yesterday.' [...] And that's the problem," Maher continued in a sarcastic tone, sparking laughter from Morgan. As for the cause of this problem, the humorist also remarked that it is a matter of "intellectual cowardice".

Afterward, both talked about the fear of being canceled that exists in journalism and artistic environments. "They see people around them literally getting canceled, getting shamed and abused," Morgan continued, and "getting hounded out of jobs, and they think, 'I don't want it to happen to me.'"

Maher repeatedly criticized the "woke" culture, making him the target of those who have taken up that agenda. For example, he infuriated this group in August 2022, by claiming that "being woke is like a magical moral time machine in which you judge everyone by what you think you would have done in 1066, and you always win."

Not content with that statement, he was a harsh critic of the world today, where, according to him, "when truth conflicts with narrative, it's the truth that has to apologize."