Josh Denny is a pro-life libertarian who hosted Food Network’s Ginormous Food in 24 episodes in 2017. Denny is also a comedian, which means some consider him controversial because wokeness or something.
Food Network decided to pull everything from the channel with Denny because of his tweets regarding the Texas heartbeat law.
(Remember, I used to be an abortion fanatic. I was pro-abortion. I hated all restrictions on abortion. I’d say pro-choice but would be slightly annoyed if a woman chose adoption.)
Let’s see what caused the Food Network to make such a move. First off, Denny celebrated the Texas heartbeat law. It was glorious.
Let me tell you this. Your body does let you know you’re pregnant. Every mom I’ve asked said they knew, even with surprise pregnancies.
You are ending someone else’s life. Abortion stops the heartbeat of an unborn human being.
Second, Denny did not cave. He did not apologize. He did not back down when people brought up old tweets or called him names. But this should not surprise anyone because he has a history of sticking to his guns.
Some of the tweets are colorful, but hey. He’s a comedian.
Then Food Network caved. It’s nice to know their values include infanticide. But Denny took the avenue most celebrities avoid: He did not apologize.
Denny has always told “controversial” jokes. He has never changed. He has also made his political and social views known to everyone.
Denny’s tweets show nothing new about him. Food Network knew it when it hired him in 2017.
The Food Network and other companies always feign shock and surprise when people point out an employee or former employee’s old tweets or rants.
We need more people like Denny.
It’s not the first time Denny set off the left. In 2018, everyone exploded when he said that “straight white male” is this century’s n-word. Denny did not back down. He told The Red Pill host Van Lathan that people sent him death threats. He did not apologize.
Then Denny said the n-word numerous times on the podcast, but mainly when he retold old jokes from 2012. Those tweets spelled out the n-word and brought up Asian women.
Denny did not apologize. He described those tweets as “dark comedy.”
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