You have the right to speak freely. You have
no right to demand a paycheck for it.
Speak your mind at the bar or at church or on the street corner, and you have a reasonable expectation to be left alone to say whatever you wanna say (within certain limits).
When you're being paid to speak, you have an obligation to stay within guidelines that your employer gets to draw. Stick to your script - get paid. Go off on your own, and you're on your own. And we wish you the very best of luck in all your future endeavors.
I'm not crazy about boycotts because they tend to hurt local business people (ie: neighbors) while leaving the big dogs more or less untouched. That said, I still think it's a really good idea for consumers to vote with their feet if they feel the need, and with their emails whenever they get a chance. Smart companies know they have to listen to their customers. They spend many millions every year trying to convince us they're in line with the trends they spend other millions trying to get us to tell them about. When we take a few minutes to sign a petition or send an email thru their websites or leave critical comments on their facebook pages, they notice.
So when Rush Limbaugh gets slapped around (finally) for being - for having been for a very long time - a complete punk-ass rent-a-con, what we may be seeing is a kind of self-correction; the immune system of the body politic at work.
I dunno, of course, but it looks a lot like cause and effect to me. Pay a guy to do something and that's what he does. Stop payin' him to do it and he's likely to stop doin' it.
(hat tip and inspiration =
driftglass)