Bud: Kimmel gave himself wiggle room, but the worm got crushed anyways.
Buddy: Kimmel is good at using tricky language but everyone knows where he was going with this. It would have increased in intensity and frequency over the next few weeks.
I asked ChatGPT to give me a reframe on this story through the following books:
Conservative Claims Of Cultural Oppression (Rony Guldmann)
Kimmel’s dismissal can be read through what Rony Guldmann calls the progressive Clerisy—a diffuse but powerful cultural elite in media, academia, and bureaucracy that enforces orthodoxy without needing formal institutions. From this perspective, Kimmel’s ouster is less about one man’s comments and more about the Clerisy’s power to “marginalize, or excommunicate, miscreants from the public sphere.” The punishment isn’t incidental; it’s the mechanism by which liberal cultural dominance sustains itself, cutting off dissent and reinforcing the sense among conservatives that they are subject to “the last socially acceptable bigotry.”
Joel Kotkin describes the “progressive Clerisy” as a diffuse ruling class:
“In ways not seen since at least the McCarthy era, Americans are finding themselves increasingly constrained by a rising class—what I call the progressive Clerisy—that accepts no dissent from its basic tenets. Like the First Estate in pre-revolutionary France, the Clerisy increasingly exercises its power to constrain dissenting views, whether on politics, social attitudes or science. … The contemporary Clerisy increasingly promotes a single increasingly parochial ideology and, when necessary, has the power to marginalize, or excommunicate, miscreants from the public sphere.”
And the book emphasizes the invisible enforcement:
“They do not marginalize or excommunicate in the name of some codified orthodoxy like Catholic teaching or Talmudic law. But conservatives believe that the cumulative social prestige arrogated by this ‘rising class’ is the functional equivalent of such an orthodoxy, endowing the liberal elites with a special power to cut off debate and silence dissent.”
The Politics of Expertise (Stephen Turner)
Stephen Turner’s analysis helps frame this as a problem of expert authority. Modern institutions delegate legitimacy to experts—lawyers, HR departments, DEI officers, crisis consultants—who define what counts as acceptable speech. This expertise is not neutral; it aggregates knowledge selectively, with biases built into the system. Kimmel’s fate reflects how entertainment corporations outsource legitimacy to professionalized “experts in harm,” who present their judgments as objective necessity. In Turner’s terms, the decision isn’t about truth but about the institutional structures that allow expert knowledge to “speak to power” and override other values.
Turner stresses how legitimacy rests on experts who define the acceptable:
“For users of expert claims, including experts themselves, there are issues of trust. In large scale expert-audience relations, these are usually described as problems of legitimacy. Science as a whole rests on a vast amount of what is called output legitimacy as distinct from process legitimacy. … With experts we have a bit of both: Are the supposed experts really knowledgeable (an output problem), and is there a system of checks that assures us that they are speaking as experts rather than as interested parties (a process problem).”
And he underscores the political consequences of expert rulings:
“Expert claims routinely ‘affect, combat, refute, and negate’ someone or some faction or grouping of persons. … Claims about the human contribution to climate change favor the faction that believes in an extensive role of the state in regulating the economy. All these claims are ‘political.’”
From Tolerance to Equality: How Elites Brought America to Same-Sex Marriage (Darel E. Paul)
Darel Paul’s account of elite-driven cultural change situates the firing within a broader pattern: professional-class elites driving a shift from tolerance of difference to mandated equality. Just as marriage norms flipped rapidly under elite sponsorship, speech norms are being redefined by the same class logic. What once might have been tolerated as tasteless humor is now read as incompatible with “normalization” values. For Paul, corporate HR and media executives act as guardians of elite class culture, ensuring their institutions embody “diversity without tears” by excluding voices that don’t conform.
Paul documents how elites shifted norms from toleration to mandated affirmation:
“Toleration was once American elites’ preferred frame for thinking about homosexuality. As they came to support normalization, however, mere toleration fell out of fashion. Equality is now the dominant frame of discourse. … With the power of the state now fully behind normalization, toleration has itself become morally compromised. … To those editors the cost of such toleration can be counted in dead bodies. … If these are the wages of tolerating anti-LGBT bigotry, what virtue can exist in toleration?”
He situates the change squarely in elite institutions:
“All the attention paid to mass opinion and politicians hides the fact that the views of social elites had evolved long before those of Biden and Obama. As early as 2005 polls showed a plurality of persons with advanced degrees supported same-sex marriage. … ‘Creative class’ cities pioneered broad societal LGBT normalization.”
These paragraphs, read together, suggest Kimmel’s firing wasn’t just about one incident—it’s an example of how cultural elites (the Clerisy), institutional experts (legitimizing authority), and professional-class norms (mandated equality over tolerance) converge to police the boundaries of acceptable speech.
Seen through these works, the Kimmel firing is not just an HR dispute or a culture-war skirmish. It embodies:
Cultural oppression dynamics (conservatives excommunicated by a liberal clerisy).
The politics of expertise (specialized arbiters of acceptable speech consolidating power).
Elite cultural transformation (the professional class imposing new norms of equality).
In short, Kimmel becomes a case study in how cultural elites wield soft power to police the boundaries of legitimacy, with “free speech” arguments dismissed as irrelevant to the deeper class and institutional logics at play.
