Daniel Tosh, the Evil Insect Who Thinks Rape Is Funny

I support the freedom of speech and believe that the vile freakazoid Daniel Tosh has the inalienable right to tell as many rape jokes as he wants. I also believe that, for the same reason, every normal, decent person is entitled to denounce him and tell the world what a vile cockroach he is.

The story about this stinky animal proved to be a great litmus test of people’s basic normalcy. I already discovered two diseased freaks in my blogroll (one male, one female) who tried making excuses for this jerkwad’s vile actions.

If we all join forces in denouncing Daniel Tosh as the vile rape apologist that he is, we will manage to tank his sorry excuse for a career. Let’s do this, people! Let’s ridicule him and boycott his stupid shows.

P.S. One comment that is even mildly defensive of this animal will get you hurled off this blog for good like a turd of shit. I don’t need any mentally unhealthy freaks around here.

16 thoughts on “Daniel Tosh, the Evil Insect Who Thinks Rape Is Funny

  1. I’ve always found his brand of comedy to be repugnant, but I never thought he’d go so far as he did in that club. I cried reading that poor woman’s story.
    I normally restrain myself from insulting people too harshly, but I think that in this case, it’s appropriate for me to wish that Daniel Tosh gets boiled in pig semen.

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      1. His defenders have fallen into the same stupid trap that they do every time, thinking that being criticized means he’s being oppressed, and OMG censorship!
        Comedy Central and people signing a petition are not Government entities. They cannot suppress free speech. The petitioners, however, can make it clear that they won’t tolerate such horrid behaviour being given a spotlight, and CC can decide whether he’s worth the risk of losing their advertising dollars if their sponsors back out and the ratings plummet. If they knew what real censorship looked like, they wouldn’t peep about this.

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  2. I was shocked, he was inciting rape. It is scary that people watching just laughed. He just told a group of “men” that gang rape is funny. If even one of them goes on to commit rape he should be sharing a cell with them. I am very offended by this person (I can’t bring myself to call him a man) and the audience let him get away with this!!!

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      1. “What does a person need to have wrong with them to find this situation funny??”

        He must hate women. He should be honest and put that in the adverts for his show.

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      2. I actually do think he has some weird issues and a hate for women. In the first episode I saw of his show, he spent a good ten minutes roaring about a video of a “fat” (I would say more of a curvy but nowhere near fat) woman in a bikini. It turned my stomach. Passing blatant cruelty and much more seriously inciting rape and violence off as comedy is a sign of something seriously wrong with him.

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      3. //Passing blatant cruelty and much more seriously inciting rape and violence off as comedy is a sign of something seriously wrong with him.

        Being original is hard and demands some talent. Easier to reach enough people for a program by going for the lowest common denominator. Even gives the benefit of being considered “edgy” and attracting *more* publicity, which is his everything, his bread & butter.

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      4. “He must hate women. He should be honest and put that in the adverts for his show.”
        I wouldn’t be surprised if he did exactly that and then claimed he was being “ironic.”

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  3. Rape jokes are, unfortunately, pretty much par for the course insofar as the more inept sort of stand-up comedian is concerned, but his “hilarious” incitement to gang rape should spell the end of his career.

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  4. I had sort of heard of this guy before — I knew his name, knew he had a show on Comedy Central. But I’d never actually seen his show, or his live act, or heard any of his jokes. I’m now glad I haven’t; the only thing I know about him is that he is the kind of person who thinks it is A-OK to urge a crowd of people to gang-rape a woman who interrupts him.

    (Also, since first reading about that, I have seen another post about him that says disgusting jokes about how great rape is are apparently a recurring theme in his act.)

    Vile indeed.

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  5. I can’t add anything more to this, what you’ve said is perfect. As for the people laughing at his jokes and defending them… I put it down to our increasingly conformist society, where everyone is terrified of standing out from the crowd and being “different.” No one wants to be “that one” — the person who won’t laugh, whose refusal to approve of reprehensible “jokes” makes everyone realize they’re shits for laughing along. Also, look what happened to the girl who stood up; people in the land of the free and home of the brave are terrified of this happening to them. Another thing is our increasing admiration for authority figures. The fact that this Tosh person was on a stage made him the “leader” of the evening, and anyone who contradicts the leader is a traitor. We’re sliding as a society further and further towards fascism and incidents like this are a warning.

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  6. I don’t know anything about the situation, or even about how the state of emotions are rising or falling in the US these days. I’ve severed my links. However, in the old days, I often heard people say that if you take these kinds of issues seriously, you are “just being sensitive”. So, of course there are ways to be insensitive, like pronouncing that it would be quiet funny if Daniel Tosh and all his laughing entourage were gang raped. You could mention this with a tone like this could be quite normal and acceptable, and people shouldn’t be too sensitive to hear these kinds of ideas spoken.

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