![Jane Hampton Cook: When cancel culture came for Ben Franklin – here's how this founder fought back](https://video.foxnews.com/thumbnails/060410/640/360/060410_gb_thing_FNC_060410_17-19.jpg)
Jane Hampton Cook: When cancel culture came for Ben Franklin – here's how this founder fought back
Fox News
In the past year, Franklin has been the target of cancel culture. Washburn University removed Franklin's statue to appease vandals while a Washington, D.C., committee included him on their statue hit list.
If Franklin were alive, would he agree with the 64% of Americans who believe that cancel culture threatens freedom? Yes, because he lived through it. Franklin set the standard for fair play, that truth and evidence would win over error and falsehoods. "Being frequently censur’d and condemn’d by different persons for printing things which they say ought not to be printed, I have sometimes thought it might be necessary to make a standing apology for myself, and publish it once a year," Franklin published on June 10, 1731, in his Pennsylvania Gazette.More Related News