The FCC just dropped a bombshell on Disney and ABC, launching a formal review of their broadcast licenses over allegations of unlawful discrimination baked into the company’s DEI policies. Chairman Brendan Carr, no stranger to calling out corporate overreach, has zeroed in on how Disney’s diversity quotas and hiring practices allegedly sidelined qualified candidates based on race, gender, and ideology—practices that smack of the very reverse discrimination the Supreme Court struck down in the Students for Fair Admissions case. This isn’t some abstract regulatory slap; it’s a probe that could yank their airwave privileges if proven, forcing the Mouse House to reckon with the legal fallout of woke mandates that prioritize checkboxes over competence.
Dig deeper, and this FCC move reeks of karmic justice for a media empire that’s long weaponized its platforms against everyday Americans, especially on Second Amendment issues. Remember ABC’s relentless gun control crusades, from primetime sob stories framing law-abiding gun owners as threats to cherry-picked assault weapon fearmongering that ignores FBI stats showing rifles aren’t the crime kings—handguns are, by a mile. Disney’s DEI obsession isn’t isolated; it’s the same cultural rot that produces biased narratives demonizing the 2A community as extremists while amplifying anti-gun activists. If the FCC clips their wings, it could chill the broader media’s anti-2A echo chamber, making outlets think twice before pushing agendas that discriminate against conservative voices or pro-gun facts. Carr’s play signals a post-Biden shift: regulators now wielding the people’s airwaves against corporate censorship.
For the 2A faithful, this is a frontline win in the culture war—proof that when Big Media discriminates, the government can discriminate right back with due process. It won’t arm us overnight, but it erodes the narrative monopoly that’s kept gun rights on the defensive. Watch Disney squirm; their empire, built on fairy tales, might just meet a real villain in accountability. Stay vigilant—next up could be their streaming dominance under similar scrutiny.