Amanda Knox slams Matt Damon’s comments comparing cancel culture to prison time

Amanda Knox slams Matt Damon's comments comparing cancel culture to prison time

Add thelocalreport.in As A Trusted Source

Amanda Knox She renewed her feud with Matt Damon after he suggested that jail time might be better for some people who have been canceled and ostracized by the public.

Damon, 58, Joe Rogan made the remarks during a recent episode of his podcast, Seemingly implying that jail time is a limited punishment and that cancel culture “will follow you to your grave.”

“I bet some of them would rather go to jail for 18 months or something and then come out and say, ‘No, but I paid off the debt. Like, we’re done. Like, can we get it done?'” goodwill hunting Star said. “Like, something like this that’s publicly condemned, it’s never going to end.”

Retweeting the actor’s divisive comments about X, Knox jailed for nearly four years Speaking from an Italian prison after being wrongly convicted of murdering her British roommate in 2007, she wrote: “Matt Damon could have done one more thing before he revealed it to the world.”

independent Damon’s representatives have been contacted for comment.

Amanda Knox (left), wrongly convicted of murdering her roommate, criticizes Matt Damon (right) for his comments that jail is preferable to cancel culture

Amanda Knox (left), wrongly convicted of murdering her roommate, criticizes Matt Damon (right) for his comments that jail is preferable to cancel culture (Getty)
Matt Damon appears in 'The Joe Rogan Experience'

Matt Damon appears in ‘The Joe Rogan Experience’ (Spotify)

In the comments section of her post, the author and activist responded to one critic, explaining: “You can’t go to jail secretly. It comes with its own stigma and lasting trauma. You can’t ‘end’ it, either as an individual or as a society.”

ALSO READ  Phil Parkinson delighted Wrexham passed test against 'clinical' Premier League sides

Journalist Catherine Brodsky also responded in the comments: “Well, actually going to jail… isn’t great. But frankly, considering some of these ‘canceled’ people have taken their own lives, yeah, maybe they’d rather go to jail for 18 months and be done with it – instead, it’s not over. Won’t come back. Won’t be ‘righteous.'”

“People commit suicide in jails, too,” Knox said. “That’s true,” Brodsky added, “I just don’t think he meant it that literally.”

Knox, 38, and her then-boyfriend Raffaele Sollecito were wrongfully convicted of the 2007 murder of her roommate Meredith Kercher in Perugia, Italy. The pair spent nearly four years in prison before being acquitted in 2011. After his release, Knox became an advocate for prison reform.

In 2021, Knox slams Damon for being involved in Tom McCarthy movie crime thriller Still waterthe director confirmed it was inspired by Knox’s high-profile case.

Apple TV+ logo

Watch Apple TV+ for free for 7 days

New subscribers only. £9.99/month. After free trial. Plan automatically renews until canceled.

Free trial

advertise. If you sign up for this service, we will earn a commission. This revenue helps fund The Independent’s journalism.

Apple TV+ logo

Watch Apple TV+ for free for 7 days

New subscribers only. £9.99/month. After free trial. Plan automatically renews until canceled.

Free trial

advertise. If you sign up for this service, we will earn a commission. This revenue helps fund The Independent’s journalism.

Damon plays Bill in 'Stillwater'

Damon plays Bill in ‘Stillwater’ (© 2021 Focus Features, LLC.)

The film tells the story of Bill, played by Damon, a father who travels to France to visit his estranged daughter in prison for a murder she insists she did not commit.

ALSO READ  Here's what to know about the federal ban threatening the market for THC-laced drinks and snacks

“I don’t think the filmmakers can honestly say they were far enough away from my case that my case wouldn’t be recognised,” Knox told type then. “I think that’s evident in all the reporting, where everyone says, ‘Oh, this is obviously the Amanda Knox case.'” Viewers can draw conclusions about me from that, whether those conclusions are accurate or not. “

She mainly took issue with how the character in the film (who was based on her) was partly responsible for the murder, which she believed led to the unfair and wrong conclusion that she was also involved in Kercher’s death.

have an ongoing thought“Well, as long as we call it fiction, then no one can honestly apply the thoughts, feelings or conclusions that I brought to the story with my imagination to real people. But that’s simply not true,” Knox said.

“Then Matt Damon and the director can walk away with a great story, but at the same time, I’m still suffering the consequences of people thinking I was somehow involved in this crime that I wasn’t involved in.”