America woke up to another sermon from Whoopi Goldberg on The View, and hardworking Americans across the country rolled their eyes. Goldberg has long been the moderator of that daytime panel, wielding a megaphone for left-wing talking points while pretending to speak for the common person.
This isn’t the first time her “preachy” posture has backfired; in February 2022 ABC even suspended her for two weeks after a disastrous on-air claim about the Holocaust that exposed how careless lecturing can turn into real harm. When a host uses moral grandstanding as a substitute for facts, the consequence is predictable: credibility evaporates and the conversation spirals into chaos.
Time and again Whoopi goes on the offensive—scolding conservatives, judges, or cultural figures—only to reveal how shallow those attacks really are. After the Supreme Court’s affirmative-action ruling, Goldberg’s blistering remarks at Justice Clarence Thomas were less about reasoned debate and more about theatrical moralizing, the kind that comforts the choir but does nothing to persuade the skeptical American.
Even off-script, her temper and lectern manner have made the set a spectacle instead of a forum; producers have had to rein her in and manage combative studio moments when Whoopi escalates into a performance. When a host interrupts, confronts, or halts taping to scold an audience member, viewers smell the rot—this is showbiz posing as statesmanship, and the country deserves better than celebrity sermons between ad breaks.
Conservatives who watch these clips aren’t asking for censorship; they’re demanding accountability. If your platform is going to preach virtue and lecture the nation, then you should be prepared to back up those sermons with facts, humility, and an honest willingness to engage real Americans beyond the echo chamber—qualities The View’s moderator has repeatedly failed to demonstrate.

