Last year, Schilling was suspended from ESPN for an offensive Tweet that compared some Muslims with Nazis. In that case, Schilling deleted the post and quickly apologized. However, during this social media crisis instead of apologizing for the post quickly he doubled down and defended it on his blog.
Schilling has the right to voice his opinions. However, under his agreement with ESPN there is most likely a morals clause and under ESPN's social media policy it most likely enables it to fire him for making those opinions public on social media. Most jobs in the U.S. are at-will meaning that employees may be fired for any reason or no reason at all that doesn't violate public policy (i.e. discrimination-age, race, gender, religion etc...)
Schilling's reputation has taken a tremendous hit. It is highly questionable whether he will be given another opportunity by a large media company to be a sports commentator. It wasn't just one offensive social media post that did him in. Schilling's cumulative comments online and offline and how he responded to them made it easy for ESPN to fire him.
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