The man who was killed was a close friend of the president and most of the men and women close to him. Not much time has passed. Temperatures are high. People are saying and doing things they normally wouldn't, and in some cases, shouldn't. Important men and women with the ear of the president and his team have already come up loud and clear about free speech concerns.
Mr. Kimmel could have totally ignored this subject; he could have just told jokes about sports or the weather or Mr. Trump. Worked for Carson. He crossed a line; if you look over the facts of the case as currently presented, Mr. Kimmel's statement is insane wishful thinking. That is his right, you know: he can stand on any soapbox, owned by Mr. Kimmel, on any public street corner. As soon as he chose to speak his mind on the ABC Television Network, he crossed a line. He doesn't own the soapbox. The street corner he's speaking from? Ultimately, it belongs to you and me, as leased (via license) to the network and its affiliates. The American Broadcasting Corporation has to decide, how far do they wish to go in support of Mr. Kimmel and his unpopular opinion?
Walter Cronkite's famous negative take on Vietnam resulted in CBS getting an unpleasant call from LBJ, but the "most trusted man in America" kept his job. But, suppose Cronkite opined that Sirhan Sirhan was a liberal Democrat, upset that RFK wasn't liberal enough, and that the DNC & LBJ were at fault? Or, if you prefer, what if Dick Cavett stated it on his late night show? I don't know. Go back and watch early reports of the JFK shooting and they were suggesting the gunman must have been a right-winger. Maybe not much has changed.