Not that those sort of apps are morally ok, but that Apple should not have the power to decide what is morally acceptable for you, and what isn't.
In the broadest sense, I think you're right. And for a large part, the hue and cry against every Apple misstep has led to the will of sane minds countermanding idiotic decisions from Cupertino.
But more practically I think Apple should get some slack. This is relatively new territory ... a company builds a gizmo, other companies provide software but the original company remains responsible for getting the software onto the gizmo. Or
new territory only in that we're talking about millions of gizmos. Right now, I can't get a Mark Fiore app for my Samsung whateveritis. I have every right to claim it's censorship, but since there might be only a few dozen of these things still around, no one's going to care.
Getting back to the OP ... part of the anti-Apple ouevre is how fascistic it's getting in people talking about their products. That's why I think that might be part of Ellen's little skit.
... What happens if Apple decides homosexuality is in fact a sin, and pulls all homophobic references from the app store?
I think you mean the other way around ... :
mt