Commentary Model, television host, and best-selling cookbook author Chrissy Teigen is the newest epicenter of the red-hot controversy over cyberbullying and “cancel culture”—those relentless attacks on social media that can result in someone’s losing a media platform, business, or career because of something said or done that offends the swarms of attackers For a decade, Teigen was called the “queen of Twitter,” with nearly 14 million followers and famous as an online motormouth who made exactly the “refreshingly unfiltered” and “brutally honest” (I’m quoting from the media) jokes about conservative political figures that journalists and Hollywood wanted to read. When she reportedly tweeted, “i don’t want much from Sarah Palin. i just want her to admit partial fault, then shoot herself in the face. is that wrong?” her fans chuckled. When she tweeted at then-President Donald Trump, “lolllllll no one likes you” and after calling him an expletive, Vanity Fair …