Meghan McCain is speaking out after her former The View co-star, Whoopi Goldberg, found herself in hot water following some very controversial comments about the Holocaust.
The 66-year-old actress said on the show that the Nazi genocide of the Jews in the 1940s was "not about race" as it involved "two groups of white people".
Goldberg received instant pushback from her co-hosts, as well as from the Anti-Defamation League, the Auschwitz Memorial, and the Holocaust Museum.
Goldberg - who has been on the ABC talk show since 2007 - also argued that the Holocaust was about "man's inhumanity to man".
"If you're going to do this, now let's be truthful about it because the Holocaust isn't about race," she said on the talk show. "No. It's not about race."
Six million Jews were murdered in the Holocaust by the Nazi party, who believed themselves to be part of an Aryan master race.
Now, McCain has spoken out following the controversy, slamming Goldberg's comments as "bizarre, incoherent, and dangerous".
"I hate commenting on my old employer because I have moved in every way a person can move on," wrote McCain, who left The View in August last year.
"That being said I am an activist against antisemitism and it is a big part of my life. The growing threat is real and virulent and everywhere. I am heartbroken about what was said."
McCain also addressed Goldberg's "bizarre, incoherent, and even dangerous" comments in her Daily Mail column.
"I am not calling for Whoopi Goldberg to be fired, if only because I don't believe there is any universe where she could possibly do anything that could get her fired — she is the crown jewel of The View and a pop culture icon," she wrote, in part.
"But I hope this can be used as a teachable moment to explain to millions of Americans why conflating the Holocaust as something that is specific and limited to 'white people' is insane, ahistorical, and anti-Semitic."
McCain also added: "Instead of half-assed apologies and bringing in experts in the antisemitism space, maybe dedicate an entire 'Hot Topics' segment to discussing why what was said was so deeply offensive and dangerous."