Here's Lewis Black on an NPR show, getting a call from someone who doesn't like his work. The caller makes a number of mistakes, the most obvious being that if you want to criticize something in public, you need to be prepared to make your case with an example or two.
The caller believes that Black does some kind of damage by mocking religion, Judaism in particular. That alone makes you think the guy on the phone hasn't heard (or understood) much of what Mr. Black says. But even if he's right — even if Lewis Black is out there saying the worst kind of things about Judaism — they'd probably be less disrespectful of the religion than the suggestion that it's so frail it can be harmed by one guy yelling on a stage somewhere. It's like people who think America is so fragile, it could crumble if someone occasionally burns a flag.