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The Republic of Smieda

Xyanth wrote:I would think the people of Germany would have already learned that lesson. But, yet... here we are.

Well actually a lot of people especially in the eastern parts of the country are very fed up with marxist and woke agenda. A lot of them still remember how socialism was and they see the similarities.

But unfortunately, this is not an isolated issue. We see similar things happen in other western countries like the US and Canada.

Corporate Collective Salvation wrote:Subversive Marxism 101 calls for the infiltration and eventual control of infrastructure like education, media, tort culture, and healthcare.

Yes, they are everywhere. One of the latest things I heard, maybe some of you know about it, was that there are consultant companies that video game studios hire to make their games politically correct and to get that juicy ESG score. They rewrite the stories and are able to do other things in the name of "inclusion" and "diversity". Basically they want to shove you woke stuff down your throat.
I really hate that everything has become politicized nowadays. Mainstream Movies, TV shows and games now too just try to push a narrative.
Anyway someome made a Steam curator list of some games where one of these companies was involved. The company (Sweet Baby Inc) called for mass flagging of the list on Twitter which made the whole thing more popular. (Streisand effect)
The media portrayed this list as far right white supremacist hate crime. Sidenote: The author of said list is Brazilian.

The Technocratic Union of Corporate Collective Salvation

In regards to US entertainment media, just follow Disney's odious trail, and assume the rest of the industry is following suit.
They are long past the need for subtlety as decades of defining deviancy down has skewed the frame of reference for divining true center on any given issue.

In its arrogance, American news media operates under the premise that the customer is always wrong.
Boycotting is a very limited response, because it is not about the money.
Circulation, and ratings count for little in the minds of progressive moguls in politics, or business.
They happily prop each other up with cash, and occasional policy tweaks on the Hill, because all that matters is staying on the air, and the screen, so they can keep beating people over the head with their spin.

The Republic of Moreistan

Everyone, BOPDR's next debate will be on immigration. It will be at 9:00 AM AEST Sunday, or 6:00 PM EST (I think. That could be CST) Saturday. The specific topic should be 'In what cases is increased immigration a good thing?'. If you would like to sign up to participate in the debate, telegram me about it, and I will add your name to the list.

The Republic of Moreistan

Gurkland wrote: are unintelligent and democracy is rule by the ignorant, trust the experts only, people are also too disinformed and unintelligent to vote''

...They're not? No offence, but I think the authoritarians may have a point there. They certainly aren't any more qualified, though.

The Pirates of Xyanth

Corporate Collective Salvation wrote:In regards to US entertainment media, just follow Disney's odious trail, and assume the rest of the industry is following suit.
They are long past the need for subtlety as decades of defining deviancy down has skewed the frame of reference for divining true center on any given issue.

Disney is a freight train speeding toward a busted bridge. The CEO and the Board are starting to catch on and backed off on the throttle. What waits to be seen is if anyone applies the brakes before it is too late to stop the train from plunging into the canyon.

The Technocratic Union of Corporate Collective Salvation

The New York Times, and other powerhouse publishers like it, have devolved into allowing Twitter to be their editor in chief in all but name.
Entertainment does not pretend to as high an ethical standard as news reporting, which leaves cowardice in the face of rabid activists a considerable obstacle.
The progressive activism industry has become a powerhouse in its own right as far as financial backing, and political influence goes.
A very fat Karen to sidestep around in any hall of power you have to navigate in the US these days.
However, a board of directors can only let things go so far, but instead of nipping the issue in the bud like they would a purely numbers issue, they have to take matters tainted with ideology, especially in the face of ESG standards of accounting, to the cliff's edge like baby Kirk in the Corvette at the quarry.

The Pirates of Xyanth

Corporate Collective Salvation wrote:The New York Times, and other powerhouse publishers like it, have devolved into allowing Twitter to be their editor in chief in all but name.

Tell me about it. More and more news articles are littered with twitter comments as part of the article. Seriously, people. I don't care what people are tweeting. Other people's opinions should not ever be part of a fact based news piece.

Opinions are why someone created the editorial page.

The Technocratic Union of Corporate Collective Salvation

Never mind that Twitter is the lowest common denominator of American discourse, and does not represent a median example of much beyond willful emotionally charged ignorance.

The Armed Republic of Anconcapistan

Corporate Collective Salvation wrote:Never mind that Twitter is the lowest common denominator of American discourse, and does not represent a median example of much beyond willful emotionally charged ignorance.

The blue haired girls are seething after reading this lmao.

The Technocratic Union of Corporate Collective Salvation

Case in point.
It is blue check, not chick.

At least I don't have to be online to know what they are thinking, if that is the word for it.

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