Online Justice Squads - Digilanteism

Unclebaldrick

Well-Known Member
Two recent examples of some really dumb shit:

The Eurovision winning singer was recently piloried for lowering his head toward a table, an act that was seen by some as doing a line of coke mid-interview.

Hundreds of Jeopardy fans demanded the removal of a recent winner after he flashed what they perceived as a racist gesture, when in fact he was merely making a gesture for his three wins yeah, he did it awkwardly, but even Neal Armstrong muffed his line.

Yeah, I know, a bunch of little Trumptards are going to wander by and condemn "wokeness" and "cancel culture". You don't have a leg to stand on. Your entire worldview is made up from this kind of crap whether it be the entire Qanon thing or condemning Biden for some out of context photos of him touching people while you defend a self-confessed serial sexual assaults.

We shouldn't let ourselves be drawn into this garbage, most of us are better than that.
 
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Two recent examples of some really dumb shit:

The Eurovision winning singer was recently piloried for lowering his head toward a table, an act that was seen by some as doing a line of coke mid-interview.

Hundreds of Jeopardy fans demanded the removal of a recent winner after he flashed what they perceived as a racist gesture, when in fact he was merely making a gesture for his three wins yeah, he did it awkwardly, but even Neal Armstrong muffed his line.

Yeah, I know, a bunch of little Trumptards are going to wander by and condemn "wokeness" and "cancel culture". You don't have a leg to stand on. Your entire worldview is made up from this kind of crap whether it be the entire Qanon thing or condemning Biden for some out of context photos of him touching people while you defend a self-confessed serial sexual assaults.

We shouldn't let ourselves be drawn into this garbage, most of us are better than that.
I had to google it but couldn't get the letter that the previous contestants sent out about it. Sounds like he called Roma a slur at one point too that they called out?

But yeah completely stupid and should not be fed.

It doesn't even look the same as I have seen it done in pictures online.
Screen Shot 2021-05-24 at 5.12.40 PM.png
 
I had to google it but couldn't get the letter that the previous contestants sent out about it. Sounds like he called Roma a slur at one point too that they called out?

But yeah completely stupid and should not be fed.

It doesn't even look the same as I have seen it done in pictures online.
View attachment 4908413
Have I got this right, some people are choosing to perceive that as a racist sign?
 
Have I got this right, some people are choosing to perceive that as a racist sign?
I think that it is more that people are choosing to use it as a racist sign and when is is used innocently they get to point at troll people saying it is racist.

https://www.rollitup.org/t/faces-of-the-master-race.968499/post-16141623
Screen Shot 2021-05-24 at 5.41.51 PM.png


screen-shot-2021-02-13-at-9-07-58-am-png.4824879
 
The first time I can recall seeing the power of the internet so wrongly used was here:

1621892842111.png

Things like this make me yearn for the days of legitimate journalism - yes, the New York Post is not legitimate. There is now a proliferation of these types of lazy, disingenuous new sources and they seem to be effecting both sides. Just think of any thread started by @ttystikk. He's a perfect example of somebody on the left going off the rails. Of course we can't even count the ones on the right. Who remembers @Flaming Pie? And how about the user that now masquerades as the sock puppet @GodAlwaysWins. She used to be a normal person but now she's a complete retard who thinks that 800,000 children each year are falling prey to ritual satanic abuse in this country alone. That last bit strikes me as hilarious as she kept a satanic worship book in her trailer in an entirety non-ironic sense. I guess Trump led her to Jesus.
 
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I'm not Mr current affairs so from a totally impartial perspective that is innocent, him gesturing 3 wins sounds feasible.

The signs are very different.
_20210524_230530.JPG
There's a distinct WP

_20210524_230613.JPG
He has his thumb and forefinger tucked as you would for indicating 3, imo that 3 isn't remotely an attempt at WP, I can't disagree with @hanimmal anyone seeing that as racist wants to, it's cleary not imo.
 
Two recent examples of some really dumb shit:

The Eurovision winning singer was recently piloried for lowering his head toward a table, an act that was seen by some as doing a line of coke mid-interview.

Hundreds of Jeopardy fans demanded the removal of a recent winner after he flashed what they perceived as a racist gesture, when in fact he was merely making a gesture for his three wins yeah, he did it awkwardly, but even Neal Armstrong muffed his line.

Yeah, I know, a bunch of little Trumptards are going to wander by and condemn "wokeness" and "cancel culture". You don't have a leg to stand on. Your entire worldview is made up from this kind of crap whether it be the entire Qanon thing or condemning Biden for some out of context photos of him touching people while you defend a self-confessed serial sexual assaults.

We shouldn't let ourselves be drawn into this garbage, most of us are better than that.
Biden probably is a pedo.

Trump deffinetly is.
 
This looks like a good thread for this article, some say the only truth is statistical, everything else is anecdotal! :lol: Which is kinda like saying, don't believe yer lying eyes!
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White Republicans an outlier on views about race in America (yahoo.com)

White Republicans an outlier on views about race in America

1621895317555.png

Data: Axios/Ipsos poll; Chart: Axios Visuals

A new Axios-Ipsos poll on race relations one year after George Floyd's murder shows in stunning detail how there's no such thing as "what white Americans think," with Republicans and Democrats seemingly living in two different worlds.

Why it matters: Such a vast gap between the left and right inside the majority U.S. racial group belies the notion of a compromise view, and it shows why Congress has been so slow to act.
  • It also helps to explain why Donald Trump still has such a hold on the GOP.
Details: Black Americans are the most dissatisfied or worried about the status quo on issues from policing to employment to politics.
  • Overall, white Americans appear the most resistant to reform. Asian and Hispanic Americans fall somewhere in between across a battery of questions about views and experiences.
  • But a closer look shows white Democrats are most closely aligned with — and sometimes more change-oriented than — Black Americans, while white Republicans are on the other end of the spectrum.
  • Hispanic, Asian American and Black respondents are also somewhat divided by party, but with less of a gap than among whites. There's also less political consequence to their divisions, because there are fewer Republicans in each group and because the populations of these groups are significantly smaller.
By the numbers: 57% of white Americans say that "the events of the past year have made me realize there is still a lot of racism in our country," but that breaks down as 35% of white Republicans — and 93% of white Democrats. By comparison, 80% of Black Americans agreed with that view.
  • 87% of white Democrats, but just 19% of white Republicans, say the U.S. "needs to continue making changes to give Black Americans equal rights with white Americans."
  • Nearly three-fourths of white Democrats, but just one in five white Republicans, say their race gives them an advantage over non-whites.
  • 60% of white Democrats — and just 8% of white Republicans — say the protests over racial injustice last year had a positive impact on society.
The big picture: Majorities across all racial and ethnic groups say the events of the past year prove there's still a lot of racism in the nation. But for all the demonstrations and talking, respondents said they felt that race relations actually got worse since this time last year — and there's little agreement on how to proceed.
  • When respondents were asked to name their top three concerns, the most-cited topic varied significantly depending on race and ethnicity.
  • Black Americans most often cited racial justice and discrimination as a top concern, while white respondents put political extremism or polarization at the top. For Asian American and Hispanic American respondents, COVID-19 dominated.
  • 92% of Black respondents said there must be more changes before there can be equality between Black and white Americans. But just half of white Americans held that view, compared to 70% of Asian Americans and 65% of Hispanic Americans.
The poll also examined racial and ethnic disparities around policing and the criminal justice system, which Axios' David Nather unpacked as part of our Hard Truths series.
  • This same split between white Democrats and Republicans can be seen across most of those questions as well.

What they're saying: "We're in the middle of these broad demographic changes — we're at the tipping point right now," said Cliff Young, president of Ipsos U.S. Public Affairs. "But in the medium term, our politics is going to be extremely divisive because of this."
  • "I'm looking at this as, we're seeing a change of the guard. American society is changing. Our values are changing. There is division, but we know where we're going."
  • "We're going to a society that's going to be much more diverse than it is today and than it was 10 years ago. "
The intrigue: For all of corporate America's talk about diversity and inclusion in hiring, promotions and retention, relatively small shares of respondents across all groups said their employers had made changes in the past year to be more fair or equitable.
  • Just 18% of Black Americans, 20% of white Americans, 23% of Hispanic Americans and 35% of Asian Americans said their employers had made such changes.
  • 32% of white Democrats said they saw such changes, but just 11% of white Republicans agreed.
Methodology: This Axios/Ipsos Poll was conducted April 28-May 4 by Ipsos' KnowledgePanel®. This poll is based on a nationally representative probability sample of 1,875 general population adults age 18 or older.
  • The margin of sampling error is ±2.8 percentage points at the 95% confidence level, for results based on the entire sample of adults.
 
So this thread is not about PBS Kids Odd Squad? Teams working together as teams for better teamwork. Them and Word Girl hand out lots of online justice.

Edit: No pay TV at the riverhouse.

 
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