I got recommended that "comedian destroys woke hecklers" video yesterday. I've never watched anything even similar to that. It must be a paid promotion targeting a wide demographic or something.
Hyperlich
I work around teenagers. I once listened to a highschool redditor coaching his league of legends team and tell them that if they are losing to a Chinese team then to start yelling "tianammen square!" over the chat because the ceeceepee will disconnect the Chinese team. He claimed he did this all the time and it worked each time. The amount of confidence he said this with was unnerving.
These reddit libs really believe this is some sort of incantation that banishes reality and Chinese people.
Finally, a good use case for bitcoin
As a Chinese-American, sadly I can confirm that in my experience, most Chinese-Americans are pretty brainwashed by Western propaganda and hate/are ashamed of China or being Chinese at some level. Personally, I love and support China and the government but I'm afraid to openly admit that. Once I just simply said "I got friends in China" and a (History) teacher whipped his head around and screamed "WHAT!?!" And gave me the most evil glare. I've had a college professor literally tell the class that Chinese people have no concept of love.
I don't know how internalized the propaganda actually is for Chinese Americans, or if they're just simply afraid of vocalizing support of an "enemy" country while knowing that every person surrounding you has an insane irrational hatred of China and all chinese people and literally want blood.
The plea deal probably: agree to be an imperial propagandist or die in a mysterious accident.
It sounds like they're not just admitting to this, but admitting to creating thousands of accounts on all US controlled social media platforms since 2001 to influence everyone.
Why are they admitting this?
Why is Reuters claiming that propagandizing Americans was not allowed when, I believe, the patriot act gave them permission to do just that? And it's very obvious lots of users on Reddit, Twitter, YouTube etc all glow so bright you could light a city?
I feel this is sort of a damage control thing. Admitting to something they perceive as less horrible (with lame justifications) in order to continue hiding the larger campaign being performed on the English speaking internet. Like a sort of "ok we're bad, we did this thing and we admit it, there is nothing else we're hiding ok?"
I recall operation songbird (?) was this exact thing?
I don't have any sources, just what I remember. So please feel free to correct me if I'm wrong.
Also why is the military the ones doing this? Does the CIA outsource their dumber operations to the military?
And once again why are they even admitting to any of this?
I beat it a while ago. Feel assured, you are playing correctly. The game wants you to use and abuse it's items and systems.
The game was decent, not my favorite but I enjoyed it and do not regret paying near full price.
I won't survive and that's fine with me, I've lived long enough. I want to take a couple formerly-rich parasites out with me though. Leave the place better off than when I arrived.
If I could, I would move to a communist country though.
Honestly surprised Hawaii is so low. Maybe it's because so many of the native Hawaiians and locals got pushed out.
I don't want to be in this country
One Piece : I gotta post some spoilers to talk about it:::: large plot spoilers The main characters dad is literally based off Che Guevara and is always portrayed as the side of good. His ship is named Granma, same as Che's. He's the leader of a force named the revolutionary army. His second in command is named Invankov: queen of the kamabakka kingdom which is an island of gender fluid people who can physically change genders any time they want thanks to Invankovs hormone powers. They go around liberating islands from the world government and freeing slaves.
The main character and his crew embodies freedom and I'd say communist ideals but they never really explicitly say so.
There is an arc where they must dispose of a king who was hoarding doctors for himself. It feels like a metaphor for socializing healthcare.
In most of the arcs after the introductory ones, they team up with natives to force out occupiers who are displacing them, or straight up enslaving them.
One of the first long form arcs they fight what's basically a world government funded NGO who is trying to coup a king in the Middle East by controlling the resources (water).
They fight the CIA of their world.
There are consistent themes of freeing slaves throughout.
The world government is controlled by disconnected incestuous billionaires that all gave themselves the title of "saint"
There is a villain who is liberal coded, who creates a Disneyfied kingdom using fear.
Another is libertarian coded who occupied a land that he turned into a weapons manufacturing island.
There is an alt right coded villain who also turns the occupied kingdom into a weapons manufacturing island. ::: It's a big commitment due to length.
I love the absurd art style (aside from every woman looking like the same character and some portrayals I found insensitive or offensive) but a ton of people have a hard time getting past how goofy it looks. Characters can look ridiculous and proportions mean nothing. Humans heights seem to vary between 1ft - 30ft tall.
The absurdist and cartoony nature of it can be off-putting to a lot of people but personally I love it and wish more things were like it.
There are a lot of problematic elements throughout that you'd need to look past and just enjoy the overarching message.
I gotta recommend One Piece, my all time favorite. It's about goofy 'pirates' who sail from island to island liberating them from fascists or stopping attempted coups, or fighting the CIA. The biggest problem in the one piece world is that everything was built to support a ruling class of disgusting inbred billionaires who do things like take slaves. There is a literal revolutionary army named "the revolutionaries" lead by a guy based on Che (he looks like che, his boat was named after che's boat) who's main goal is to destroy that billionaire ruling class.
The beginning of the show (like first 4 arcs) are more about introducing characters, but every arc after is about the above. The tone is like if Tom & Jerry had a plot. Despite how it might appear it's not like a typical power scaling battle shonen, the fights are not the main point, though later on they do end up emphasizing fights a lot (in the anime, the manga is better at keeping fights secondary).
The show isn't without issue though. It portrays trans, gender fluid, and queer people in a very mean way. They're all still part of the 'good guys' but a lot will be drawn as like hairy men wearing dresses. There are better portrayals like one inspired by tim curry or one inspired by Jim carry (with the best voice actor ever if you watch it subbed). This issue gets a lot better later on though. This story has been going for 25 years, in the last 5 years or so it's gotten much much better.
Another issue is it's portrayal of women. Almost every prominent woman looks the same. They have the same-ish face and exact same body. They're frequently scantily clad. No matter how important they are to the story, no matter how well fleshed out their characters are or how heartbreaking their story is, the author will still find a way to make them dress in underwear or something. I realize a lot of this was because of his editors. It doesn't become a problem till later on when he gets editor after editor pushing him to draw them as scantily clad as possible. The author has warned other authors that the publisher is full of perverts. The anime makes things more gratuitous than the manga.
I do recommend reading it over watching it due to pacing and artwork though. They are remaking the anime right now even though the anime is still ongoing. The remake is supposed to address the pacing and art.