U.S. Riots of May 2020 over George Floyd and others - ITT: a bunch of faggots butthurt about worthless internet stickers

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How is it that every single time I see some hateful video about Kyle Rittenhouse they look like this. “Donald trump should be telling his supporters not to go to BLM protests.” He wasn’t at the protest, he was defending the property from looters. If you don’t act like a animal and destroy things, you don’t get shot. It’s how civilized society works. It’s really stunning and brave to criticize Donald Trump as a “Wall Street Democrat” instead of the actual people he might actually be able to influence.

View attachment 1566803
"We need Biden to win so we can clean the party and defend freedom from a business democrat / populist demagogue (who has done more for preserving conservative freedoms than any President in recent history)" shrieks the (obviously Jewish) neocon who supports Wall Street and big business more than the "Wall Street Democrat." "No, don't worry about big business infringing on your rights, mandatory government funded diversity training, or red-flag laws; we need to refocus on containing Russia in the Middle East."
 
On subject of Kangz claiming to invent everything, this shit has always been pushed for at least 20 years, Dr Pierce warned us of this and many of us didn't listen because he was a meany nazi.
Kangz really are desperate to wanting to claim credit for everything.

This is why the Kangz should go ahead and have their segregation. Go on, Kangz and Kuhwaaanzzz, show us honkeys how it's done!

If they are so goddamn intelligent, enterprising, and progressive, should be no problem building Wakanda!! Oh wait... Wakanda was only possible because some Kangz touched a space rock made of unobtanium like the 2001 monolith--and even then--noted white guy Stan Lee actually created it????

See, if Kangz and Kuhwaaanzzz are so advanced and invented everything, then why are things objectively comperable between most sub Saharan African countries and DPRK? Grorious Reader Kim Il Sung ALSO invented everything forever and ever, Amen (Including Randy Travis). And yet... I never hear droves of people rushing to visit fantabulous Pyongyang and Hamhung.

Same with Sub Saharan blacks. If white people STOLE everything and you invented everything, why does a based Chinaman have to come over there and ask why you all effectively wrecked your own economies and participate daily in mass rapes and genocides? If you're so goddamn smart, why do you think cracking the skulls of albinos and bald men will reveal the Luck Charms Laprechaun's gold? Where IS your Wakanda?
 
Just like Professor Xavier. Without the intelligence. Or the mental powers. Or the super-powered mutants. Or a vision of a better tomorrow.
d9a6d7d9-7489-4988-95a8-e2f02fc802ac.jpg
Deserve the same treatment tbh
 
So they were full blown commies until some Soros-aligned neolibs co-opted them, and said neolibs bow to them now because they've been successfully puppeted?
>Soros-Aligned Group
They did get money from the Foundation for Open Societies and Open Society Foundation, so you're no off in that assessment. However, Thousand Currents is staffed by a former Weather Underground member who was arrested for bombing a FBI building.

The only other vague connection I'm aware of is the fact that social media's artificial intelligence knew that posts about "racism" and "police brutality" got a lot of shares (approx 1,000 seperately), so made articles that were about "racist police brutality" for sensationalism (news that makes people angry is likely to be shared) and SEO purposes. The latter is why there are so many word salad articles from newsmedia that ram intersectional buzzwords together.
Some tried to capitalize on the intersectional craze (and failed) when people were sharing SJW events/articles around like "those wild and crazy kids nowadays", not realizing that these people would head into, then become reality.
It's not too different from how Frank Zappa described the music industry getting stale (old locomotives ruining the music industry by hiring hippies to do basic jobs before doing well at so many that they became chiefs).
 
A weepy whiner quits the Kenosha newspaper. This turd has a Gofundme, over $20.000 so far. Lots of idiots with money to piss away, I guess.


Kenosha News journalist quits: 'At the core of my decision was one person, Jacob Blake'
Rory Linnane, Milwaukee Journal Sentinel 3 hrs ago


1599076973954.png

Daniel Thompson, who said he was the only full-time Black journalist at The Kenosha News, resigned Saturday after objecting to a headline he called "grossly negligent" about a rally for the family of police shooting victim Jacob Blake.
a man wearing glasses and smiling at the camera: Daniel Thompson resigned from his job as a digital editor for The Kenosha News.
© Daniel Thompson

Daniel Thompson resigned from his job as a digital editor for The Kenosha News.
He joins a wave of journalists of color across the country who have publicly shared stories in recent months about challenges in newsrooms led predominantly by white people. Like Thompson, many protested headlines, prompting public apologies from the Philadephia Inquirer and The New York Times.

At the Saturday event, Jacob Blake Sr. spoke about visiting his son in the hospital, a retired reverend sang songs about unity, and thousands marched behind the Blake family calling for social justice.

Get daily updates on the FudgePackers during the season.

The large-font headline that topped the Kenosha News website for several hours quoted an unnamed participant: "Kenosha speaker: ‘If you kill one of us, it’s time for us to kill one of yours.’”

Thompson, who had attended the event, said he felt it was dangerous to headline the quote, which didn't represent the event or the messages from the family and other speakers.

The top editor at the news organization, Bob Heisse, confirmed Thompson’s resignation but did not answer questions about the dispute or why he ultimately changed the headline.

“Nothing was wrong,” Heisse said. “I just felt after a while that I would just change the headline.”

Heisse also declined to answer questions about diversity at the Kenosha News. Many news organizations recently started sharing information about diversity as part of commitments to make newsrooms reflect the communities they serve.

“It’s crucial for news organizations and news leaders to be transparent about their diversity numbers,” said LaSharah Bunting, journalism director for the Knight Foundation. “You can’t solve a problem if you're not willing to admit the extent of the problem.”

‘I can’t stand for that’

Thompson, who was a digital editor, said working for the Kenosha News had long been his dream job. After being initially rejected for a job there, he carried a Kenosha News editor’s business card in his wallet for five years before he returned and was hired in 2017.

a man reading a book: Daniel Thompson, right, reads The Journal Times with his father, who was a columnist for the Racine newspaper.
© Submitted Daniel Thompson, right, reads The Journal Times with his father, who was a columnist for the Racine newspaper.
The day of Saturday’s rally for Blake’s family, Thompson was on vacation but attended the event. It was a beautiful day, he said.

“I am a biracial person, and all my life I have been dealing with that,” Thompson said. “To me why the event was so hopeful is because I saw people of different races, colors, religions. I’d been waiting a long time to see what it would look like if everybody came together, and I did.”

Thompson went home, reclined on his couch, and opened Facebook. He saw the Kenosha News headline and was immediately concerned, as were other Facebook users.

"How much damage can a headline like that do in hours in a city where two people were already gunned down because of high tensions?" Thompson said.

It wasn't the first time Thompson saw a problem with something published by his newspaper, or his former employers. But this time felt different.

"Honestly, there are so many moments from my career and life, where I have not said something, that haunt me," he said. "At the core of my decision was one person: Jacob Blake. In that moment I could not, one more time, not say anything. So I didn’t. I didn’t stop myself."

He texted Heisse his concerns. Thompson sent the Journal Sentinel screenshots of the conversation, and Heisse did not dispute them.

“I need to calm down,” Thompson wrote. “But I wanted you to know immediately.”

Heisse replied: “Yes you should calm down. That is a public threat and it is an exact quote. At a rally that was to that point totally on message.”

“Then I quit,” Thompson wrote. “I was there the whole time. I can’t stand for that.” (Buh-bye! 🖕 - JS)

Heisse told Thompson to send him his resignation letter.

In an interview, Heisse defended the headline, noting the quote was accurate. He said the story was a "sidebar" to another story about the rally, though it ran in the News' primary featured position online.

'The courage to leap'

When Thompson quit, he didn't have a plan.

"When I quit my job to do what I thought was right, I did it with the full chance of free-falling for however long," he said. "Then you know what happened? My community, that I have given my time to, caught me."

a group of people standing in front of a crowd: Daniel Thompson, former digital editor for The Kenosha News, covers local protests.
© Jordan Pauley Daniel Thompson, former digital editor for The Kenosha News, covers local protests.

Thompson set up a GoFundMe page to support himself financially, setting a goal of $5,000 to help him through a couple of months of bills while he explores establishing a new media platform. The page had raised $20,000 as of Tuesday.

"I had faith in my community and they proved me right," Thompson said. "Sometimes even though it’s scary to do the right thing, you’ll find somebody will catch you. You just have to have the courage to leap." (Dude, leap out of Kenosha. Believe you are now radioactive there with most employers. - JS)

Since quitting, Thompson said he has heard from journalists across the country who can relate to the position he was in and are proud of him for speaking up.

“What happened at The Kenosha News is not an isolated case,” he said. “This is happening in newsrooms everywhere.”
Bunting, from the Knight Foundation, said the challenges facing journalists of color aren’t new.

“What you’re seeing is journalists of color feel more empowered to speak up and tell their truth, a truth that’s happened for decades,” she said. (Aha! THEIR truth, which may or may not be the same as the actual truth. - JS)

Bunting said journalists of color have long taken on the unsung work of flagging problematic coverage and structural racism within newsrooms.

"For many Black journalists including myself, it is an important part of our work, but news organizations and news leaders have to acknowledge that it is extra work, an extra burden being put on their journalists of color," Bunting said.
"There’s this desire to give our best to the reader, and certainly in the situation with the Kenosha paper it appears (he) was doing just that."

Bunting said it's crucial for news leaders to examine their own newsrooms and make material changes.

"For many years, you have journalists of color serving on diversity committees, telling people what needs to be done, and those suggestions have largely been ignored," Bunting said. "With the more public airing of these difficulties, that opens the door for real systemic change." (Please...how many blacks can even afford a subscription to a newspaper?- JS)


1599076973954.png
 
this is literally proving the stereotype that blacks are lazy as shit. Just work a regular fucking job at construction or something so you can pay rent and not get evicted

I wonder if black comedians still do the bit today about how blacks never pay their electric bills and rent on time. That was a staple of black comedy back in the 80s and 90s; and what was even better was seeing the niggers in the audience going "dats rite!!!" "sho' nuff!" "he gots dat rite....sheeeit!"

They really do stereotype themselves.
 
I've run into the 'hurr durr landlords' socialists before, and it's not the complete picture, because after hurr durring about landlords, they also included business owners. From what I was able to gather, their general belief is that people who own and rent property and people who own businesses are doing nothing but sitting around jerking off all day while the oppressed people send them rent and/or slave away in their businesses to make them money. Therefore they are evil and need to be brought low by the bright communist future. Because apparently people who own property or start companies did so with magical money that fell from the sky and never did an ounce of work in their lives to actually have earned it.

So keep an eye out, I'm betting that in addition to FUCK LANDLORDS you'll soon see FUCK BUSINESSES creeping in. Which will also not go over well for dems, as the US as a whole has a fair soft spot for small business owners.
 
A weepy whiner quits the Kenosha newspaper. This turd has a Gofundme, over $20.000 so far. Lots of idiots with money to piss away, I guess.


Kenosha News journalist quits: 'At the core of my decision was one person, Jacob Blake'
Rory Linnane, Milwaukee Journal Sentinel 3 hrs ago


View attachment 1566920
Daniel Thompson, who said he was the only full-time Black journalist at The Kenosha News, resigned Saturday after objecting to a headline he called "grossly negligent" about a rally for the family of police shooting victim Jacob Blake.
a man wearing glasses and smiling at the camera: Daniel Thompson resigned from his job as a digital editor for The Kenosha News.
© Daniel Thompson

Daniel Thompson resigned from his job as a digital editor for The Kenosha News.
He joins a wave of journalists of color across the country who have publicly shared stories in recent months about challenges in newsrooms led predominantly by white people. Like Thompson, many protested headlines, prompting public apologies from the Philadephia Inquirer and The New York Times.

At the Saturday event, Jacob Blake Sr. spoke about visiting his son in the hospital, a retired reverend sang songs about unity, and thousands marched behind the Blake family calling for social justice.

Get daily updates on the FudgePackers during the season.

The large-font headline that topped the Kenosha News website for several hours quoted an unnamed participant: "Kenosha speaker: ‘If you kill one of us, it’s time for us to kill one of yours.’”

Thompson, who had attended the event, said he felt it was dangerous to headline the quote, which didn't represent the event or the messages from the family and other speakers.

The top editor at the news organization, Bob Heisse, confirmed Thompson’s resignation but did not answer questions about the dispute or why he ultimately changed the headline.

“Nothing was wrong,” Heisse said. “I just felt after a while that I would just change the headline.”

Heisse also declined to answer questions about diversity at the Kenosha News. Many news organizations recently started sharing information about diversity as part of commitments to make newsrooms reflect the communities they serve.

“It’s crucial for news organizations and news leaders to be transparent about their diversity numbers,” said LaSharah Bunting, journalism director for the Knight Foundation. “You can’t solve a problem if you're not willing to admit the extent of the problem.”

‘I can’t stand for that’

Thompson, who was a digital editor, said working for the Kenosha News had long been his dream job. After being initially rejected for a job there, he carried a Kenosha News editor’s business card in his wallet for five years before he returned and was hired in 2017.

a man reading a book: Daniel Thompson, right, reads The Journal Times with his father, who was a columnist for the Racine newspaper.
© Submitted Daniel Thompson, right, reads The Journal Times with his father, who was a columnist for the Racine newspaper.
The day of Saturday’s rally for Blake’s family, Thompson was on vacation but attended the event. It was a beautiful day, he said.

“I am a biracial person, and all my life I have been dealing with that,” Thompson said. “To me why the event was so hopeful is because I saw people of different races, colors, religions. I’d been waiting a long time to see what it would look like if everybody came together, and I did.”

Thompson went home, reclined on his couch, and opened Facebook. He saw the Kenosha News headline and was immediately concerned, as were other Facebook users.

"How much damage can a headline like that do in hours in a city where two people were already gunned down because of high tensions?" Thompson said.

It wasn't the first time Thompson saw a problem with something published by his newspaper, or his former employers. But this time felt different.

"Honestly, there are so many moments from my career and life, where I have not said something, that haunt me," he said. "At the core of my decision was one person: Jacob Blake. In that moment I could not, one more time, not say anything. So I didn’t. I didn’t stop myself."

He texted Heisse his concerns. Thompson sent the Journal Sentinel screenshots of the conversation, and Heisse did not dispute them.

“I need to calm down,” Thompson wrote. “But I wanted you to know immediately.”

Heisse replied: “Yes you should calm down. That is a public threat and it is an exact quote. At a rally that was to that point totally on message.”

“Then I quit,” Thompson wrote. “I was there the whole time. I can’t stand for that.” (Buh-bye! 🖕 - JS)

Heisse told Thompson to send him his resignation letter.

In an interview, Heisse defended the headline, noting the quote was accurate. He said the story was a "sidebar" to another story about the rally, though it ran in the News' primary featured position online.

'The courage to leap'

When Thompson quit, he didn't have a plan.

"When I quit my job to do what I thought was right, I did it with the full chance of free-falling for however long," he said. "Then you know what happened? My community, that I have given my time to, caught me."

a group of people standing in front of a crowd: Daniel Thompson, former digital editor for The Kenosha News, covers local protests.
© Jordan Pauley Daniel Thompson, former digital editor for The Kenosha News, covers local protests.

Thompson set up a GoFundMe page to support himself financially, setting a goal of $5,000 to help him through a couple of months of bills while he explores establishing a new media platform. The page had raised $20,000 as of Tuesday.

"I had faith in my community and they proved me right," Thompson said. "Sometimes even though it’s scary to do the right thing, you’ll find somebody will catch you. You just have to have the courage to leap." (Dude, leap out of Kenosha. Believe you are now radioactive there with most employers. - JS)

Since quitting, Thompson said he has heard from journalists across the country who can relate to the position he was in and are proud of him for speaking up.

“What happened at The Kenosha News is not an isolated case,” he said. “This is happening in newsrooms everywhere.”
Bunting, from the Knight Foundation, said the challenges facing journalists of color aren’t new.

“What you’re seeing is journalists of color feel more empowered to speak up and tell their truth, a truth that’s happened for decades,” she said. (Aha! THEIR truth, which may or may not be the same as the actual truth. - JS)

Bunting said journalists of color have long taken on the unsung work of flagging problematic coverage and structural racism within newsrooms.

"For many Black journalists including myself, it is an important part of our work, but news organizations and news leaders have to acknowledge that it is extra work, an extra burden being put on their journalists of color," Bunting said.
"There’s this desire to give our best to the reader, and certainly in the situation with the Kenosha paper it appears (he) was doing just that."

Bunting said it's crucial for news leaders to examine their own newsrooms and make material changes.

"For many years, you have journalists of color serving on diversity committees, telling people what needs to be done, and those suggestions have largely been ignored," Bunting said. "With the more public airing of these difficulties, that opens the door for real systemic change." (Please...how many blacks can even afford a subscription to a newspaper?- JS)


View attachment 1566920
So what happens when all the diversity hires quit and refuse to work
 
A weepy whiner quits the Kenosha newspaper. This turd has a Gofundme, over $20.000 so far. Lots of idiots with money to piss away, I guess.


Kenosha News journalist quits: 'At the core of my decision was one person, Jacob Blake'
Rory Linnane, Milwaukee Journal Sentinel 3 hrs ago


View attachment 1566920
Daniel Thompson, who said he was the only full-time Black journalist at The Kenosha News, resigned Saturday after objecting to a headline he called "grossly negligent" about a rally for the family of police shooting victim Jacob Blake.
a man wearing glasses and smiling at the camera: Daniel Thompson resigned from his job as a digital editor for The Kenosha News.
© Daniel Thompson

Daniel Thompson resigned from his job as a digital editor for The Kenosha News.
He joins a wave of journalists of color across the country who have publicly shared stories in recent months about challenges in newsrooms led predominantly by white people. Like Thompson, many protested headlines, prompting public apologies from the Philadephia Inquirer and The New York Times.

At the Saturday event, Jacob Blake Sr. spoke about visiting his son in the hospital, a retired reverend sang songs about unity, and thousands marched behind the Blake family calling for social justice.

Get daily updates on the FudgePackers during the season.

The large-font headline that topped the Kenosha News website for several hours quoted an unnamed participant: "Kenosha speaker: ‘If you kill one of us, it’s time for us to kill one of yours.’”

Thompson, who had attended the event, said he felt it was dangerous to headline the quote, which didn't represent the event or the messages from the family and other speakers.

The top editor at the news organization, Bob Heisse, confirmed Thompson’s resignation but did not answer questions about the dispute or why he ultimately changed the headline.

“Nothing was wrong,” Heisse said. “I just felt after a while that I would just change the headline.”

Heisse also declined to answer questions about diversity at the Kenosha News. Many news organizations recently started sharing information about diversity as part of commitments to make newsrooms reflect the communities they serve.

“It’s crucial for news organizations and news leaders to be transparent about their diversity numbers,” said LaSharah Bunting, journalism director for the Knight Foundation. “You can’t solve a problem if you're not willing to admit the extent of the problem.”

‘I can’t stand for that’

Thompson, who was a digital editor, said working for the Kenosha News had long been his dream job. After being initially rejected for a job there, he carried a Kenosha News editor’s business card in his wallet for five years before he returned and was hired in 2017.

a man reading a book: Daniel Thompson, right, reads The Journal Times with his father, who was a columnist for the Racine newspaper.
© Submitted Daniel Thompson, right, reads The Journal Times with his father, who was a columnist for the Racine newspaper.
The day of Saturday’s rally for Blake’s family, Thompson was on vacation but attended the event. It was a beautiful day, he said.

“I am a biracial person, and all my life I have been dealing with that,” Thompson said. “To me why the event was so hopeful is because I saw people of different races, colors, religions. I’d been waiting a long time to see what it would look like if everybody came together, and I did.”

Thompson went home, reclined on his couch, and opened Facebook. He saw the Kenosha News headline and was immediately concerned, as were other Facebook users.

"How much damage can a headline like that do in hours in a city where two people were already gunned down because of high tensions?" Thompson said.

It wasn't the first time Thompson saw a problem with something published by his newspaper, or his former employers. But this time felt different.

"Honestly, there are so many moments from my career and life, where I have not said something, that haunt me," he said. "At the core of my decision was one person: Jacob Blake. In that moment I could not, one more time, not say anything. So I didn’t. I didn’t stop myself."

He texted Heisse his concerns. Thompson sent the Journal Sentinel screenshots of the conversation, and Heisse did not dispute them.

“I need to calm down,” Thompson wrote. “But I wanted you to know immediately.”

Heisse replied: “Yes you should calm down. That is a public threat and it is an exact quote. At a rally that was to that point totally on message.”

“Then I quit,” Thompson wrote. “I was there the whole time. I can’t stand for that.” (Buh-bye! 🖕 - JS)

Heisse told Thompson to send him his resignation letter.

In an interview, Heisse defended the headline, noting the quote was accurate. He said the story was a "sidebar" to another story about the rally, though it ran in the News' primary featured position online.

'The courage to leap'

When Thompson quit, he didn't have a plan.

"When I quit my job to do what I thought was right, I did it with the full chance of free-falling for however long," he said. "Then you know what happened? My community, that I have given my time to, caught me."

a group of people standing in front of a crowd: Daniel Thompson, former digital editor for The Kenosha News, covers local protests.
© Jordan Pauley Daniel Thompson, former digital editor for The Kenosha News, covers local protests.

Thompson set up a GoFundMe page to support himself financially, setting a goal of $5,000 to help him through a couple of months of bills while he explores establishing a new media platform. The page had raised $20,000 as of Tuesday.

"I had faith in my community and they proved me right," Thompson said. "Sometimes even though it’s scary to do the right thing, you’ll find somebody will catch you. You just have to have the courage to leap." (Dude, leap out of Kenosha. Believe you are now radioactive there with most employers. - JS)

Since quitting, Thompson said he has heard from journalists across the country who can relate to the position he was in and are proud of him for speaking up.

“What happened at The Kenosha News is not an isolated case,” he said. “This is happening in newsrooms everywhere.”
Bunting, from the Knight Foundation, said the challenges facing journalists of color aren’t new.

“What you’re seeing is journalists of color feel more empowered to speak up and tell their truth, a truth that’s happened for decades,” she said. (Aha! THEIR truth, which may or may not be the same as the actual truth. - JS)

Bunting said journalists of color have long taken on the unsung work of flagging problematic coverage and structural racism within newsrooms.

"For many Black journalists including myself, it is an important part of our work, but news organizations and news leaders have to acknowledge that it is extra work, an extra burden being put on their journalists of color," Bunting said.
"There’s this desire to give our best to the reader, and certainly in the situation with the Kenosha paper it appears (he) was doing just that."

Bunting said it's crucial for news leaders to examine their own newsrooms and make material changes.

"For many years, you have journalists of color serving on diversity committees, telling people what needs to be done, and those suggestions have largely been ignored," Bunting said. "With the more public airing of these difficulties, that opens the door for real systemic change." (Please...how many blacks can even afford a subscription to a newspaper?- JS)


View attachment 1566920
Honestly I'm disappointed, I thought this dude left because of the media lionizing a rapist.
 
>Soros-Aligned Group
They did get money from the Foundation for Open Societies and Open Society Foundation, so you're no off in that assessment. However, Thousand Currents is staffed by a former Weather Underground member who was arrested for bombing a FBI building.

The only other vague connection I'm aware of is the fact that social media's artificial intelligence knew that posts about "racism" and "police brutality" got a lot of shares (approx 1,000 seperately), so made articles that were about "racist police brutality" for sensationalism (news that makes people angry is likely to be shared) and SEO purposes. The latter is why there are so many word salad articles from newsmedia that ram intersectional buzzwords together.
Some tried to capitalize on the intersectional craze (and failed) when people were sharing SJW events/articles around like "those wild and crazy kids nowadays", not realizing that these people would head into, then become reality.
It's not too different from how Frank Zappa described the music industry getting stale (old locomotives ruining the music industry by hiring hippies to do basic jobs before doing well at so many that they became chiefs).
Wait, so half the clickbait articles that get featured on A&N may have been literally written by bots? Are these riots a more retarded version of Skynet?
 
“I am a biracial person, and all my life I have been dealing with that,” Thompson said. “To me why the event was so hopeful is because I saw people of different races, colors, religions. I’d been waiting a long time to see what it would look like if everybody came together, and I did.”

Thompson is clearly not aware that the "Black Community" HATES bi-racial, light-skins just as much as every other race. Especially as that typically means they had all the perks of both demographics and almost none of the flaws.
 
I've run into the 'hurr durr landlords' socialists before, and it's not the complete picture, because after hurr durring about landlords, they also included business owners. From what I was able to gather, their general belief is that people who own and rent property and people who own businesses are doing nothing but sitting around jerking off all day while the oppressed people send them rent and/or slave away in their businesses to make them money. Therefore they are evil and need to be brought low by the bright communist future. Because apparently people who own property or start companies did so with magical money that fell from the sky and never did an ounce of work in their lives to actually have earned it.

So keep an eye out, I'm betting that in addition to FUCK LANDLORDS you'll soon see FUCK BUSINESSES creeping in. Which will also not go over well for dems, as the US as a whole has a fair soft spot for small business owners.
There is a class of middle managers who get away with doing nothing, but for every one of those there's a dozen peons who browse twitter for 7 hours and work for 1.

Anyone with a real job will tell you that the higher you go up the ladder, the more problems you have, and the less time you have to deal with them. All this socialist whining about "rent seeking" is projection of the highest order.
 
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Thompson set up a GoFundMe page to support himself financially, setting a goal of $5,000 to help him through a couple of months of bills while he explores establishing a new media platform. The page had raised $20,000 as of Tuesday.

"I had faith in my community and they proved me right," Thompson said. "

Umm...99% of the donors to your gofundme aren't from "your community."
 
Oh, so once Trump goes there. Biden realized "shit, I look like coward" the thing I'm wondering if he will go to the burnt buildings like Trump did. Or he won't becuase the people who burned it down were his supporters
Single camera, front and center, tight-in on Joe to hide how many people are actually in the room, and a dark to neutral back drop. I'm calling that's all his visit will be. Otherwise, we'll get a video of someone calling out Joe for being in support of the rioters that'll get him mad and cause another dementia fueled "you're full of shit" moment.
 
I've run into the 'hurr durr landlords' socialists before, and it's not the complete picture, because after hurr durring about landlords, they also included business owners. From what I was able to gather, their general belief is that people who own and rent property and people who own businesses are doing nothing but sitting around jerking off all day while the oppressed people send them rent and/or slave away in their businesses to make them money. Therefore they are evil and need to be brought low by the bright communist future. Because apparently people who own property or start companies did so with magical money that fell from the sky and never did an ounce of work in their lives to actually have earned it.

So keep an eye out, I'm betting that in addition to FUCK LANDLORDS you'll soon see FUCK BUSINESSES creeping in. Which will also not go over well for dems, as the US as a whole has a fair soft spot for small business owners.

Fuck businesses? FUCK BUSINESSES??

These NEETS lay around assfucking theirselves with Bad Dragon bestiality dildos while playing Animal Crossing and fellating the latest stuffed animal purchased from Target. Like...where do they think all this shit comes from?

I re-read this very interesting article in National Geographic from 1990 or 91. It was the last Gulag. One of the prisoners interviewed was a college professor, a true believer in the cause, and he'd been languishing in the Gulag for over 30 years. What was his crime?? He tried leaving the Soviet Union in a crop dusting plane. He was caught. And that man was no longer a believer.

There's another interesting article from roughly the same time about Albania. Food lines would cause people to stand there for NINE or more hours. And often by the time they reached the "Fully Automated Luxury Gay Space Communism" food port, there was: Fuck. and All. Riots often broke out.

But yes, do tell me more about fuck businesses...
 
This is why the Kangz should go ahead and have their segregation. Go on, Kangz and Kuhwaaanzzz, show us honkeys how it's done!

If they are so goddamn intelligent, enterprising, and progressive, should be no problem building Wakanda!! Oh wait... Wakanda was only possible because some Kangz touched a space rock made of unobtanium like the 2001 monolith--and even then--noted white guy Stan Lee actually created it????

See, if Kangz and Kuhwaaanzzz are so advanced and invented everything, then why are things objectively comperable between most sub Saharan African countries and DPRK? Grorious Reader Kim Il Sung ALSO invented everything forever and ever, Amen (Including Randy Travis). And yet... I never hear droves of people rushing to visit fantabulous Pyongyang and Hamhung.

Same with Sub Saharan blacks. If white people STOLE everything and you invented everything, why does a based Chinaman have to come over there and ask why you all effectively wrecked your own economies and participate daily in mass rapes and genocides? If you're so goddamn smart, why do you think cracking the skulls of albinos and bald men will reveal the Luck Charms Laprechaun's gold? Where IS your Wakanda?

I had to take an "African Philosophy" course back in the mid 90s as part of my degree requirement.

What a hoot.

It was literally one semester of one single claim: "the Greek philosophers STOLE EVERYTHING from the Africans!!"

I was like, wait, what: so Plato and Aristotle plagiarized African "philosophers"?

DAATS RITE!!

So...where were these "African philosophers?" What happened to them? Where did they go?

WELL DEY IDEAS WERE TAKEN FROM DEM! SO DEY COULDN"T PHILOSOMOPHIZE ANY MO!!!

At that moment I had an epiphany: Niggers can never be philosophers because they cannot engage in any metaphysical, transcendental conceptualization. Their brains just aren't wired for it. Everything is crudely material for them. This dumb nigger "professor" was literally treating "stealing ideas" as if it were on par with stealing hub caps. Because, apparently, once those "African philosophers" had their "philosophy" "stolen" from them, they just couldn't philosomophize no mo'. Because somebody stole dey ideas and sheeit.
 
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