- Joined
- Apr 14, 2014
The Dr. Doge Playlist is hilarious. I'm sure he'd be flattered to know some autistic weirdo he's never met has made a playlist of generic, forgettable punk music in his honor. No way that would be bad for his image and reputation. Wonder what got Phil on his Dr. Dugi kick again. He hadn't mentioned him or the surgery in a long ass time. Maybe its one of the few places online that his tard wranglers don't have access to or control his accounts?
Phil's tastes in music are pretty shitty and uninteresting. Most of his playlists seem more like someone searched a random term or artist on YouTube and just copied the results. I've mentioned before that his mother seemed to control what he was allowed to listen to. Its just kind of funny to me that someone who adopts the persona of a rebellious teenager seems so... disinterested in music, when music is (or at least used to be) such an integral part of teenage rebellion. Then again maybe its too scary or stimulating for his autistic ears.
Well at least wolves play a pretty big role in Turkish mythology. Thats kind of why nationalists have co-opted them as a symbol. But yeah, I've commented on Phil's "Turkish" Playlist before. The interesting thing is that there aren't any particularly well known or popular Turkish artists in there at all, and he freely mixes non-Turkish Chechen, Balkan and Arabic music, as well as "ethnic" electronic and ambient music that's made to "sound like" its Middle Eastern. Its basically him doing a quick YouTube search for "Turkish" music and just adding whatever he finds.
I'd speculated that maybe he was going to try and "convert" to Islam to be edgy, or claim that he's a "white passing" Turk or Chechen now that he seems to have dropped the whole translatinx thing. It makes sense. He's flirted with trying to adopt a Muslim persona before, but he's always been too inconsistent and chickenshit to actually do it. It'd be hilarious to see his antifa friends accuse him of "cultural appropriation." Also as I've said before, if he waddled into a masjid and started acting weird he'd absolutely get the cops called on him.
Brown people are scary. Also, let's be fair, he's been distancing himself from the translatinx crap for quite a while now. Its actually one of the more surprising things about him lately. I genuinely do wonder if he was called out for "cultural appropriation," or if Toren still threatens to out him. Or maybe Trump's anti-immigrant rhetoric got to him, since Phil is essentially a right wing bigot.
Well most of the people in antifa and the like are in their 20s and still trying to find an identity. Granted I'm old and out of touch with youth culture, but I remember what it was like to be a teenager, and what it was like in college. Today it seems there are fewer subcultures and distinct communities or interests for kids, but the spirit of teenage rebellion is still alive and well. Most of them will also slowly grow up and age out of it.
Phil is a middle aged man who's still trying to fit in with people fresh out of high school.
Phil's tastes in music are pretty shitty and uninteresting. Most of his playlists seem more like someone searched a random term or artist on YouTube and just copied the results. I've mentioned before that his mother seemed to control what he was allowed to listen to. Its just kind of funny to me that someone who adopts the persona of a rebellious teenager seems so... disinterested in music, when music is (or at least used to be) such an integral part of teenage rebellion. Then again maybe its too scary or stimulating for his autistic ears.
Why the hell does he have a turkroach playlist? The wannabe sultan running that shithole murderscommie terroristsbrave PKK freedom fighters on the regular. He's even sent his al Qaeda cronies to fight the totallyPKK terroristsbrave YPG/YPJ freedom fighters in Syria. Also, the Grey Wolves are a far right ultranationist militant group. Having the thumb for the playlist be a big old Turkish flag with a wolf is fucking hilarious.
Well at least wolves play a pretty big role in Turkish mythology. Thats kind of why nationalists have co-opted them as a symbol. But yeah, I've commented on Phil's "Turkish" Playlist before. The interesting thing is that there aren't any particularly well known or popular Turkish artists in there at all, and he freely mixes non-Turkish Chechen, Balkan and Arabic music, as well as "ethnic" electronic and ambient music that's made to "sound like" its Middle Eastern. Its basically him doing a quick YouTube search for "Turkish" music and just adding whatever he finds.
I'd speculated that maybe he was going to try and "convert" to Islam to be edgy, or claim that he's a "white passing" Turk or Chechen now that he seems to have dropped the whole translatinx thing. It makes sense. He's flirted with trying to adopt a Muslim persona before, but he's always been too inconsistent and chickenshit to actually do it. It'd be hilarious to see his antifa friends accuse him of "cultural appropriation." Also as I've said before, if he waddled into a masjid and started acting weird he'd absolutely get the cops called on him.
You'll notice no Latino music, contemporary or traditional, appears anywhere on any of his playlists. Very interesting.
Brown people are scary. Also, let's be fair, he's been distancing himself from the translatinx crap for quite a while now. Its actually one of the more surprising things about him lately. I genuinely do wonder if he was called out for "cultural appropriation," or if Toren still threatens to out him. Or maybe Trump's anti-immigrant rhetoric got to him, since Phil is essentially a right wing bigot.
It's why he's part of Antifa in the first place, everyone in there is exactly like him in that regard. It is practically a requirement that you have never mentally and emotionally developed out of your teens and that the default base world view and ethos you need to have to have is "Fuck You Mom And Dad"
Well most of the people in antifa and the like are in their 20s and still trying to find an identity. Granted I'm old and out of touch with youth culture, but I remember what it was like to be a teenager, and what it was like in college. Today it seems there are fewer subcultures and distinct communities or interests for kids, but the spirit of teenage rebellion is still alive and well. Most of them will also slowly grow up and age out of it.
Phil is a middle aged man who's still trying to fit in with people fresh out of high school.