Right wing nuts thread (3 Viewers)

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    This guy …. Is he actually trying to complain about unemployment benefits? Has he not seen the unemployment rate under Biden? Also, why should a drug policy mention God or faith?

     
    Omg...lmao! Like taking nits to a whole other level.



    She is kind of... vaguely correct about something, a teeny bit. But mostly wrong lol. JC played Biden on SNL, which is probably where that idea originated. But as it got passed down the grapevine, that by the time it got to her, was totally distorted

     
    Well, she said the quiet part out loud. Basically confirmed what we already know, lol.


    About Trump, "he's part of us, he truly is.........."

    Lol

    The-Mar-a-Lago-sitting-room-donald-trump-house-14feb17-pa_b.jpg

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    It's really the opposite of what the Trumper lady said. They want to be part of him. They want to be a part of his lifestyle. They know they can't have it, so they live it vicariously through him. Precisely why he could shoot someone outside Trump Tower and they still would love him.
    Or maybe she's referring to his political stance. In other words, he thinks like us. America first. Keep out anyone who isn't like us. Build a wall. "There are nice people on both sides." Etc., etc. "He's part of us...." He's white. The heck with the rest of the world. So on and so forth.
     
    Or maybe she's referring to his political stance. In other words, he thinks like us. America first. Keep out anyone who isn't like us. Build a wall. "There are nice people on both sides." Etc., etc. "He's part of us...." He's white. The heck with the rest of the world. So on and so forth.
    Fair point.
     
    Jim Schneider, co-founder of sunglass brand Zivah, knows his company could probably reach more customers if he sold his products on Amazon, but he isn’t interested.

    Zivah has found success as an early adopter of PublicSq., an online marketplace that bills itself as an alternative to “woke” corporations espousing liberal values.


    Zivah (a name that comes from the Hebrew word for “light of God”) sells high-end sunglasses with names like “Glisten” and “Dazzle.” Each one bears a scripture on the inside of the temple.

    “In a world that seems so polarized, you see the world through a different lens,” Zivah’s website reads.
“Our target consumer really is someone who supports American values, who does not want to support a company that’s gone woke, who does not want to support a company that’s supporting abortions,” Schneider told The Washington Post. (Amazon has joined other large companies in offering to cover employees’ travel expenses for abortion and other non-life-threatening medical treatment if they don’t have access at home.)

    Since Zivah joined PublicSq. last year, the platform “has definitely become our biggest source of new customers,” Schneider said.

    Zivah and PublicSq. are part of a growing contingent of companies promoting “anti-woke capitalism,” a business model that is gaining traction amid broader cultural battles over abortion, guns, transgender rights and American exceptionalism. As big companies and brands such as Target, North Face and Bud Light have drawn fire from some consumers for celebrating the LGBTQ community, PublicSq. is building a customer base on the other side of the ideological spectrum.

    The platform has swelled to host more than 55,000 small businesses since it launched on July 4, 2022 — with major growth coming in recent months as consumers reacted to Bud Light’s partnership with transgender comedian and activist Dylan Mulvaney and Target’s Pride merchandise. In the last week of May, as tensions around corporate Pride campaigns crescendoed, PublicSq. said it added more than 300,000 users, bringing its customer base to over 1.1 million…..

     
    Jim Schneider, co-founder of sunglass brand Zivah, knows his company could probably reach more customers if he sold his products on Amazon, but he isn’t interested.

    Zivah has found success as an early adopter of PublicSq., an online marketplace that bills itself as an alternative to “woke” corporations espousing liberal values.


    Zivah (a name that comes from the Hebrew word for “light of God”) sells high-end sunglasses with names like “Glisten” and “Dazzle.” Each one bears a scripture on the inside of the temple.

    “In a world that seems so polarized, you see the world through a different lens,” Zivah’s website reads.
“Our target consumer really is someone who supports American values, who does not want to support a company that’s gone woke, who does not want to support a company that’s supporting abortions,” Schneider told The Washington Post. (Amazon has joined other large companies in offering to cover employees’ travel expenses for abortion and other non-life-threatening medical treatment if they don’t have access at home.)

    Since Zivah joined PublicSq. last year, the platform “has definitely become our biggest source of new customers,” Schneider said.

    Zivah and PublicSq. are part of a growing contingent of companies promoting “anti-woke capitalism,” a business model that is gaining traction amid broader cultural battles over abortion, guns, transgender rights and American exceptionalism. As big companies and brands such as Target, North Face and Bud Light have drawn fire from some consumers for celebrating the LGBTQ community, PublicSq. is building a customer base on the other side of the ideological spectrum.

    The platform has swelled to host more than 55,000 small businesses since it launched on July 4, 2022 — with major growth coming in recent months as consumers reacted to Bud Light’s partnership with transgender comedian and activist Dylan Mulvaney and Target’s Pride merchandise. In the last week of May, as tensions around corporate Pride campaigns crescendoed, PublicSq. said it added more than 300,000 users, bringing its customer base to over 1.1 million…..

    1.1 million, you say? Why that's almost as many as died from Covid. Put that way, these greasy schmucks would say it's a minuscule, completely inconsequential number.
     
    Jim Schneider, co-founder of sunglass brand Zivah, knows his company could probably reach more customers if he sold his products on Amazon, but he isn’t interested.

    Zivah has found success as an early adopter of PublicSq., an online marketplace that bills itself as an alternative to “woke” corporations espousing liberal values.


    Zivah (a name that comes from the Hebrew word for “light of God”) sells high-end sunglasses with names like “Glisten” and “Dazzle.” Each one bears a scripture on the inside of the temple.

    “In a world that seems so polarized, you see the world through a different lens,” Zivah’s website reads.
“Our target consumer really is someone who supports American values, who does not want to support a company that’s gone woke, who does not want to support a company that’s supporting abortions,” Schneider told The Washington Post. (Amazon has joined other large companies in offering to cover employees’ travel expenses for abortion and other non-life-threatening medical treatment if they don’t have access at home.)

    Since Zivah joined PublicSq. last year, the platform “has definitely become our biggest source of new customers,” Schneider said.

    Zivah and PublicSq. are part of a growing contingent of companies promoting “anti-woke capitalism,” a business model that is gaining traction amid broader cultural battles over abortion, guns, transgender rights and American exceptionalism. As big companies and brands such as Target, North Face and Bud Light have drawn fire from some consumers for celebrating the LGBTQ community, PublicSq. is building a customer base on the other side of the ideological spectrum.

    The platform has swelled to host more than 55,000 small businesses since it launched on July 4, 2022 — with major growth coming in recent months as consumers reacted to Bud Light’s partnership with transgender comedian and activist Dylan Mulvaney and Target’s Pride merchandise. In the last week of May, as tensions around corporate Pride campaigns crescendoed, PublicSq. said it added more than 300,000 users, bringing its customer base to over 1.1 million…..


    Something tells me Amazon isn't sweating this to much.
     

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