DaveXA
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Wasn't sure where to put this, but we need a thread for the wing nuts. Lauren Boebert.
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The irony is delicious. Lmao.What's the opposite of "Go Woke Go Broke"?
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An Australian cafe that opened in Sydney with a Donald Trump theme is closing its doors after mere weeks.
According to the New York Post, "Mark Da Costa opened Bueno Eatery in St. Peter’s in March after closing down his Waterloo cafe, Hale and Hearty, in 2020 after being involved in a series of internet controversies, in which he called a community member a homophobic slur. He also declared his cafe a 'Donald Trump safe zone,' which served pancakes with a 'side of racism.'"
When the restaurant first opened, Da Costa told news.com.au "about how he had grown up and had hoped to 'move on' from his Trump-laden controversies with his latest venue, situated at the end of Newtown’s renowned King Street."
However, after just six weeks, Da Costa announced the closure of the cafe, posting a photo of himself "in his Trump shirt, posting a photo of himself in a MAGA shirt and giving the finger to the camera."
Da Costa, who previously competed on Australian Idol, blamed "snowflakes" for the failure of his restaurant, which echoes how, after the failure of Hale and Hearty, he blamed the “left-wing fake vegan community” and told his critics to "go f--- yourself."
MAGA cafe that hawked pancakes with a 'side of racism' closes weeks after opening
An Australian cafe that opened in Sydney with a Donald Trump theme is closing its doors after mere weeks.According to the New York Post, "Mark Da Costa opened Bueno Eatery in St. Peter’s in March after closing down his Waterloo cafe, Hale and Hearty, in 2020 after being involved in a series of...www.rawstory.com
Those angry white men need to get a life. Sheesh. I'm a white man and I just don't get why they're so insecure. It's absurd.
In a recent episode of his highly influential podcast, Joe Rogan declared what he sees as the latest triumph in the cultural battle over language: the return of the “R-word.”
“Every time I see people that disagree with any that’s happening, any gigantic world events, it’s one of these mentally challenged shows where they’re screaming,” he said April 10 on an episode of “The Joe Rogan Experience,” before he interrupted himself to go on a quick rant about the word.
“The word ‘mentally challenged’ is back, and it’s one of the great cultural victories that I think is spurred on, probably, by podcasts,” he added.
Rogan is right, at least to those in some circles.
Once relegated to the cultural dustbin, the so-called R-word has made a resurgence in recent months, used most commonly by people in right-leaning and anti-political correctness worlds, some of whom have tried for years to bring the slur from the social media undercurrents back into the mainstream.
Tesla CEO Elon Musk now frequently uses the word on X to disparage everyone from a Danish astronaut to Ben Stiller. In March, Ye, the rapper formerly known as Kanye West, used it in questioning the mental capacity of Beyoncé and Jay-Z’s twins, only to later issue an apology. The FX show “English Teacher” included a bit about how “the kids are not into being woke” and they’re “saying the ‘R-word’ again.” And a recent Netflix comedy special invoked the word repeatedly.
While its use has percolated in the comedy world for years, only recently has the word — and discussion of its return — become more normalized. That is fueled in no small part by a sense that the tide has turned both culturally and politically against those seeking to keep the word out of the popular lexicon. But the battle lines are not as clear as one might think, with even some on the left softening their stance on the slur’s rebrand while some on the right — most notably former Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin — decry its return.
Timothy Shriver, the chairman of Special Olympics International, noted that the word is used across the political spectrum.
“People on the left and people on the right have treated people with intellectual disabilities in subhuman ways, historically,” Shriver said.
Still, there are some political dynamics at play. Kenneth Luna, a linguistics professor at California State University, Northridge, who teaches a course on forbidden language, said the word has emerged as a cultural signifier, used by people on the cultural and political right to reinforce a group allegiance — and create further division.
“There’s this term, the politics of cruelty,” Luna said. “It’s a political ploy to marginalize opponents. But it also reinforces, if you think about it, this kind of in group loyalty.”.............
The 'R-word,' embraced by Joe Rogan and Elon Musk, inches back into the mainstream
Many still consider the word a disability slur, and while its use has percolated in the comedy world for years, only recently has it — and discussion of its return — become more common.www.nbcnews.com
The door was open so I have to walk throughIn a recent episode of his highly influential podcast, Joe Rogan declared what he sees as the latest triumph in the cultural battle over language: the return of the “R-word.”
“Every time I see people that disagree with any that’s happening, any gigantic world events, it’s one of these mentally challenged shows where they’re screaming,” he said April 10 on an episode of “The Joe Rogan Experience,” before he interrupted himself to go on a quick rant about the word.
“The word ‘mentally challenged’ is back, and it’s one of the great cultural victories that I think is spurred on, probably, by podcasts,” he added.
Rogan is right, at least to those in some circles.
Once relegated to the cultural dustbin, the so-called R-word has made a resurgence in recent months, used most commonly by people in right-leaning and anti-political correctness worlds, some of whom have tried for years to bring the slur from the social media undercurrents back into the mainstream.
Tesla CEO Elon Musk now frequently uses the word on X to disparage everyone from a Danish astronaut to Ben Stiller. In March, Ye, the rapper formerly known as Kanye West, used it in questioning the mental capacity of Beyoncé and Jay-Z’s twins, only to later issue an apology. The FX show “English Teacher” included a bit about how “the kids are not into being woke” and they’re “saying the ‘R-word’ again.” And a recent Netflix comedy special invoked the word repeatedly.
While its use has percolated in the comedy world for years, only recently has the word — and discussion of its return — become more normalized. That is fueled in no small part by a sense that the tide has turned both culturally and politically against those seeking to keep the word out of the popular lexicon. But the battle lines are not as clear as one might think, with even some on the left softening their stance on the slur’s rebrand while some on the right — most notably former Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin — decry its return.
Timothy Shriver, the chairman of Special Olympics International, noted that the word is used across the political spectrum.
“People on the left and people on the right have treated people with intellectual disabilities in subhuman ways, historically,” Shriver said.
Still, there are some political dynamics at play. Kenneth Luna, a linguistics professor at California State University, Northridge, who teaches a course on forbidden language, said the word has emerged as a cultural signifier, used by people on the cultural and political right to reinforce a group allegiance — and create further division.
“There’s this term, the politics of cruelty,” Luna said. “It’s a political ploy to marginalize opponents. But it also reinforces, if you think about it, this kind of in group loyalty.”.............
The 'R-word,' embraced by Joe Rogan and Elon Musk, inches back into the mainstream
Many still consider the word a disability slur, and while its use has percolated in the comedy world for years, only recently has it — and discussion of its return — become more common.www.nbcnews.com
The door was open so I have to walk through
Rogan and Musk are both (insert R word).
They think, if that be what they actually do, that in some manner they have scored a “victory”. They have, instead, shown how childish they are.
In another article I read, I forget where, there is this issue of masculinity which seems to have devolved down to wanting to be able to act like a d**k with no repercussions. The problem is not society damaging or altering masculinity. The problem is men not being willing to stop being adolescents.
Joe Rogan, Tony Hinchcliffe, and anyone else who uses that word can kiss my arse. fork all of them. I don't give a damn what your political leanings are, using that word is messed up.
The door was open so I have to walk through
Rogan and Musk are both (insert R word).
They think, if that be what they actually do, that in some manner they have scored a “victory”. They have, instead, shown how childish they are.
In another article I read, I forget where, there is this issue of masculinity which seems to have devolved down to wanting to be able to act like a d**k with no repercussions. The problem is not society damaging or altering masculinity. The problem is men not being willing to stop being adolescents.
Real men are not what these poor fools are.Read an article (possibly posted it here) that said the rise of that attitude and the 'manosphere' in general was a direct response and backlash to emo, metrosexuals and hipsters and all the emotional, well groomed dandies with their obscure fringe interests, likes and hobbies
Led to a return of "real men" meat and potatoes, domestic beer, my way or the highway, dirty, crass and grunty, better to fight than cry kind of men
You’re right. They are azzhats.Don't walk through it. Be better than those butt crevasses.