• PhilipTheBucket@ponder.cat
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    4 hours ago

    Yeah, what could go wrong if we let propaganda, wild misunderstandings and distortions of reality, start to impact the public consciousness and affect people’s decisions or voting decisions or whatever?

    I literally can’t think of a single downside.

    • GenerationII@lemm.ee
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      1 hour ago

      When you said that football guy kneeling wasn’t political, I started to seriously question what your motives are. He literally knelt, during the national anthem, in a political protest against police brutality. Politics isn’t capitol hill bullshit. I’m fairly certain that you don’t have a deep enough understanding about politics to come in here and be the arbiter of what is and isn’t political.

      While I understand the sentiment of your statement, and I think it was well intentioned, I think you’re wrong

      • PhilipTheBucket@ponder.cat
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        1 hour ago

        Someone else said it I think better than I could: Colin Karpernik’s protest was not political, it was ethical.

        You and I can disagree about the precise definition of “political” and whether it includes non-partisan activism that is dealing with pure issues of right and wrong. It is fine either way, I was just saying how I see the definition. I led off though by identifying explicitly political actions which are not “political,” by the propaganda definition. Surely we can agree that the “political” definition that doesn’t include those things is a bunch of shit.