[-] CrowTankieRobot@hexbear.net 18 points 2 days ago

Oh, yeah, back before YouTube or even the commercial internet, there were various crazy political groups that would send their videos to cable-access stations around the country. You would sometimes see their stuff played on late-night cable TV. I vaguely remember one that had to do with old rail yards being converted into FEMA detention camps or something. There was even an X-Files episode or two that riffed off of this stuff...it had quite an impact on '90s culture. The "FEMA camp" nonsense was even featured on Jesse Ventura's ridiculous TV show.

[-] CrowTankieRobot@hexbear.net 21 points 2 days ago* (last edited 2 days ago)

Finally...an example of "jury nullification" for the left. Every other time I've heard that term, it's always been from a MAGA chud. Too bad the incident (and court case) happened in the UK, though, not here.

[-] CrowTankieRobot@hexbear.net 8 points 2 days ago

So many cultural minefields to cross...anyone remember the George HW Bush incident with the grocery scanner? That was blamed in part for his loss to Clinton.

[-] CrowTankieRobot@hexbear.net 33 points 2 days ago

It's also nice to see that years after Roger Ailes toppled down the stairs to his demise, his successor(s) at Fox "News" still have the fetish for newsreaders from the Blonde Fembot Factory.

[-] CrowTankieRobot@hexbear.net 5 points 4 days ago

That's rather ironic, since the right-wing economists at Stanford's Hoover Institution would normally consider anathema any mention of "national industrial policy", even if it was dressed up with all sorts of niceties about "public-private partnerships" and similar nonsense. The careers of so many there (Sowell, etc.) are predicated on a near-religious belief in the old Thatcherism "there is no such thing as society". Similarly, for Hooverites, "there is no such thing as the public sector", or at least there ought not to be.

Dr, Harris may live inside ivory towers and ivy-covered walls, but he apparently doesn't understand that he's a lot closer to the old plantation than he realizes. Something tells me that his heterodox "progressive market theory" (or whatever he would call it) is tolerated more because of his Third World background than for any other reason.

[-] CrowTankieRobot@hexbear.net 7 points 5 days ago

Don't think so. Are you thinking of Dasha Nekrasova? She's one half of the Red Scare podcast. They were somehow affiliated with Thiel (I remember there was something in the press about that).

[-] CrowTankieRobot@hexbear.net 1 points 1 month ago

And before this stunt, he was re-tweeting (or should I say, "re-Xitting") Pepe frog Frenworld memes. He literally reposted plagiarized Frenworld content, just like an incel basement dweller.

[-] CrowTankieRobot@hexbear.net 14 points 1 month ago

After the raids in 2006, the company needed to replenish its work force fast. Swift executives set up a war room where they posted maps on the walls and circled target cities for recruitment. The company’s H.R. team advertised on the radio and in local newspapers. They bought space on billboards. They sent representatives to job fairs and set up a recruitment station at unemployment offices. But few workers would bite. Finally, Swift started offering free bus service to Cactus from Amarillo. Somali refugees began to apply, and in 2007, after JBS acquired Swift, it stepped up the hiring of refugees to maintain production.

It's surprising that this story actually reveals one of the key problems of industrial agriculture, the vertical integration and monopolization which has grown exponentially since the '80s--particularly through M&As and finance capital buyouts. The working conditions in these plants are often beyond description, and the article only obliquely mentions the latest work hazard: Covid. A family member lived in Sioux Falls, SD during the worst of the pandemic years, and they told me of the panic that spread through the community as workers at the Smithfield plant there got sick and died. It turns out that Covid spreads best in cold, damp conditions, which makes meat processing plants uniquely dangerous. Then there was the spectacle of Donald Trump insisting that the plants stay open during the worst of the pandemic, which resulted in huge spread of Covid outside of the confines of the plants and the predictable deaths of workers from the virus.

[-] CrowTankieRobot@hexbear.net 15 points 1 month ago* (last edited 1 month ago)

What a joke of an article. These "think" tank morons just phone it in, every damn time. FEE has to be among the very worst, with seemingly no standards for what kind of garbage gets posted on their site. I recall that another FEE "writer" was featured on a Chapo episode some time ago, and their prose read exactly like this Jon Miltimore idiot. I wish I could remember more details--but I do know that the individual in question was a college dropout who had basically bounced around from marginal job to marginal job and somehow ended up at FEE. That seems to be how they find these people--I'm guessing that the pay is lousy and they prey on not-too-bright recent college grads or dropouts who have run out of options. I also noticed that Miltimore is affiliated with "Intellectual Takeout", which is a really lame project run out of the Center for the American Experiment, a regional right-wing "think" tank in MN. "Takeout" exists basically to provide prefabbed term papers with right-wing themes which lazy students can copy in order to "pwn" their supposedly Marxist professors. However, colleges now use sophisticated anti-cheating software, and this is a really great way to get blackballed from higher ed by being expelled for plagiarism.

[-] CrowTankieRobot@hexbear.net 8 points 2 months ago

The MRA/PUA/incel Vice President, endorsed by Roosh V, ladies and gentlemen.

[-] CrowTankieRobot@hexbear.net 9 points 8 months ago

Fascism that's so comfy... comfy

view more: next ›

CrowTankieRobot

joined 4 years ago