If Books Could Kill - BONUS: Conservatives vs. Pride Month
Episode Date: July 6, 2023Lots of subscribers asked us to release last month's bonus episode in full so here it is! Share it with the conservatives, the boomers and the Satanists in your life.Support us on Patreon: https:...//www.patreon.com/IfBooksPod Where to find us: TwitterPeter's other podcast, 5-4Mike's other podcast, Maintenance PhaseThanks to Mindseye for our theme song!
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Michael, Peter, what do you know about the backlash to corporate pride?
All I know is that it will be refreshing to have a pride month that is exhausting, but not because of the gaze.
You texted earlier this week and said that you wanted to do a bonus episode on the target backlash and like the institution of corporate pride in general.
And my initial gut instinct was, I don't know if I trust Peter to talk about corporate pride.
I don't know if I want, I don't know if I need like the straights weighing in.
You handle the pride, I'll handle the corporate.
And then I realize that this is how members of other groups feel like when we cover issues,
this is how like women feel when we talk about like the love languages on the show,
they're like, I don't know about Mike and Peter. Thank you for giving me a window of empathy,
this week's Peter. That's when you realized that you were wrong because we can speak for women.
We can.
And I can speak for all LGBT people.
Exactly.
Just summarize this debate for us, Peter.
I plan to just sit quietly and let you talk and just wait for you to fuck up.
Everybody listen up.
Yeah, exactly.
A straight man is talking.
So tell us about the genesis of this episode, Peter. Why did you want to cover this? Well, I was bearing witness to some of the backlash against Bud Light.
You're true. You're living your truth.
And it sort of struck my brain that it was more transparent
than what we've seen in the past,
in the sense that there was almost no veneer
of like a reasonable position.
The entire display was the result of conservatives saying,
hey, we hate trans people.
And then corporations reacting to that with something like sympathy.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
I thought that was unique.
It felt like an evolution of the sort of conservative backlash we've seen.
Yeah.
And I thought it was an evolution.
Maybe we're talking about given that it is taking place in the context of like a wave
of anti-trans legislation
across the country, for example.
And also the way that this has spilled over
into the broader like LGBT community, right?
Like it started out as like explicitly anti-trans
and a lot of people were warning about like
they're gonna come for same sex marriage next,
they're gonna come for like other groups, right?
And the response you got was like,
I don't know, there's a real tricky debate
about youth sports and these surgeries.
They're doing on kids, blah, blah, blah.
And then now this stuff,
they're freaking out about greeting cards
for same-sex couples.
And it's just like,
oh, okay, they're just freaking out
about the existence of gay people now.
Right, well, I also think that an element of this
is that part of like the conservative
political strategy right now is to just be
deeply unpleasant in public spaces,
like school board meetings, right?
That's well.
They turn them into completely insane spectacle
that no one else wants to be a part of.
Everyone else leaves and they assume positions of power
within school boards.
This feels like a similar sort of thing.
They are making themselves so obnoxious in public
that companies are put into a weird position, right?
Where it's like, well, I don't want to give in
to these people necessarily, but dealing with them
is so bad that maybe we should.
So why don't you walk us through the Bud Light explosion?
I feel like this was kind of the beginning of it this year
and then I'll talk us through Target.
Yeah.
Before we talk about the incident from April,
we need to get to know Dylan Mulvane,
a 26 year old trans influencer.
She used to be a Broadway performer.
She was in Book of Mormon for a bit.
She is huge on TikTok.
Right now, she has something like 10 million followers
on TikTok, over a million on Instagram.
I had no idea.
She was that famous.
Almost all of her current popularity
came within the last year or so.
She came out as a trans woman and posted a tongue
and cheek clip titled day one of being a girl.
It gets popular.
She expands it into a series that chronicles her transition.
A lot of jokes, a lot of serious commentary.
And by the end of 2022, she is obscenely popular, just sort of skyrockets to social media
fame.
In October, there is a presidential forum where various prominent figures on social media
talk to Joe Biden and Dylan spoke with him about trans rights for a few minutes.
This puts her on the right wing radar.
Yeah, of course.
So right wing pundits and politicians, including Senator
Marsha Blackburn of Tennessee, respond with like their standard round of right wing vitriol.
Some of it is directed at Biden's comments, which were, you know, just accepting that trans people
are real, basically, and saying they deserve rights. But then they start digging through Dylan's
TikToks and mocking them. There's a video where Dylan talks about having a potentially visible penis as a trans
woman.
Senator Blackburn does a tweet saying left wing lunatics want to make this absurdity normal.
Oh my God.
Marjorie Taylor green ways in lots of vile shade as being said.
And then, you know, they get distracted by the next shiny object and move on.
I love how like the right wing panics are always about like some random sophomore at Oberlin said something
arguably over the top about a sandwich and this is like two sitting congressmen.
Right. It's not just that. It's like the entire fucking media apparatus, right?
Oh, yeah. There's just a clear line between like the lowest, most vile, right wing social media types and then Tucker
Carlson and Ted Cruz and whoever, right? Yes, wild. So as influencers are want to do Dylan is also
doing like promotional sponsorships with various brands. So in March, she posts this on Instagram Reels. I'll send it to you.
Since deleted, but I managed to find
what I think is not a homophobic YouTube channel
that has it.
Nice.
I've never actually seen it.
Well, it is harrowing.
Race yourself.
Hi, impressive carrying skills, right?
I got some bud lights for us.
So I kept hearing about this thing called March Madness,
and I thought we were all just having a hectic month,
but it turns out it has something to do with sports.
And I'm not sure exactly which sport,
but either way, it's a cause to celebrate.
This month, I celebrated my day 365, a womanhood,
and Bud Light sent me possibly the best gift ever, a
can with my face on it.
Check out my Instagram story to see how you can enjoy March Madness with Bud Light and
maybe win some money too.
Love ya!
Now I imagine that you need a moment to compose yourself after watching this clear symbol
of the downfall of Western civilization.
God, it's so bleak how these huge blowups come from
just the most boring random shit.
It's like, I'm getting a dumb hashtag sponsor deal.
There's no reason to notice this kind of thing.
Unless right wingers just decide to freak out about it.
So let's be clear before we move on about what this is because part of what fueled the right wingers just decide to freak out about it. So let's be clear before we move on about what this is,
because part of what fueled the right wing reaction
was misinformation around the situation.
Yeah, of course.
According to Anheuser Bush,
the scope of this partnership was exactly one post.
This was not a TV commercial,
Bud Light was just paying to get Dylan
to do some quick promotion on social media.
She receives this can with her face on it that can's not for sale anywhere.
Oh really?
It's like a commemorative thing that they sent her.
Yeah, it was a thing that they sent her.
They have sent it to other sponsorship partners.
They sent it to her for being a partner and because she was celebrating one year officially
out as a woman.
This is like one level above those people
that'll have like soccer mom,
trip did Disney World, 2017 like printed on T-shirts.
Yeah, right.
And like they wear the T-shirts,
but like the T-shirts are not being sold anywhere.
They screen printed her image on a can
and send it to her basically.
Yeah.
These companies just have like,
I think they cast the net very wide
for these kind of like influencers, sponsorships.
There's like everybody, they probably have Christian influencers.
They probably did this too.
100%.
It's not particularly ideological these things.
No, no, no.
Everybody with more than like 100,000 followers send them some free shit and give them a thousand
bucks.
Yeah.
Part of the initial Bud Light response was to be like, we do hundreds of these partnerships.
Yeah.
Yeah. So some right-winger or somewhere, presumably, is scrolling through her insta and they freak
out, right?
Yeah.
Ben Shapiro says, quote, well, folks, our culture has now decided, men are women and women
are men.
And you must be forced to consume products.
That's a.
Force to consume products is a fascinating phrase.
That's right.
Manatory. force to consume products is a fascinating phrase. That's right. Manitory.
Three dollars will be removed from your paycheck.
Yeah.
And a beer will be sent to your house.
And then you get water boarded with transbud light.
Kid rock posts a video of him shooting a case of bud light with an AR 15.
Of course.
Right wing politicians and celebrities and pundits all get in on Fox News is talking
about it.
Budweiser factories are receiving bomb threats.
They call for a boycott, boycott commences.
Sales drop for Budweiser and Bud Light in early April.
In mid April, the CEO of Anheuser Bush puts out a statement titled,
Our Responsibility to America.
Jesus Christ.
It is maybe the worst statement I have ever read.
Hell yeah.
Not just because it is completely morally and substantively hollow,
but because it might as well be designed to just piss everyone off.
Yeah, because if you throw a trans person under the bus,
you then get the backlash from progressives.
So what they're trying to do is thread the needle between,
we don't want to piss off the right wing psychos,
but we also don't want to piss off like the 90% of the country
that like really has no problem with this.
Right, it includes the choice line, quote,
we never intended to be part of a discussion that divides people.
Oh my God. We are in the business of bringing people together over a beer.
The rest of the statement is just like, melee mouth bullshit. At one point, they reference like
American values and they talk about like freedom and hard work. Yeah, just throw a bald eagle in
there. Right. The bald eagle screech is like playing in the background. I mean, the direct parallel is just like, what if an ad had a black person?
Yeah, exactly.
And then the right wing freaked out.
Yeah.
And Anheuser Bush was like, look, we don't want to be part of a conversation that divides
people.
We're trying to stay out of all these politics.
From now on, it's white-only.
This is like what we talked about before we recorded of like how difficult it is to talk
about this because it's so just one dimensionally bigoted,
like the actual backlash.
Like there's no laundered version of this argument
that is like, well, if you look at it this way,
it's actually like they raised some good points.
It's literally just like a trans person was visible.
The only sort of like angle here that they have
is that she has done some activism, right?
Like the fact that she's talked to Joe Biden
is sometimes referenced, but like really,
she's just a trans influencer?
Yeah, she's just a famous trans person.
Now what's interesting about this boycott
is that usually boycotts lose energy very quickly.
Yeah.
You know, remember like the carreg boycott
from a few years ago or like the carreg boycott from a few years ago,
or like the Goya boycott of 2020. Apparently. Yeah. These things come and go. There is research
showing that boycotts just tend not to work. Yeah. The boycottters lose energy and focus.
Often the publicity creates brand awareness that like counteracts any decline in sales. Yeah.
This one appears to be different.
For nearly two months now, Bud Light and Bud Wiser sales have fallen relative to the
previous year's sales.
And the decline has mostly increased over time, now hovering around 25% for Bud Light
in particular, which is a massive decrease, obviously.
Yeah.
I don't think we really know why this boycott has been much more effective than the usual boycott.
I would imagine that you can chalk it up to a couple of things.
First of all, Bud Light is essentially a commodity.
It is cheap swill, meaning it's very easily replaced by competitors like Miller and
Chors.
Yeah.
And in fact, some preliminary sales data seems
to show that that's where the sales went, right? For the 25% decrease in Bud Light, there was a
corresponding increase across the other two brands. Yeah, they're in the rack next to each other.
You're like, fuck it. I've been hearing that Bud Light is woke. I'm just going to pick the other
beer, right? Right. The easiest boycott in the world to stick with. And then also there was like a very intentional campaign
by prominent right wingers to sustain the outrage.
With the conscious knowledge that the right
is generally outnumbered,
but they could get what they want in the market
by sort of aggressively targeting individual companies.
This is something that Matt Walsh has talked about for a while.
They don't always admit that they are sort of in the minority, right?
Because the whole silent majority concept has been
part of their psyche for so long.
But essentially conceding, look, we are not the majority in this country,
but we are large enough that if we just coordinate and focus our effort,
we can bully the marketplace. Yeah. Right.
By being the more obnoxious side, by being the more organized side.
Yeah.
I highlighted that quote too where he said like we can't boycott every like woke company,
but we can highlight one and make a big example out of them.
Right.
And they've essentially by zeroing in on this one company, every other consumer brand is
looking at this being like,
oh, fuck, we don't want to be next.
Right.
And heizerbush puts two marketing executives responsible for the promotion on leaf.
One of them is Alyssa Heinerschied, who was hired, I think in 2022, just to freshen up
the brand.
Right wingers locate a podcast interview with her from March where she said she was hired with a mandate to evolve the brand and
That she wanted to bring an image of inclusivity to what she called a
Traditionally fratty and kind of out of touch brand. Oh, no this poor woman
Now I want to talk about this sort of like business angle here Bud Light and its peers are a shrinking portion of
the alcohol market, right? For the past like 20 years, we've seen the rise of like craft beer.
Last few years, we've seen hard-seltzer, take a massive share of the market. So if you're sitting
on Bud Light, a brand pivot is a very natural move, right? It makes total sense. You need to sort of,
you need to sort of redirect your energy because you are shrinking. On the other hand, the plurality
of your customers are probably white, male, middle aged. The brand has always been marketed to them.
And so this becomes sort of like an affirmation of everything they feared when they saw the Dylan Mulvaney promo, right? Like the culture is slipping out of their hands.
And these are people that are still very upset by the black elves that they had. That's right.
That's right. That's right. On the television screens. Very difficult for these folks.
Hiner Shide receives some weird targeted harassment, of course. Of course. People dig up photos of
her from her college days
where she's at parties.
And they're like, oh, so now you don't like frat parties.
She's a Christ.
That was on Fox News, dude.
Yeah, the anti-fandom.
It's like, yeah, you got her.
Yeah, wow.
She's now 39, by the way.
So like, this is like 20-year-old fucking huge hypocrisy.
She attended frat parties and then made an off hand comment about
frattingness 20 years later. I don't even know that we know that they were
frat parties, but I would have met like, yeah, of course you went to a frat party.
Yeah, I went to frat parties. Frat's are fucking stupid, but I also went to frat parties in
college. Because that's where the parties are. Yeah, exactly.
So Dylan for her part drops off of social media for a bit.
She comes back in late April with a quick message where she says things So Dylan for her part drops off of social media for a bit.
She comes back in late April with a quick message where she says things like quote,
what I'm struggling to understand is the need to dehumanize
and to be cruel.
I just don't think that's right.
Which is very nice and also sort of like borderline naive
in a nice way like a beer soul.
Dehumanizing is the whole point, Dylan.
Yeah, it's always so bleak when people just make these like basic statements of humanity.
I've just like, right, please don't try to murder me.
I don't know.
There's a little debate to be had here.
Yeah, there's such a purity in the response where it was like, I don't think everyone should
be trying to kill me.
I know that I need to die.
And media is like the controversy swirls.
Now, again, the boycott has sort of continued in May,
Ted Cruz and Marsha Blackburn called for a probe into the sponsorship,
claiming that Dylan's audience skews young.
So they are like arguing that this might be tantamount
to marketing alcohol to children.
Oh my God.
They manage to like work in like a weird grooming angle, right?
And in general, like the right wing response
at the ground level has just been wild.
Like just naked transphobia.
Yeah.
A lot of people commenting about Dylan's like affect
saying that she acts young girlish,
and that's like mocking women.
Oh my God.
Which a only exists as a critique
if you reject the concept that she is a woman.
But B is misunderstanding what's happening here.
Dylan's annoying girlish affect is because
she's a theater kid.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, exactly.
They don't get it.
I mean, look, I have been around theater kids for long enough
that I immediately clock this.
Yeah.
And then people were like, she's mocking women.
I was like, no, you don't get it.
You don't get it.
And you're going to have to watch a lot of production
before you do.
There's so much to say about this stuff
about like the hypocrisy of quote unquote free market
conservatives losing their minds
because like the free market is working as intended.
Yeah, yeah.
Like companies are trying to appeal to new audiences losing their minds because like the free market is working as intended. Yeah. Right?
Like companies are trying to appeal to new audiences or the hypocrisy of like the people
that melted down about cancel culture for fucking years and are now like very obviously
engaging in an effort to cancel a person and a company.
But it's like it's just so fucking obvious.
It's so obvious to make these points.
And it's like it's boring to listen to.
Yeah.
What we were talking about earlier as sort of my takeaway, the fact that like
there is really nothing more to the outrage than the fact that Dylan is trans, right? There's no
nuance beyond that. The right just wants the takeaway to be, don't do business with trans people.
And it's so nakedly built upon unfiltered discrimination, that it feels like surreal to witness the media coverage
because the media keeps referring to a controversy
without really spelling out that the entire controversy
is that Bud Light partnered with a trans person
and these people hate trans people.
Especially true, by the way,
because a lot of the coverage comes from financial media, because this is like a business story to a degree.
Right.
So like, just to give you the tiniest slice, Yahoo finances, latest story said, quote, driven
by backlash from an advertising campaign with transgender influencer Dylan Mulvaney,
Bud Light sales have now declined for six weeks.
Now, if you are in the business media,
that is presumably the full story, right?
There's a New York Times article about
one of these meta articles about like
what's going on at Target and Bud Light and stuff.
And the headline is,
brands embracing Pride Month confront
a volatile political climate.
Jesus.
It's not a climate.
It's almost like if you're a journalist covering this,
you have two choices.
One is you just like use this neutral terminology,
or two is like, you really dig in.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
And I think a lot of them are probably just like,
oh, I'm not gonna deal with this, right?
I'm not gonna try to write the article
that explains what's happening here because it's too much.
Right.
And that sort of like willingness to go along with it
is a huge problem in a society where fascists are ascendant.
Yeah.
Again, if this were just the right being like,
hey, let's get mad, they did a partnership
with a black person.
I would think that people within the media
would be a little more primed to call it what it is.
Maybe that's me being naive,
but it feels like the media's response to this
and their willingness to describe it in neutral terms
is an indicator that they are not ready
to defend trans rights.
Yeah. Period. I think the problem is that the reality, But they are not ready to defend trans rights, period.
I think the problem is that the reality, if you describe it in sober terms, sounds
partisan.
Sounds right.
If you describe, like, we are now in, like, year three of a wave of essentially terrorist
actions and, like, local agitating against progressive change, right?
This, I think think it really started with
the anti-vaxxers, but we've had people taking over school boards. I mean, we had a fucking anti-queer,
fucking mass shooting. You know, we had the Buffalo shooting, which was like straightforwardly
white supremacist. We've had other mass shootings that were like explicitly white supremacist. We've
had all kinds of other other threats against black colleges.
We've had these children's gender clinics being shut down sometimes for days on end because
the threats are so overwhelming. If you describe this as part of like, oh yeah, right wing
violence and threats and intimidation are like really ascendant in this country. And this is like a
major like, thirdingly obvious trend. It sounds bad, but it's just objectively the reality.
Like, I read an ADL report that pointed out
that like every extremist act of murder in 2022
was right wing terror, and like there's various other reports
like there's one from the New America Foundation
that tracks every single incident of terrorist violence since 9-11 and one death is attributed to the far left and
150 deaths are attributed to far right violence.
Right.
I mentioned their strategy of being intolerable to be around.
Part of that though is that sort of implication that there is a willingness to engage
in extreme violence among a decent chunk of these people. When they go and start knocking over
pride displays at target, the target worker doesn't know whether they're dealing with the 99% of them
that are just ready to knock over a pride display or the 1%
that's ready to pull out a gun and shoot you if you try to stop them.
Totally. Should we talk about target? I did a lot of like social media slew thing.
Let's talk about target.
So in early May, target announces its 2023 Pride collection. The only media I could find about the actual announcement
and like when they started putting this on shelves
was from left wing gay media making fun of it
because like ultimately it's target.
So one of the things they're selling
is a t-shirt that says live laugh lesbian
and people are like target.
What are you doing?
God, Lord.
There's a coffee mug that says gender fluid.
There's a candle that is allegedly pronoun centered.
I don't know what that means.
This is unnecessary because candles are already gay.
Exactly.
We don't need you to go this far.
We got it already.
Vanilla wasn't enough.
Exactly.
So for the first two weeks of May, this just like sits there.
It sits there on the internet.
It sits there in stores.
The earliest viral post that I could see about this was from this account called
fucking gaze against groomers.
Hell yeah.
We've heard of these ghouls.
Good luck, gaze against groomers.
I'm sure they will never put you against the wall.
I'm comforted by the fact that no matter how much these fucking people hate
themselves, I hate them more.
So this account is the first one I saw where they basically amplify these videos
that I believe had been bouncing around for a while at that point, where essentially
random people go into target and are like,
look at this. Like look at what they're selling to your kids. And it's like someone who's sort of
cause playing as like a concerned parent or someone who's like, I'm just worried about indoctrination
or whatever. Right, right. They post a couple of these videos. And there's a couple of like blips
in right-wing media. So on May 11th, there's a daily wire story called
Target releases latest Pride collection, complete with kids' books and rainbow items for babies.
Okay. What is very interesting about the following two weeks.
And I think this has been memory-hold when this goes public, but the early days of this freak-out
are very straightforwardly a satanic panic.
Most of these videos where random people walk into target stores and like lose their minds
are based around the fact that they're allegedly selling satanic merchandise.
Right. Right. So I don't know if you came across this, but I'm going to send you
a article from the National Review, far right laundromat, the National Review.
Slash the most prominent rag in all of conservatism.
Exactly, like the respectable conservatives.
Okay.
Right.
Oh, fuck yeah, dude.
Okay.
It's so good.
So read the headline in the first couple of paragraphs.
The headline is target partners with Satanist brand to create items for pride collection.
Satanist brand, a real thing, a real thing that exists.
Why are there so many fucking pop-up ads on national review?
It's like something about conservatism.
They can't help themselves.
It's like NFTs and like buying gold and like it's like really low rent ads too.
And it's the ones that like move across your screen.
So they try to trick you when you're trying to hit the X into hitting the fucking
ad itself.
I know.
God.
All right.
Target has contracted with Ab Prolin, a clothing brand that sells Satanist merchandise,
some of which glorifies violence to create products for its pride collection.
While Target does not sell a prolyn Satanist-inspired products,
the retail giant approached a prolyn less than a year ago
to design pride-related merchandise
according to the brand's social media post.
At one point, Target sold three app-prolyn items,
a messenger bag saying,
we belong everywhere across trans flag colors,
a tote bag with a message
too queer for here beneath a UFO, and a cure transphobia, not trans people sweatshirt. Only
the sweatshirt remains for sale. It's unclear why the other two items no longer appear on
the target website. Rich texts. The lurking mystery is what exactly the affiliation between this brand and Satanism
actually is because it's not entirely clear. Of course, the products that they actually sell
from this brand are relatively harmless. I feel like the most masterpiece clause in this thing is,
well, Target does not sell appellan's Satanist-inspired product, comma. Like, right, target does not sell. Abpullin's Satanist inspired product, comma.
Like, right, they're not selling them.
Conservatives can't accept that like corporate pride
is pinkwashing bullshit to sell merchandise, right?
They believe that it is materially important.
And because that is such an obvious fiction,
they have to sort of craft a narrative
where the corporations are sort of like
Illuminati-esque figures.
Yeah.
They are right before our eyes, shaking hands with people who worship Satan and eat babies.
That exact dynamic also applies to their conception of Satanism.
The entire reason they're mad about this is that this brand ad problem, which is basically
just one dude named Eric in the UK, this like trans guy who's a designer. He also sells pins that say
Satan respects pronouns. So it's just tongue-in-cheek bullshit. It's very obviously a fucking joke. It's
like it's like a satire of what like the church lady would say. Right. Right. It's like, did you know
Satan respects pronouns? Right. One of the things that drives me the most fucking bananas about conservative Christians is that they
don't understand that Satan is a Christian deity. Right. Right. To believe in Satan, you have to think
the Bible is true. People who reject Christianity are atheists. Right. Right. They're not Satanist. It
doesn't make sense to believe in the Bible, but then side with the bad guy. Can you remember if it
was like a Twitter post or Tumblr post or something like that, but then side with the bad guy. Can't remember if it was like a Twitter post
or Tumblr post or something like that,
but there was once a post somewhere that was like,
the Bible is just God's side of the story.
Like I want to hear what Satan has to say.
That's the both sides of what we need.
It's true, the sort of like aggressively
even gelical types have always been super easy to troll
with this sort of shit, because they cannot comprehend, or don't care to differentiate between
a person who is trolling and says they like Satan, and someone who is actually a Satan
worshipper, to them, it doesn't matter whether you are a trans guy named Eric creating a joke pin, or like the witches in the witch,
huddled nude around a campfire floating in the air through the power of Satan.
Like that is the same thing to them.
It's also very funny to me that they're pretending that they don't agree with the phrase
Satan respects pronouns.
You guys hate respecting pronouns.
The fact that Satan would be a pronoun guy kind of makes sense.
And then like the right wing media kicks into gear around this.
So Tom Cotton tweets out a photo of the Satan Respects pronouns pin
with something along the lines of like target is indoctrinating our use, blah, blah, blah.
And of course this all gets like warped together
with this idea that Target is actually selling
the Satan respects pronouns, pin.
Right, right, right.
To be honest, I would not give a shit
if Target was selling that pin,
but it's a very deliberate effort
on the part of right-wing media.
It's also Target would not sell that pin.
No, of course not.
They need something more than just,
look, they're supporting gay people.
Yeah.
But the goal of this effort is, is to imply that all of this is part of a top-down effort
by liberal elites to corrupt our children, to groom our children.
That a pride display at Target is two degrees of separation away from pedophilia.
And you can also see the Q and onification
of conservatism in this too, where it's like,
they're kind of trying to imply that somehow
by buying like a cute t-shirt for a kid,
this is like too queer for here with a UFO on it.
That somehow like, no, no, no,
that's not just a cute t-shirt.
It's actually like low-key satinist.
They also do this extremely try hard thing
where they try to link this merchandise
to like glorifying violence.
So later in the National Review Post, they say,
the company, they're talking about this allegedly
satanic company, the company sells clothing designs,
showing the phrases, we bash back
with a heart-shaped mace in the trans flag colors,
transphobe collector with a skull,
and homophob headrest with skulls beside a pastel guillotine.
Absolutely based. And it's like, they're obviously jokes. The wee bash back thing is like a very well-known
slogan from people who used to go around neighborhoods looking for gay bashes and like
protecting gay people. They would like walk around with baseball bats.
And this is like an actual like thing of like you're going to gay
bashes us. We're going to fucking gay bash bash you.
So like that's just like a throwback like actual thing.
Yeah, also it's cool.
I know I know it's also really cool.
But it's also very funny to be when conservatives are like this
glorifies a culture of violence.
It's a culture of self defense against you.
You fucking freaks.
Exactly. You guys are the ones glorifying fucking violence constantly. And like there's already been like a culture of self-defense against you, you fucking freaks. Exactly. You guys are the ones glorifying fucking violence constantly.
And like, there's already been like a wave of death threats about this shit.
Like, who's glorifying violence here?
Look, there are tons of like tongue-in-cheek death threats and threats of violence and like
lefty social media.
And if you look at right-wing social media, it's not tongue-in-cheek.
Yeah, oh yeah.
You know, I actually have like complaints
about how lefties handle death threats and stuff,
because I do think it's funny to joke about
like Henry Kissinger dying.
I feel like the most magical times on the internet
in the last like five years were the weekend
when Pokemon Go came out and the night
that Trump announced he had COVID.
Dude, that night ding dong, like ring the bells.
I think I once tweeted that that night on Twitter was like the closest we got to all like being
in a stadium together doing the seven nation army chant. I remember texting my family the next day. And my family are not a bunch of
like irony poisoned lefties like me. They're just normal liberals. And I was like, did you hear
the good news? And they were like, we heard the great news. Like, Zana, dude, it's possible.
We can't have a better world. Everyone was vibing, dude. I don't know. I'm not someone who defends
the use of like jokes about violence
as anything other than catharsis, which I think is what it is and why people use it.
I don't feel like whatever. People are going to joke around about this kind of stuff.
Yeah. I have no problem like making some jokes and like tittering when other people joke about
like Donald Trump dying of COVID. But also like, if somebody were to assassinate a political leader on the right,
I would also be able to be like, oh, I don't know that this is like a great direction.
Well, which political leader though?
But so, I really think that it's important to note that this whole target freak out began as like
psychos, saying psychos shit about Satanism.
Very bush junior era conservative grassroots shit.
And then eventually, of course, they add this thing about like indoctrinating kids.
So they find out that target is selling some like pride-related swimsuits for girls.
But then elsewhere in the store, target also sells swimsuits that have, quote, tucked friendly construction.
Okay.
Did you follow this?
I caught this out of the corner of my eye and was like, no, I'm not engaging.
You know, you get a product on the shelf.
You know, they have like a little brochure that's like attached to it.
Yeah.
It's like, oh, it wicks away moisture and it's like 70% polyester.
And it does some kind of like extra marketing stuff.
One of the things that is sometimes included
in these little marketing pamphlets
that are included in clothing now
is like it's tuck friendly construction,
which means it has a little bit of extra fabric in the crotch
so that if you're a trans woman who has a penis,
it like makes it a little bit easier for you to tuck down there.
These chimneys who are not sold to children,
this is not like a major component of the marketing.
Actually, search on their website,
you can like barely find this sort of advertised or prominently displayed.
It just like, here's a little extra piece of information.
In the same way, like, hey, don't dry this on high.
Yeah.
It's like an extra little piece of marketing, right?
Right.
And so, because conservatives are all just melting down
about things existing, they then pretend
that these tuck-friendly swimsuits are being sold to children.
Uh-huh. Which, honestly, even if that was true,
I don't know that I would give a shit,
like whatever, I don't know, tags on clothes
say all kinds of things and like,
some kids are trans, like whatever,
I don't, it's really not that big of a deal.
But of course, it's like,
they can't respond to the world as it is, right?
Everything needs to be this like heightened version of it,
right?
So it's like,
they're selling trans swimsuits to kids.
And there's all these videos, including one
from the Heritage Foundation,
another sort of quote unquote respectable conservative institution,
where people go in and there's very sort of deliberate editing
that goes on to make it look like these little tags on the swimsuits
are on the kids swimsuits.
Uh-huh, interesting.
So they sort of cut away from the kids swimsuits
to like a close-up of her hands.
And she's like, now this has tuck-friendly construction.
Right.
But you're like, you're into a different part of the store.
What if a kid is eight lines deep on the tag
of this adult mating suit?
Exactly.
And they see this.
They never say this outright, but I feel like it's very similar to when I was like a really
little kid, I would go into my parents' bathroom for whatever, and I would see my mom's
like multivitamins for women. And like in my little kid brain, I would be like, oh, if I took those,
they would like turn me into a woman. Like that's how I understood those pills, even though it's
just like, you know, vitamin C and like riboflavin or whatever. And I feel like it's telling that they
never really describe like the mechanism by which this is harmful to kids. It's like a little bit
of extra cloth in the crotch. And like, I think that they think that this will turn your kid
trans if they wear this swimsuit.
Like I don't actually know what they're mad about.
There's a weird part of the conservative
like anti-trans anti-LGBT movement
that is basically predicated around like loose associations
in your mind between children
and sexuality and genitalia and like creating a sense that these things are intermingling
more than they should.
But without any real like coherence, because like if you're a child at target, they sell
adult underwear, right?
And if you're wandering over to the adult section,
you can see a lady in a bra.
You can see a guy in briefs being gluesley present
in the world, you will see this stuff, no one cares.
But if you threw a fucking rainbow on that,
they would say it was grooming.
It's also very funny because rainbows are like sold
to children in all kinds of
contacts that aren't particularly gay.
Like kids just like rainbows.
You can sell rainbows to kids, but there needs to be text on it that says, like, if it's
a boy's shirt with a rainbow, like, I will fuck girls when I grow up.
Live laugh heteronormative.
It's great.
That's like conservative target is just like little shirts for toddler boys that are like I like pussy
Penetrative sex with a vagina, but then okay, I don't know if you saw this with the
Bud Light stuff, but there's a fascinating wave in conservative media. So the early reports
are just like target is selling pride merch. And then around the first one I found was May 23rd in Fox.
The framing is like pretending to be meta.
It'll be like, target faces backlash over pride collection.
And it's like, right, you guys did the backlash.
Like the Daily Wire, which is the earliest article
that I could find being like, look at what's in there
pride collection, then has an article two weeks later
that is like, target really riled up conservatives with its pride collection.
That's you, you did that.
And now you're reporting on the thing that you did.
Right.
So this Fox News article from May 23rd, it's something we saw in the GameStop bonus episode
that we did where it's all about how target is panicking.
Yeah.
So the headline is target holds emergency meeting over LGBTQ
merchandise in some stores to avoid bud light situation. And like they have some sort of insider
who works at target who says like the executives are really concerned about his backlash. And like
they had a meeting to discuss their response. Right. And like that's the whole story. It's like
yeah, target has noticed this. Yeah. And it's like trying to come up with a response to this,
which like, yes, you know, it's a consumer facing company.
It's facing consumer backlash.
Like people are gonna get on the phone
and be like, what should we do about this?
One of the things that neutral coverage about this stuff does,
especially in the business media context,
is sort of imply, if not outright state,
that they have made a business misstep
without explaining what they mean,
which is like, yeah, marketing things to gay people
is a business mistake now, right?
Partnering with a trans person is a business mistake.
They can't say that shit out loud,
but you can sort of gesture to the situation and be like,
yeah, so obviously Target has made some sort of error here because how else can business
media process, corporate controversy, how else can business media process, a sales decline?
Something must have gone wrong.
It's a way of talking about this just like again straight forwardly bigoted and deranged
pushback as like somehow you're making an objective statement.
You're like, well, you know there's this backlash going on.
We're not gonna say whether it has any merit or not.
But of course they throw in these little things
that are like very obviously meant to like,
rile up the reader.
So the Fox News article, it's sort of giving an overview
of like, what's this controversy all about?
And it says, target pride merchandise includes female-style swimsuits that can be used to tuck male genitalia.
Some products are also labeled as thoughtfully fit on multiple body types and gender expressions.
Pride merchandise also includes onesies and rompers for newborn babies.
A variety of adult clothing with slogans such as superqueer,
hearty supplies, home decor, multiple books,
and a grow at your own pace, saucer platter.
And it's like none of this stuff is bad,
but it's just describing it in these sort of intonation
that's supposed to make you like,
oh my God, like rompers for babies.
Babies could wear anything as a romper
and they're not gonna be affected by it
because babies can't read.
There is like a cottage industry
that I've never really seen any complaints about
of like loosely or even like very offensive things written
on clothing for infants.
Because it's not for the infant.
Yeah, of course.
Seeing something offensive written across a baby
is inherently funny.
Yeah.
But they have this sort of like express
or implied narrative that like this is being directed at children.
Yeah.
And then they list off 20 relatively inoffensive things.
And in a vacuum, you would never think anything of them if you're a normal functioning human
being.
But when you read all of them together, you're supposed to get the impression that like something
is going on here. Yeah.
There is an effort to shift the culture in some way or something like that.
And again, it's basically just like marketing boilerplate, like they're selling clothes
that say thoughtfully fit on multiple body types and gender expressions.
Oh, fuck no.
Whoa, like fat kids might have swimsuits.
Oh my god, or like my kids experimenting with their gender.
Like what kind of swimsuit should I get them?
I'll get them like a relatively sort of unisex one.
No, every tag should say fits beautifully
on a traditionally structured white body.
Exactly.
Like thin white children.
Like I don't know, maybe you think that's like
an annoying thing to have on a tag,
but also like these are mostly just marketing efforts, right?
This is again, something that gay people have complained about every fucking pride month.
It sounds literally the day after Stonewall.
It's like, yeah, this is on some level cynical, on some level earnest marketing efforts to
a group.
Like, people are more concerned with sort of gender expression now.
And like, there's been much more talk of like positivity, et cetera, in the last 10 years.
And so, like, companies are marketing to that.
Here's a product that sort of matches your values.
This is just normal capitalism shit.
Here's the thing, it's like, I've now been within,
like, high-level HR circles of corporations,
and so I feel like I have some vision into this.
There are, in almost every corporation,
the true believers in like DEI and inclusivity
in the product, et cetera, et cetera.
But everything they do gets filtered through a sales guy,
someone who is revenue focused.
And what that means at the end of the day is if our culture had gotten more
homophobic over the last 10 years, rather than drastically less homophobic, corporations
wouldn't be doing this. If we had gotten more fat phobic as a society, there wouldn't
be more options for fat people in clothing sections. It is plain as day.
I actually think that one aspect of this
that is maybe undercover is the extent to which
a lot of this has done also for employee retention.
I know that in the 1990s,
when all the sweatshop boycotts of Nike were happening,
they never really affected sales,
but they affected Nike's ability to higher
and retain employees.
If you're trying to get a job in corporate America,
and one company has a reputation for sweatshops
and the other doesn't,
you're not going to go work for the sweatshop company.
And so Nike kind of made this big marketing effort
and actually genuinely worked on improving
its working conditions in Indonesia,
mainly as a result of internal pressure.
Mike spoke with the Nike CEO about their efforts to. They're trying to do
better. Actually, they're unfairly aligned. You're wrong about Nike. I'm going back to my
roots. They're fine. The Nike is good episode of You're Wrong About Sarah Get on it.
But really, I mean, like a lot of this is internal marketing,
external marketing. This is the thing is that like, there are three reactions to like corporate DEI
if you're an employee.
One is like the weird true believer
who mistakenly thinks that the company
is actually trying to do good in this world.
Two is the cynic who's like,
ugh, what a bunch of fucking bullshit.
Whether or not the cynic believes it,
they realize that the company does not,
and so it doesn't really matter.
And then three is the right-wing nut job
who's losing their mind because they believe
that it's authentic and genuine.
And ironically has sort of aligned themselves
with the person in category one, right?
The suckers who believe that it's real are on like opposite sides of the political spectrum
to some degree.
And then you have like the sort of cynical mass of people across the spectrum who are just like,
obviously this is bullshit.
And therefore I roll my eyes at it.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Whether or not the ultimate message of it is something you believe in. So I mean, nearly everyone I have worked with my entire life and been friends with has
been roughly politically aligned with me to some degree, at least on like things like
diversity, sexual harassment, etc.
And yet almost all of them would roll their eyes at corporate sexual harassment training
because everyone knows that it comes from a place
of inauthenticity and is a product
of the company trying to cover its ass
more than anything else.
Yeah, this kind of gets to my overall thoughts
on corporate pride, which I repeat every single year,
is that I think fundamentally, it's surface level,
it's bullshit, but also I would rather live in a country with it
than without it.
Right.
I don't weep over the fact that Target
is no longer gonna have a pride display,
but if companies do not feel safe
having cheesy pride displays,
that's a sign of a country going backwards.
What are they doing with their pride displays?
Because I've heard people say they're getting rid of them,
I've heard people saying they're moving them
to the back of the store, like what's going on?
So I went to my local targets
and I chatted with a couple of employees.
I didn't like say I'm a journalist,
you're doing a podcast or whatever,
I was just like what's going on?
Wow, this is fucking boots on the ground journalism
from my cov.
I embedded at the local target.
Went to the nearest diner and asked them about
their experience at target.
So according to the employees at my local store,
one of them I talked to was opening and she came in and just like all the swimsuits
were gone from the pride displays.
And they didn't like announce this.
There wasn't like a conversation within the company about it.
They were just kind of gone.
My read on the situation is that target executives were looking at all of this happening
and wanted to like quietly get rid of this stuff and like tamp it down.
But obviously they didn't want to do it publicly because then you get the backlash from LGBT
people, right?
Yeah, yeah.
So my read is that they wanted to like quietly remove the satanic stuff, quietly remove
the swimsuits, and then like maybe the right wing psychos will calm down.
Yeah, that'll work for sure. But then Fox News snipped them out, right? Fox News runs this piece,
but there's an emergency meeting, and they're thinking of taking things off the shelf, and of course,
they contact Target for a statement. And once all of this stuff kind of goes public, the company
is crambling behind the scenes, then they have to say something publicly. Yeah. So the day after the Fox News article runs,
we get a statement from Target, which says,
for more than a decade,
Target has offered an assortment of products
aimed at celebrating Pride Month.
Since introducing this year's collection,
we've experienced threats impacting our team members'
sense of safety and wellbeing while it worked.
Given these volatile circumstances, we are making adjustments to our
plans, including removing items that have been at the center of the most
significant confrontational behavior. Our focus now is on moving forward with our
continuing commitment to the LGBTQIA plus community and standing with them as we
celebrate Pride Month and throughout the year. To be fair, this feels somewhat
authentic, at least compared to the
buttlight statement.
Because it seems like what they're saying is like, yeah, our
corporate position is that we stand by the LGBT community, but also our
employees are being threatened.
And we can't just idly stand by and let that happen, right?
We're going to acquiesce to some of these demands
or these implicit demands because we're concerned
about employee safety.
Yeah, but also it's a friend of the show, Parker Molloy,
wrote a really good post on this about, you know,
Target is like the 10th company that has done something
like very low level superficial pro queer
and then faced huge right wing backlash
and then pulled it back.
And her point was like, this is worse for us than if you just hadn't done it in the first
place.
Right.
Because what we see happening is basically like you're capitulating to terrorists.
Right.
So we've now had bomb threats against targets in nine states.
A lot of the stores have had to be evacuated.
There's been various viral videos of people like tearing down displays,
shouting at the people who work at the stores. One of the things that makes me so fucking mad about
all this shit from like the anti-vaxxers to this stuff is how like it's always like the front line
retail employees making like a minimum wage. You have to fucking deal with this stuff. And so on some
level, like morally speaking,
I can get why the executives were like,
we're just gonna get people out of harm's way.
I also feel like they're using this somewhat
as an excuse, right?
When like, they were really concerned about their employees,
you know, there's other things that they could do.
And like, yeah, I don't think working conditions
for target employees are like all that great.
That's why I want to see target employees armed.
And if a Republican enters the store,
they're allowed to shoot. Republicans have defended profiling for years to like stop Muslims
in your courts. That's true. That's true. Sorry, man, Magahat, you're not getting in.
Honestly, sounds like a more reliable predictor of commotion. Seriously.
Then anything we've done with the TSA. Seriously. So we're seeing these corporations sort of try to reckon
with a world where you can't abandon LGBT people
and allies because they have a lot of support
and make up the majority of the country.
But you also have to cater to this loud,
violent, aggressive minority.
And I think the actual lesson for companies
is cross your fingers and hope you don't get selected.
And I know you saw this in your research, Peter,
but they've already moved on to Coles,
which also apparently has pride displays.
They're going after it in North Face
because they did an Instagram partnership,
something with a drag queen named Petty Gonia.
Just pretty good. It's funny to do a partnership with one of your competitor company names. Instagram, partnership, something, something with a drag queen named Patti Gonia.
Just pretty good. It's funny to do a partnership with like one of your competitor company name. Maybe they thought they were like co-opting. Yeah. We will take away Patagonia's greatest
drag queen ally. But then you know, I mean, earlier this year, we had the Hershey's thing. Hershey's
did a marketing campaign that included some trans people and conserved his meltdown.
There was Lego. They went after Lego. Yeah went into Lego because they were going to have like black Lego figures and like people
with disabilities.
That's another one where you're like, you guys, it's really revealing of the whole fucking
project.
Even though all Legos are gender fluid, there's no genitals pop a little wig on that guy
and that's a gal now.
Well, also what's interesting to this,
people have been talking a lot in the last couple of years
about like moving the Overton window, right?
If you say like the leftmost position,
the median political position then kind of
move is to the left is the idea.
But to me what all of this represents
is like the Overton window shifting to the right.
There was a period where it was like very possible
for companies to make like,
normy ass statements of support for LGBT people.
It basically is just a proxy indicator
for like mainstream acceptance.
And I think that's why it's always so fraught
for actual gay people because there's always a question
like, well, do we want mainstream acceptance
or do we wanna change the mainstream?
Yeah.
But then losing mainstream acceptance feels really bad.
Like, it feels bad.
Like, this is one of the first episodes I've researched
for this show where like, I really did not feel good
reading about this target stuff.
Yeah, I felt the same way.
It's like, fuck target, but also like,
I want the dumb, like, United Airlines float at Pride.
Like, not because I think United Airlines gives a shit,
but like, it just means that it's not controversial
to support gay people.
It feels like a metric of progress more than a good in and of itself, right?
Yeah, exactly. Yeah. In a vacuum, we shouldn't care about these empty gestures at all,
but we're not in a vacuum, right? This is the product of an ascendant reactionary movement
that is increasingly hateful, increasingly aggressive, increasingly violent. And the corporations backing down so quickly
in some of these cases is a reminder that these institutions that have pretended to stand with
the LGBT community for a decade now will very readily side with the fascists when the chips are down.
Easily. I have this other maybe half-baked thought, but I think that what's interesting about
the conservative tactic here
is that they get the causation backwards. Corporate pride is the aesthetic output of a society
that is more broadly accepting of LGBT people. Conservatives lost the fight over broad social
tolerance of LGBT people, or at least LGBT people. And now they're attacking the aesthetic
outgrowth of that social tolerance. I think in general, people on the right are sort of blind
to the difference between aesthetics and material politics, because their politics are so aesthetic.
They don't want anything other than to feel like they are firmly atop the social hierarchy. I think it was Walter Benjamin who said
that fascism is the aestheticization of politics, right? The fascist public is being given a channel
to express their frustrations without any material political benefit of crewing to themselves.
So for LGBT people, it's a material fight because you can't separate
the Bud Light drama, the target drama from anti-trans bills in state legislatures, for example.
But for conservatives, it's purely aesthetic. They have nothing material to gain here.
It's about the validation of their social status.
It's also to me, there's also like a huge media component of this too that in the 2010s
after Obergefell, we had a lot of takes that are like, okay, gay marriage is kind of off the table.
Conservatives have kind of dropped gay marriage anti-gay stuff as a fight. You'd even see essays
in the National Review and various other conservative publications about like, well, you know,
the gay thing turns out it's actually really not that big of a deal, right? But then the minute the far right becomes emboldened to go after gay people, the center right
immediately capitulates and immediately starts laundering this into the world. There's actually some concerns,
right? So the media matters for America had a piece about how Jonah Goldberg went on CNN, when all
this stuff was happening, and being like, well, you know, there's some real concerns
about like trans youth and like surgical procedures.
And it's like, these are people that are saying that the products are satanic.
These are fucking psychos.
And you're going on and be like, well, wait a minute.
What if the psychos have a point?
Right.
I also think there's a big thing that kind of transphobia itself too, that like the JK Rowling wing of like the quote unquote gender critical movement, their argument is always like,
well, we're not an anti-trans movement. We're not transphoped. We just have reasonable concerns
about like same sex basis and reasonable concerns about kids. And then this stuff happens that,
again, straight forward bigotry, and they're not pushing back. No one on their side is like,
hey, I am actually concerned about the surgical procedures,
but these people are fucking weirdos.
They're not doing that,
which should call into question
everything else they are saying
about their alleged reasonable concerns
about like, well, trans kids and the surgical procedures.
It's become very obvious that they are part of.
I, you know, you can never say what anybody's
individual motivations are, but they are in league with open right wing bigots who are
aiming to turn back both trans rights and LGBT rights and really, you know, broader progressive
gains more generally, right? They are in league with these people. They're just like,
oh, yeah, yeah, it turns out, you know, maybe there's some fascists like doing death threats on target. But like, I don't know why we should
ever like give that any attention. Right. Anyway, here's a whole eight episode podcast series
about the fucking witch trials of JK Rowling. Right. Right. And about how like trans people
were mean to her on the internet. Like, what does anyone mean on the internet right now?
Right. Your dedication to fucking civility on the internet. Anyone else you want to aim
that I or at? No, okay. Yeah. I mean, itility on the internet. Anyone else you want to aim that eye or at?
No, okay.
Yeah. I mean, it's from the right.
It's never a real demand for civility.
It's a demand for complacency.
That's what they actually want.
Can we end with a quiz, Peter?
I'm going to send you a quote and you have to guess where it's from.
A lot of pressure after I fucking knock that math stuff out of the park a couple episodes again.
I know it's probably you peaked too early.
Yeah. This is about a culture of violence
taking over the left.
Okay.
Now that some students, professors and activists
are labeling their opponent's words as violence,
they give themselves permission to engage
in ideologically motivated physical violence.
As an essay in the Berkeley student newspaper argued,
the rationale is that physically violent actions
used to shut down speech that is deemed hateful
are, quote, not acts of violence,
but rather acts of self-defense.
This kind of identity politics amplifies the human
proclivity for us versus them thinking.
It prepares students for battle, not for learning.
What's your freelance Peter?
So I am going to, and sure my mind's face here
and say that this is Barry Weiss.
Ooh, is that right?
This is from the cuddling of the American mind.
Fuck, fuck.
Once a week I will test whether you actually
read the books for this podcast.
Okay, the us versus them thinking,
I thought was you baiting me. Fuck, damn, I can't believe I swung and missed on that shit.
You're two for three, Peter, with the math ones.
Fuck out my whole day.
There's another element of moderate complacency here, right?
Where for years now, we've been told
that there's like a spirit of authoritarianism
and a culture of violence on the left, right?
And it's always about to spill over into violence.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
This is a core argument to the entire cancel culture panic that it's not about cancel culture.
It's a slippery slope to these college students, people on the left engaging in violence much more,
right? And yet, now that people are using actual violence, actual threats, nothing, no outcry
from the moderates, right? They are still writing these same fucking pieces.
Yep.
They're like, you got to watch over the left.
All of the right wing complaints of authoritarianism
and extremism coming from the left
are justified in abstract terms, right?
Like Glenn Greenwald has been talking about
like left-wing authoritarianism for a couple of years.
And all he means is like the enforcement
of cultural norms by Twitter users.
Or like linguistic shifts.
Right.
Like we're using this word when we used to say that word.
Okay.
The idea that like these lefty impulses are driven by this greater evil that if we
leave it unchecked, we will eventually see, right?
Right.
But it's all to be seen because they have not been able to actually articulate a material
complaint about leftist authoritarianism or violence. All they've been able to do is point
towards these really abstract concepts and label that authoritarian or violent, whereas the
authoritarianism of the right and the violence of the right is objectively measurable to a
much larger degree. The people who are not engaging in violence are measurable to a much larger degree.
The people who are not engaging in violence
are about to start at any time.
The people currently engaging in violence are about to stop.
And we shouldn't worry.
If we're talking about a culture of violence,
it is clear that we do have a huge problem with that
in the United States,
but it is one dimensionally straight forwardly
coming from the right.
We don't have anything like that on the left at all.
Okay, now I got real quiet.
We have nothing to end with.
You need to end us on a joke, Peter.
I know you're tired and you're sleepy.
I have two forms of tired.
One is when I'm in my prime joke form.
My brain can be occasionally reduced to only jokes, and it can also be reduced to no jokes.
As your podcast co-host, I just want joke, Peter.
I don't want to hear your thoughts on Pride.
I just want your little quips today.
That's what I need from you.
I tweeted, I had skied it yesterday
that about, I'm using it, about gay men at Pride.
And I, I've always had this sort of thought
that so many complaints about like,
kink at pride and
like complaints about degenerate behavior in general in the homosexual community are actually
just complaints about men. You know what's actually happening and I think I've told this to you
before like what's actually happening is you're just seeing the behavior of men unfiltered by the
presence of women in their lives to tell them to stop.
I'm glad we finally got to the part where you're problematic, Peter.
I'm just trying to get my, my, um, uh, latent homophobia flow.
I know.
Just to just to hit the edges of that perfect joke.
That was, uh, that was a good ski.
I, your ski was so good, I saved it and sent it to friends of mine that aren't on.
It was good.
It says, I have it in my little folder.
It says, if your child sees some gays being hypersexual and gross at pride, you need
to sit them down and explain the cold-hard reality that all men are like this.
Well, I've always had this sort of thought that so much of what manifest as homophobia
be careful is actually discrimination against the behavior of men.
The justified discrimination justified.
Because yeah, a lot of people are like, oh, you think that gay people are, you know,
disgusting and sexual and that's actually your homophobia.
And the other side of that is like, well, yes,
but it's actually what that really is a complaint about
is the behavior of men.
I'm so against the patriarchy that I hate gay men.
All I'm saying is that you can woke yourself
into being homophobic again.
Ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha.
I think that's it.
I think we got it, Peter.
That was good. Glad to woke up at the end.
This is what gets me animated. Is thinking of ways to be problematic while layering a Hahaha.