90 Miles From Tyranny : Publishers, TV stations, artists, politicians and corporates bow to BLM movement

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Wednesday, July 1, 2020

Publishers, TV stations, artists, politicians and corporates bow to BLM movement




Left-wing ideologists usually label alleged racial discrimination as "structural" if they cannot prove it in concrete terms.

Therefore, pretty much anything can now fall into this category and the list of what is no longer considered politically correct grows in relation to the constant shrinking of all freedom of speech and thought.

Publishers, TV stations, artists, politicians from almost all parties and even large global corporations are increasingly giving in to the tyranny of “anti-racists”. The French cosmetics manufacturer L’Oreal has just officially announced that it would no longer use terms such as “brighteners” or “bleaching” on its skin care products, while its Dutch-British competitor Unilever had previously announced that it would like to give its face cream “Fair & Lovely” a different name in view of the racism debate.

Unilever has also joined Coca-Cola, Starbucks and a host of other brands in instituting a boycott of Facebook because it is not doing enough to censor dissident opinions from the right of the political spectrum. According to an article on Marketing Week yesterday, more than ninety major advertisers have joined a “Stop Hate For Profit” campaign to force Facebook, Twitter and Instagram to ban accounts voicing criticism of multiculturalism and the progressive left.

In a statement, Unilever said: “Continuing to advertise on these platforms at this time would not add value to people and society.” The CEO of Coca-Cola, James Quincey, announced a similar boycott of social media, saying: ““There is no place for racism in the world and there is no place for racism on social media.” The company’s sugary products are sold mainly in third-world countries in single-use plastic packaging which is clogging up the world’s oceans, but the more abstract issue of racism is a more pressing issue, I suppose.

Perhaps in response to such corporate pressure, 29 June 2020 turned into something of a Black Monday on YouTube where a host of dissident-right personalities saw their accounts summarily deleted, without prior warning, “strikes” or ...

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