8 years of left wing preaching on every stinking t.v. show they control......

2aguy

Diamond Member
Jul 19, 2014
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With Trump in office these morons are going to go into over drive with their left wing preaching......

Hollywood Rebels Under Trump

The new CBS show "Superior Donuts" features one episode plot wherein the neighborhood dry-cleaning shop owned by an Iraqi-American (played by Muslim comedian Maz Jobrani) is vandalized with graffiti that says, "Arabs Go Home." Naturally, another character says to Jobrani's character, "I'm going to miss you when America is great again."


ABC's "Black-ish" drew liberal praise for a January episode in which the black characters confronted the Trump victory. "We didn't just want to be a family comedy show," Anthony Anderson, one of the show's stars, explained. "We wanted to be substantive and have a conscience and have something to say without beating you over the head with that message."

That depends on how you define "beating you over the head." Decide for yourself. During the episode, when a white woman says she voted for Trump, she is shamed for hating women. She fights back by suggesting that since blacks wouldn't vote for Dr. Ben Carson just based on race, she wouldn't vote for Hillary Clinton. The black characters slam Carson, saying, "Dude is a weirdo," and "Is he even black?" A character played by Wanda Sykes adds, "As long as she knows that a vote for Trump is a vote for racism!" When the Trump voter protests saying, "I have black friends!" the blacks collectively howl. One hectors, "It's racist to say that!"

The lectures come in the dramas, too. Fox has a new drama coming soon called "Shots Fired," inspired by the Trayvon Martin shooting and the Black Lives Matter movement. Co-creators Reggie Bythewood and Gina Prince-Bythewood were recruited by Fox after the Ferguson riots. "It's not enough to preach to the choir," Gina Prince-Bythewood told Time magazine. "You have to speak to everybody."
 
Sadly, it isn't that simple....all the young millenials watch these shows and get the left wing crap drummed into their brains.....movies and t.v. are the major ways they get programmed into left wing thought......and made to believe that left wing policies are good, rather than the destructive crap they actually are....
 
With Trump in office these morons are going to go into over drive with their left wing preaching......

Hollywood Rebels Under Trump

The new CBS show "Superior Donuts" features one episode plot wherein the neighborhood dry-cleaning shop owned by an Iraqi-American (played by Muslim comedian Maz Jobrani) is vandalized with graffiti that says, "Arabs Go Home." Naturally, another character says to Jobrani's character, "I'm going to miss you when America is great again."


ABC's "Black-ish" drew liberal praise for a January episode in which the black characters confronted the Trump victory. "We didn't just want to be a family comedy show," Anthony Anderson, one of the show's stars, explained. "We wanted to be substantive and have a conscience and have something to say without beating you over the head with that message."

That depends on how you define "beating you over the head." Decide for yourself. During the episode, when a white woman says she voted for Trump, she is shamed for hating women. She fights back by suggesting that since blacks wouldn't vote for Dr. Ben Carson just based on race, she wouldn't vote for Hillary Clinton. The black characters slam Carson, saying, "Dude is a weirdo," and "Is he even black?" A character played by Wanda Sykes adds, "As long as she knows that a vote for Trump is a vote for racism!" When the Trump voter protests saying, "I have black friends!" the blacks collectively howl. One hectors, "It's racist to say that!"

The lectures come in the dramas, too. Fox has a new drama coming soon called "Shots Fired," inspired by the Trayvon Martin shooting and the Black Lives Matter movement. Co-creators Reggie Bythewood and Gina Prince-Bythewood were recruited by Fox after the Ferguson riots. "It's not enough to preach to the choir," Gina Prince-Bythewood told Time magazine. "You have to speak to everybody."
The Little People must be programmed on what to think.
 

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