Bud Light partners with trans activist Dylan Mulvaney for March Madness: 'This isn't a parody'

:rofl: :rofl: :spitlaugh:

Rumor has it Mulvaney has been hired by the NRA and is going to be doing commercial spots for Smith & Wesson, Colt, Sig Sauer, Glock, Winchester, Browning, Knight's Armory, Bravo Company, Remington, Springfield and a few others.

The Liberals WISH!!!!!!:violent2::violent2::violent2:
 
Of course, Mulvaney has to dramatize it and say the boycotters are haters.
I think the little fake tranny is getting a taste of the fact no one thinks his little farce of "being a girl", his parody of the worst stereo types of "girls", is even acceptable.

He lived in his own little social influence bubble thinking normal people would embrace his ridiculous farce.

Glad he is now aware, most Americans find him and what he does repulsive. Repulsive to the point he was the catalysts for normal Americans to crush a company that did not see the error of embracing a fake person with a poorly targeted ad.

Knowing your market is important... Maybe Garth Brooks would like Mulvaney to be his spokes farce person.
 
Great comment from the article:

Great comment. Retired Air Force here, and I am amazed at the irony that we spend a month honoring homosexuals and yet only one day honoring veterans.
Thank you for your service.

I find it appalling that LGBTQ+ people get an entire month to honor them. What did they do as a group that benefited this country? I guess we should be thankful not a single day of the ''Pride'' month is a federal holiday. Knock on wood.
 
Thank you for your service.

I find it appalling that LGBTQ+ people get an entire month to honor them. What did they do as a group that benefited this country? I guess we should be thankful not a single day of the ''Pride'' month is a federal holiday. Knock on wood.
Don’t forget Juneteenth got added a couple of years ago
 
Don’t forget Juneteenth got added a couple of years ago
If anything, the date the Emancipation Proclamation was signed should be a legal holiday. If the government wants to give them a day to celebrate their independence, then the Japanese-Americans also deserve a day. These were people who lost their homes and businesses. Even though their personal property was put into storage, much of it was destroyed and stolen. California, Washington, and Oregon passed laws prohibiting those living in the US but born in Japan from owning the property after their release from the internment camps. They could not move back into the homes they owned.

More than 120k people of Japanese ancestry were placed in the internment camps. Out of that number, 80k qualified for reparations of 20k in 1988. Now we have black descendants of slaves (and many who are not) demanding seven-figure reparations. They claim the government promised slaves forty acres and a mule after emancipation. That wasn't the government, it was General Sherman who issued that order. But since the majority of blacks, today believe it was the government, then their reparations should be no more than what the costs were for forty acres and a mule when Sherman issued the order Lincoln revoked.

Let's say those black people who can provide evidence they were descendants of slaves owned in this country. They should get no more than what forty acres and a mule would have cost in 1865. The $20k the Japanese received was the estimate of what it would have cost to replace a house, car, appliances, and furniture in 1945. Personally, I believe for black people to get my suggested reparation, they must prove they are a former slave who was born before the Emancipation Act.
 
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