Monthly Archives: September 2016

That whole Trump is like Hitler meme

This mornings article is in reference to this tweet: https://twitter.com/BrandMooreArt/status/780391058358280193 and also this one as well: https://twitter.com/mattgood/status/780412920689754112

I spend a lot of time on Twitter. Far more than I ever did on Facebook. And since joining in 2011, it’s been my go to for political news and updates from around the world. A veritable feed of any type of information I’m looking for from who won the Tigers game last night (12-0 Tigs over the Cleveland Indians), to Theo Walcott’s passing percentage v Chelsea (77%), to the amount of unarmed civilians Obama has droned since taking office (at least 314 since 2009).

But where there’s a wealth indisputable knowledge, there’s also conjecture and lunacy. There’s tightrope walking that fine line of Political Correctness that still allows hundreds of thousands of us a soapbox of our very own. And magazines like Medium to make sweeping statements that wind around and never really go anywhere.

As of this morning, I follow 604 different Twitter accounts. Most of them news conglomerates, politicians and a wide variety of graphic designers, whose posts help inspire me and see the design world from a different perspective. On Monday morning, a pair of tweets appeared in my timeline.

Firstly, this one:
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It certainly caught my attention.

Hitler was a lot of things to a myriad of people. But no one can argue that with the help of German clothing designer Hugo Boss, he had an immense sense of style. The Feldgrau and Luftwaffe fashion is still part of every day wear over 80 years after. He also had some incredibly lofty ideas that made Germany a super power and a country feared by every neighbour within a one hundred mile radius of Berlin. The article, sadly, does nothing to prove it’s point for or against.

The second tweet, was by Canadian rock musician Matthew Good, someone I’ve known for well over 20 years, and whose politics have always been concise and well thought out yet, filled to the brim with a foreboding tinge that let’s you know exactly who he’s backing. Put mildly, he’s very Liberal.

092816b
I probably should’ve been more eloquent. I certainly could’ve been less biased as well. But what developed was an exchange over direct message that would compare former Secretary of State Henry Kissinger to a war mongering sociopath, while mostly overlooking the atrocities carried out by this regime. My point was, that if you kill one person, or you kill over 300, you’re still a criminal. And since Trump, to the best of my knowledge has done neither, that sets him apart.

Trump is different. He’s not a politician. He’s not beholden to anyone. I’m not an American, so it’s irrelevant really, but given the opportunity I’d throw my vote away on Libertarian candidate Gary Johnson, despite the fact that msm berated him for not knowing what Aleppo is.

That said, I can fully understand why someone would vote for Trump instead of a lying, conniving criminal like Hillary, who would likely sell out her own family and backstab her former cohorts at the State to have another chance of climbing those White House steps. She lied to congress, she covered up the planned kidnapping and eventual killing of an Ambassador, while her and Obama blamed it on a laughable propaganda film denouncing Mohammed.

Hitler had some truly terrible ideas when it came to ethnic cleansing, eugenics and racial purity. None of which I see in Trump. Frankly, Hillary’s win at all costs mentality is far more in line with the Third Reich, in my honest opinion.

 

Poverty is sexist, apparently

This mornings post is in regards to this news article in the Star: ‘Poverty is sexist,’ Trudeau says at AIDS conference in Montreal …

I’m trying very hard to be non partisan here. And it’s quite honestly giving me a headache. As most speeches by Justin Trudeau have the tendency to do. But here at Media Watch, I’d like to say we do the best to remain unbiased, and so I’ll just state the facts as I see them, and treat my symptoms later.

I think it’s wonderful that the Prime Minister of Canada is trying to tackle issues like gender inequality, and disease like AIDS and Tuberculosis. It’s even more wonderful that he’s encouraging other countries to get on board and join that fight.

He and the Zuckerberg’s (Mark and his wife Pricilla Chan) should definitely talk, given the recent declaration of Facebook founder to a 10 year, $3 Billion plan to cure all diseases. It’s both bold  and grandiose. But what it lacks in real world application, it more than makes up for in ingenuity and when it comes to mainstream media, that’s often enough.

Trudeau certainly has high aspirations for himself when he says “Canada can go to other rich countries like Sweden and Germany and say ‘we’re stepping up; you step up,’” And it amounts to childhood dares of “I’m jumping off this bridge into shallow water, so you should too.”

For a government big on promises, and short on actual resolution, it’s an oddly self gratifying declaration. But if the future is with women, then people like Angela Merkel, Hillary Clinton and Theresa May are strange figureheads to lead that revolution.

Sources
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https://www.thestar.com/news/canada/2016/09/16/trudeau-hosts-star-studded-aids-conference-in-montreal.html

https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2016/sep/23/priscilla-chan-mark-zuckerberg-cure-diseases-facebook-initiative-brilliantly-bold

Musings 

It seems that CBC got it right yesterday, with an excellent article by senior writer Aaron Wherry, who penned this piece on Trudeau’s question period: Link to article

Senior Trudeau staffers offer to give back $65,000 in “unreasonable moving expenses”: Link to article

And finally, Huffington Post is developing a crush on Canadian PM: Link to article

The Skittle Controversy

This mornings entry was written in regards to this BBC post: http://trib.al/NwsGSRZ

A bowl of skittles – we’ve all seen the meme. One of them is allegedly poisonous, and by relation, the entire bowl could harm us. Is it an accurate analogy to the growing concern over the Syrian refugee crisis? Or perhaps a comparison that misses the boat (apologies in advance to those of you coming into this country illegally on rafts and load bearing vessels.)

It was revisited in August by Donald Trump Jr. the son of Republican hopeful Donald Trump on Conservative Joe Walsh’s radio show.

This morning by way of bbc.com, Denise Young, vice-president of corporate affairs for Wrigley America (the company that manufacturers the popular candy), had this to say: “Skittles are candy. Refugees are people.” Which was then followed shortly after by retweets on Twitter of refugees and the subheading “Not a skittle.”

Lost in all of this, is the discovery that a self admitted refugee has revealed himself as the originator of the photo, and that it was used without his permission, adding further insult to injury.

What can be learned from all this? For one, the media will go to great lengths to revisit futile attempts to cast candidates in a negative light to sway public opinion, leading up to the November election. And that people aren’t candy coated food. Well done bbc for this enlightening report.

The statement from Wrigley is perfectly timed to pull on the heart strings of voters, while Obama laid out a speech earlier in the week in his final address to UN diplomats urging them to “Open their borders to immigrants.” A move that has proven costly for the Merkel led Christian Democratics Party (CDU.)

Sources


http://www.express.co.uk/news/world/712750/President-Obama-UN-summit-speech-refugees-welcome

http://www.cnn.com/2016/09/20/politics/barack-obama-un-diplomacy/

http://qz.com/786261/germany-and-europes-migrant-crisis-in-a-rare-show-of-regret-angela-merkel-admits-she-lost-control-of-her-refugee-policy/

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