That’s a fascinating monologue, but I’m not sure what it has to do with your habit of confidently stepping on rakes?
Looks like you have gone full blown 1984 on us. You have completely embraced doublethink. Okay, fine. I will go with the libtard definitions: Open-minded: Libtards are so open-minded—to other libtard ideas! If you agree with them 100%, they’ll welcome you with open arms. If not, well, you’re just a bigoted Nazi who doesn’t deserve oxygen. But hey, that’s totally not close-minded, right? Tolerant: Libtards are the epitome of tolerance—as long as you’re a carbon copy of their ideology. Disagree? Congrats, you’re now a fascist, a racist, or some other -ist they just made up. But don’t worry, they’re totally tolerant while they scream at you to shut up. Never cancel anyone: Oh, absolutely! Libtards never cancel anyone—except, you know, anyone who dares to think differently, have an opinion, or exist outside their echo chamber. But that’s not cancel culture; that’s just “holding people accountable” (for wrongthink). Welcome all ideas: Libtards love all ideas! Well, all their ideas. If you have an idea that doesn’t align with their dogma, it’s not an idea—it’s “hate speech,” “misinformation,” or “literal violence.” But sure, they’re the champions of free expression and not bigoted at all.
Has anybody actually ever been "cancelled"? I can't think of a celeb that didn't come back. If cancelled, it should be generally perminent. Rosanne was sinking into mental illness anyway, and she is back to her platform having taken time to recover. Louis CK won a Grammy after his scandal. it often just means “faced consequences but still making money.”
Hahahahahahahahahahaha MAGAclowns Investors in farm equipment maker Deere reject anti-DEI resolution Ross Kerber and Utkarsh Shetti Updated Wed, February 26, 2025 at 1:49 PM EST 1 min read In This Article: DE -1.60% By Ross Kerber and Utkarsh Shetti (Reuters) - Deere (DE) investors voted overwhelmingly against a resolution aimed at its diversity, equity and inclusion efforts on Wednesday, continuing a pattern of shareholder distaste for anti-DEI measures despite Republican political pressure on executives. During a webcast of its annual meeting, executives with the farm equipment maker said only 1.3% of votes cast were in support of a resolution calling on the company to report on racial and gender hiring statistics "to prove it does not practice discrimination." The resolution was filed by the National Legal and Policy Center, a conservative-leaning Washington think tank that has opposed many corporate diversity efforts. Two other resolutions aimed at restricting social action by Deere won similarly low levels of support. NYSE - Nasdaq Real Time Price•USD Deere & Company (DE) 480.00 -7.59 (-1.56%) As of 2:28:48 PM EST. Market Open. Advanced Chart DT 1/14/2025 Close 432.31 Open 430.70 High 433.44 Low 427.36 Deere's meeting was closely watched because in July it became one of the first major U.S. companies to back away from supporting programs such as LGBTQ+ pride events. Numerous other U.S. companies have retreated from DEI in recent months, particularly as the Trump administration has stepped up threats to companies and institutions that engage in those efforts. But many investors and executives see DEI efforts as necessary to address underrepresentation of certain populations in management roles. On Tuesday, Apple investors voted in defense of the company's DEI policies, as did Costco investors in January. (Reporting by Ross Kerber; Editing by Rod Nickel) https://finance.yahoo.com/news/trum...ockholders-back-pro-dei-stance-174735552.html