Disney corporate president Karey Burke says, "as the mother of one transgender child and one pansexual child," she supports having "many, many, many LGBTQIA characters in our stories" and wants a “minimum of 50% of characters to be LGBTQIA and racial minorities.”
(gab.com)
🤢 These people are sick! 🤮
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Me too, and I have had an extensive collection of the old comics that were good. They started going downhill with racism long ago--cut out the black dancing hippos in Fantasia and made them pink or something, suppressed Song of the South. Then when the blatant feminist Princesses came in it really fell apart, like all the Hollywood remakes that feature downtrodden classes. At least the Princess culture seems to have withered a little because what about trannies and non binaries.
The beauty of capitalism before the narcissistic libtards took over was that it was based on the premise that the vendor served his customer by giving him something he valued. In exchange, the customer gave the vendor money.
The beauty of their destruction is that by destroying what was good and making it garbage, they have driven people away from consumption and back towards spirituality. So while I am sad about the loss, I am glad that the mask is off. It was not as hard to say good bye as I expected.
anything 1970s or earlier is still good enough as far as I'm concerned. :)
The old stories had many episodes about selfishness, working hard vs. slacking, not giving up, things like that which are "moral" in a very universal way without bothering any religion at all. And when Carl Barks was drawing them, the Uncle Scrooge stories usually had some history and/or geography written in a more literary narrative than today. I'm glad I'm so old I remember all these things before fun became a platform for a different agenda.
i was not aware of the historical component!
Barks also wrote these great stories. Usually the history/geography pertains to an adventure setting, one that sticks in my mind was the typical "Scrooge goes treasure hunting" with Donald and the nephews, looking for Viking treasure. This featured Gladstone Gander, a later character who is the ultimate selfish jerk. Gladstone gets the gold, leaving the others to freeze on a wrecked dragonship. As things look bad for them, Donald discovers thousand-year old steaks frozen in the hold and something more precious than gold, a Viking map. It ends with them roasting steaks and singing "Gladstone's luck/Ain't worth a shuck./It takes a duck/ To have good luck." Plenty of room to discover a little about history and karma.