This is a parody skit from Monty Python's Life of Brian, from 1979.
Is it still a "parody?" I think so. It is by making things this ludicrous that it is seen as ludicrous. When it's painted as "the rights of the individual to make their own decisions" it gets people to push the idea because the premise is something most people agree with. People MUST have the right to make their own life choices.
However, when these people who are making these life choices start to win "women's" medals, or talk about actually having a "Right to have babies" people see it for what it is, a ludicrous manipulation. Far more see it now than did before, because it was turned into a Monty Python parody.
This is a parody skit from Monty Python's Life of Brian, from 1979.
Is it still a "parody?" I think so. It is by making things this ludicrous that it is seen as ludicrous. When it's painted as "the rights of the individual to make their own decisions" it gets people to push the idea because the premise is something most people agree with. People MUST have the right to make their own life choices.
However, when these people who are making these life choices start to win "women's" medals, or talk about actually having a "Right to have babies" people see it for what it is, a ludicrous manipulation. Far more see it now than did before, because it was turned into a Monty Python parody.
But he isn't the messiah....
When parody and real life collide...
I did see a Life of Brian skit on Reddit about the Jews, it obviously didn't make the film, probably because it wasn't very funny at all.
But they are all individuals.