Of course Rolling Stone magazine has weighed in on the Etsy situation.
(www.rollingstone.com)
🤢 These people are sick! 🤮
You're viewing a single comment thread. View all comments, or full comment thread.
Comments (47)
sorted by:
An alternative explanation is that this is coordinated. Bad guys set up a fake pizza shop and then ridicule everyone who takes the bait. Take people off the trail of the real stuff while shredding the reputation of anyone who speaks about such a suspicion.
Distinction is irrelevant, at least insofar as people's perception.
There's something weird about the imagery and the price, and it is creating a further connection that does not aid them in any fashion.
We know pizza is a commonly used symbol, the federal government even acknowledges it, and we know that "cheese pizza" specifically is even moreso.
As for throwing people off the trail... Maybe. Maybe not. We were looking at rugs that were overpriced and named after missing children, so who knows.
We are all pretty keen on noticing this stuff at this point, especially if you've been in the trenches of this shit for years.
What I’m saying is that if it’s a DS play that’s what I suspect they’re doing: creating fake stuff to bat us down publicly. Just analyzing their tactics not claiming to know it’s legitimate or illegitimate.
Whatever the truth is - in both cases:
the people who publish the response are evil,
they deserve a proper research who they are and what bad they’ve done in the past so they defend these pedophiles now.
Yes, but I'm saying that by doing this in particular (fake Etsy posts revolving around it, etc.) they aren't actually succeeding in discrediting the people actually asking questions, because now more people are asking questions -- too many, apparently.