• Let's Go 2 the Mall!
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    92 hours ago

    from Wikipedia. --“Unlike most large American magazines, Newsweek has not used fact-checkers since 1996.” I haven’t heard anyone not supporting Luigi except the talking heads. It’s almost like the propaganda machine wants us to side with the ceo. hmmm

  • @hexadence
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    114 hours ago

    the other six say that it was fantastic. would have been a 10/10 if not getting caught.

  • It was not acceptable but it was very much understandable.

    And honestly I don’t think it’s Thompson’s fault. He’s just doing what’s expected of him as the CEO of a profit-oriented company. The one at fault are the Legislators that let this happend and the laws/conventions of the stock market that prioritize revenue and growth above all.

    If anything, Legislators and Investors should have been shot, not Thompson.

    • @DarthFrodo
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      59 minutes ago

      If murder of a minority group was legalized and someone decided to murder their innocent neighbors and steal their stuff to make a buck, would all of the responsibility really fall on the legislator and none on the murderer?

      Imo an immoral act stays immoral whether or not it’s encouraged or discouraged by the government or social environment. I find it somewhat more understandable how people can carry out something cruel if it’s legal and completely normalized, but “It’s not their fault” is much more apologetic than I’m comfortable with. Especially when they make millions off the suffering and deaths of other people (due to inadequate medical care).

    • @BozeKnoflook
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      123 hours ago

      I have to disagree here. We all have a moral responsibility to not be evil, murderous dickheads. I’d even go so far as to say that we all have a moral obligation to at least attempt to help our fellow people when we can.

      Just because nobody stopped him from doing evil doesn’t mean that it’s not his fault for doing evil shit. Others may be complicit, but he sure as fuck was guilty the evil he committed.

      • @Dasus
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        63 hours ago

        Yeah personally I’ve never bought into the “but everyone else was doing it” excuse.

    • @[email protected]
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      185 hours ago

      It was acceptable. It’s not like poor Brian Thompson had no other choice. He was making fat stacks at that position, and I’m sure he had other career opportunities.

      • @Akagigahara
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        44 hours ago

        It also feels kinda on point of what CEOs are sometimes supposed to be. I am not sure where I got this image from, but how I often viewed CEOs for companies where the CEO is not also the founder, is that those CEOs are the figureheads for what the company is doing, take on the responsibility of all the good and bad that is happening.

        Like, usually those CEOs are shackled by the boards decision, so they are the face and “risking their neck and reputation”. At least I heard that explanation used to explain why CEOs get so much money.

        • @[email protected]
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          129 minutes ago

          Yeah, that’s how I have come to understand it as well. They are the public figure of a company, and are paid “insurance money” to take the fall if needed.

  • @novalex
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    85 hours ago

    They’re young, most haven’t had to deal with health problems, give them time.

    • @Droggelbecher
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      23 hours ago

      It is indeed more than one out of twelve. Idk why i thought that might be of interest, just a fun fact

    • @Akagigahara
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      34 hours ago

      4.8/12. Multiplied both numbery by 1.2

    • @Joeffect
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      359 hours ago

      These are the people who have basically lived their lives going through active shooter drills and know they have more than a zero percent chance of being shot at or killed at school.

      People dying and the threat of people dying to the younger generation is normalized at least this one time it wasn’t them … Maybe hoping something will bring change.

      That’s just my opinion though from someone who didn’t grow up afraid of being shot at school.

      • @kofe
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        98 hours ago

        I grew up with that fear and don’t think it was acceptable. I understand why others do, and I won’t invalidate the feelings behind why. I live with chronic health issues that I don’t have insurance or money to see a doctor for, and I desperately want change for everyone else suffering, as well. I don’t think compounding that through vigilante justice is the answer. I can’t change that it happened or that others sympathize with it, but I can continue to listen and advocate for systemic change moving forward where and when I can.

        • @pyre
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          3 hours ago

          if violence is not acceptable, all healthcare ceos must be in prison for life. they’re not, so it is.

          in reality, there’s a desperate attempt at drilling the idea into our minds that violence against the powerful isn’t acceptable. this obsessive coverage of how people don’t condemn this shooting is happening literally at the same time that someone who murdered a homeless person was allowed to walk. is there outrage in the media about how this is unacceptable?

          not really. you kill a homeless person, you walk. you kill a CEO who’s responsible for thousands of deaths, you get charged with terrorism.

          the ceo’s violence is acceptable. killing homeless people is acceptable. the police killing practically anyone is acceptable. but if you just threaten a CEO, you get 15 years in prison.

          this is bullshit. what they want is for you to only count one particular kind of violence unacceptable. the kind that might lead to liberation. it happened with women, black people and lgbtq. they can’t allow the liberation of the lower economic classes too. that would be terrible.

        • NoneOfUrBusiness
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          47 hours ago

          What I don’t understand about this viewpoint is: What systematic change are you talking about? The DNC has completely betrayed the working class, the GOP is the GOP and nobody seems interested in pushing third parties. I haven’t heard of a single protest, let alone a strike or other effective political action (which peotests aren’t, to be clear) against this issue specifically or the capitalist capture of America in general.

    • @HeyThisIsntTheYMCA
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      88 hours ago

      Where is “should be encouraged” on this survey. Won’t catch the real mood without it.

    • @gi1242
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      -14 hours ago

      given that it was murder, the people who found it somewhat unacceptable should be separated from those who found it completely unacceptable.

  • metaStatic
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    299 hours ago

    It can be totally unacceptable and totally justified at the same time.

  • @iAvicenna
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    67 hours ago

    wow highest approval ratings since Hitler.

  • @kautau
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    87 hours ago

    I agree but how is the bottom image so deep fried that the white text has become yellowed by being left in the sun