“Monster Liberty”: That’s how the otherwise excellent closed-captioning service in the auditorium at Pennridge High School interpreted “Moms for Liberty,” while one of several dozen citizens who had waited in line to lambast the group spoke at the podium. A chuckle rose up among the parents in the crowded school board meeting, held on a late August evening after the first day of classes for the Pennridge School District in suburban Bucks County, Pennsylvania. “Fair enough,” one mother whispered to another.

  • katy ✨
    link
    fedilink
    841 year ago

    Moms for Liberty meet their match: Actual moms and parents.

    • @CharlesDarwin
      link
      English
      461 year ago

      Who support actual liberty (as opposed to fascism).

  • @Sweetpeaches69
    link
    661 year ago

    More power to those parents. Fighting the good fight. Fuck “Moms for Facism”.

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      English
      41 year ago

      We all need to devote more time to finding and voting against these groups in our local elections. especially in towns like this that seem to have a majority of rational parents.

  • @CharlesDarwin
    link
    English
    611 year ago

    Moms for Liberty is a fascist group. It’s the Nazi Youth for suburban Karens, basically.

  • @flossdaily
    link
    361 year ago

    The alt-right are a cancer on the nation.

  • Maeve
    link
    fedilink
    351 year ago

    It was neither “rally” nor “riot.” It was a planned insurrection and you can bet the farm if it was blm or antifa doing it, we’d be witnessing public executions for it.

  • @glarf
    link
    171 year ago

    This makes it feel even more bleak. Where is all this money coming from?! Who is funding this and how?

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      221 year ago

      The same fucks as always. Peter Theil, the Kochs, the Davos’, pick your billionaire. They didn’t become billionaires by being awesome people and y’know, bringing everyone up with them. More like, when their tide was rising, they paid goons to short leash the marina to the docks (which would sink them if the tide rose high enough).

      Who’s the squeaky wheel, who pays them and who stands to benefit.

      Its always the rich behind fascists, because 1. They don’t want the system they’re so capable of gaming to change (unless it cements their position) and B. They are assuming they’ll be above reproach if the fascists win.

      Make no mistake, every billionaire alive would sell us all, and our children, out rather than become a $900 millionaire.

      • @SCB
        link
        01 year ago

        Davos is a city where the WEF meets, not a family of billionaires.

    • @Eldritch
      link
      51 year ago

      Because people having tens of millions of dollars in assets is a societal failure. Let alone people having hundreds of Millions, or billions, or trillions. You don’t get to be a person that wealthy by being a good person. It requires deception theft and oppression. And it only gets exponentially worse. Because these bad people have outsized pools of resources to further damage society.

      Until we as a society place reasonable limits on personal wealth and assets this will get worse.

    • @kromem
      link
      English
      3
      edit-2
      1 year ago

      ✝️

      Because why feed the poor with little ROI when you can astroturf education initiatives to increase indoctrination for $$$ in future donations?

  • @luckyhunter
    link
    71 year ago

    local parents drowned out by AstroTurf-ed organized opposition.

  • @[email protected]
    link
    fedilink
    English
    11 year ago

    Before the meeting, people exchanged wisecracks about “talented clappers” — an inside-joke reference to an email circulated among local conservatives that appealed for sympathetic outsiders to turn out and applaud the right-wing agenda: “You do not need to be a resident to attend and clap,” it advised, for “policies that bless and protect our children.”

    Is this a form of paid protestors?

    • @jeffwOP
      link
      111 year ago

      The title of the article, I guess?

  • @30mag
    link
    English
    -27
    edit-2
    1 year ago

    deleted by creator

      • @30mag
        link
        English
        -21
        edit-2
        1 year ago

        deleted by creator

        • @gsfraley
          link
          231 year ago

          It’s a rough definition, but astroturfing is usually rooted in goals separate from or even counter to the stated movement. E.g. in your example outside support for a labor movement wouldn’t necessarily be astroturfing if it’s genuinely supporting labor. A fake labor movement sprouted by the companies themselves to take the wind out of the sails of real labor movements would.

          • @30mag
            link
            English
            -4
            edit-2
            1 year ago

            deleted by creator

        • @[email protected]
          link
          fedilink
          English
          17
          edit-2
          1 year ago

          Wikipedia has a more specific definition in the first paragraph:

          Astroturfing is the practice of hiding the sponsors of a message or organization (e.g., political, advertising, religious, or public relations) to make it appear as though it originates from, and is supported by, grassroots participants. It is a practice intended to give the statements or organizations credibility by withholding information about the source’s financial backers.

          I think it’s pretty hard to argue that labor unions can be astroturfing. It’s not like they have a lot of wealthy donors who are secretly trying to push narratives to encourage workers organizing.

          • @30mag
            link
            English
            -3
            edit-2
            1 year ago

            deleted by creator