It’s “basically saying to people, ‘Look, you can do things that other people would say are immoral or unethical in terms of your voting decisions, and you can get away with it because the voting booth is private,’” Saunders said.
They said the quiet part out loud.
I’ve been dating this for a while. If you look at the things that the christofascists call people who disagree with them they tell the whole story.
Progressive - they’re bad for looking forward and for making you feel bad for looking backwards.
Woke - they’re bad for being aware of social issues and making your feel bad for being ignorant about them.
Intellectual elitists - they’re bad for being smart and making you feel dumb.
Tolerant - they’re bad for accepting that people who make you feel icky exist and making you feel bad for hating and fearing them.
It’s all about how they feel about themselves and that they feel that they are constantly being avoided for being ignorant, intolerant, regressive hicks. It’s about their seething resentment and manipulating it to convince them to vote against their own self-interest instead of helping them to be better.
So, vote your fear, anger, hatred, and intolerance like no one is watching.
This is the best summary I could come up with:
A political scientist, however, argues the ad is telling voters they shouldn’t be ashamed to embrace some of the Tories’ controversial positions during the election campaign.
The party has actively campaigned on its opposition to search a Winnipeg-area landfill for the remains of two First Nations women and has been promoting parental rights in schools, which some say could have dire effects on transgender and non-binary students who may feel unsafe to reveal their gender identities at home, said Kelly Saunders, an associate political science professor at Brandon University.
We have scheduled a series of ads to go up and down at different times, and will continue to do so," said PC spokesperson Shannon Martin, who is not seeking another term as the MLA for McPhillips.
“This video is to encourage voters from across the political spectrum — so many who support the key issues of our platform — to shut off the noise of the NDP and public union attacks, and to remind them that their ballot is their choice and theirs alone,” Martin said.
She doesn’t believe the video spot is an attempt to inoculate against NDP or public union criticism, but rather to appeal to the “baser instincts” of some voters.
Last weekend, the Progressive Conservatives took out a full-page ad in the Free Press outlining several policy positions, with the largest text highlighting the party’s opposition to the landfill search.
The original article contains 712 words, the summary contains 217 words. Saved 70%. I’m a bot and I’m open source!