Roundup Wired: The Right cancels the embrace of culture
Zoë Schiffer: True
Manisha Krishnan: … that some human design followers believe that your spleen is better than your intestine. And so she came to an end that she was blind with one of the women she loved because she said, “her spleen was silent.”
Zoë Schiffer: I was locked for the first part of this. And then we reached the spleen. What does this mean? Is it literally a sense of bowel? What do they hit?
Manisha Krishnan: To be honest, it is really confusing because they have all these rules about their reflection of the forces fundamentally within you that they do not face someone you are really, but it seems that the way you fool yourself is in some cases rigid. I saw someone in Reddit that only sends Polenta on how to eat because this is the only material that allows them to become their most realistic design.
Zoë Schiffer: I want to know, do you know what I am?
Manisha Krishnan: Yes
Zoë Schiffer: Because you asked me yesterday’s birthday, so I’m on the sidelines of my seat.
Manisha Krishnan: I did it. I plugged it up. And you are a generator, which is a kind of energy that is defined by a sacral center that is constant with a self-sustaining life force-
Zoë Schiffer: Wow
Manisha Krishnan: … It provides the endurance and capacity of the work.
Zoë Schiffer: Wire wrote this?
Manisha Krishnan: I know, I was just thinking about it.
Zoë Schiffer: Okay, great I love this for myself. After resting, we will dive to the strange reactions that some people have received from graphic designers to famous entertainment after commenting on Charlie Kirk’s death.
[break]
Zoë Schiffer: Welcome to Illegal valleyHuman I am Zoë Schiffer. I have joined the senior editor of Manisha Krishnan today. Manisha, a story this week, is the story of Charlie Kirk’s death. Our colleague, Jake Lahout, how the Trump administration is preserved at the rightist base has maintained his position that the death of crack can be the result of leftist ideology and even a harmonious attack. Both of these claims have been lost, but a little to change the minds of the people. And this week, you reported that various artists have faced professional retribution because of their beliefs about crack. What did you find in your report?
Manisha Krishnan: There have been a large number of people from different industries who have lost their jobs that have lost their empathy for Charlie Kirk’s death, from journalists to video game developers. But the thing that came to my mind was that I interviewed this transistor who did a comic series for DC comics. After his death, he referred to Charlie Kirk as a Nazi bitch and was suspended in Bluski for a week and fired DC and canceled the series. And it was really stuck to me because he said that Charlie Kirk was completely anti -transistor. I mean, he was anti -a lot of things that a white man was not direct, and he was very proud of these views. So, I think it’s really clinging to me because it is almost like, is it expected that people who support the disgusting views of society will do sadness, but it’s almost really hard to use it. Apology is someone’s one thing, but literally from the disappearance of art, canceling a complete serial or South Park The decision to re -release the episode of Charlie Kirk who loved himself. He said he really likes it. I just think it’s a little more than people’s reprimand.