- > You should be just as sick that these companies are pulling
One can be sick of people turning the office into a political battle-field and simultaneously have no problems with outward corporate lobbying. These are different problems.
- > Red states that vote the most against social programs are the biggest beneficiaries. It's the leech screaming "Leech!" in the mirror
You're assuming in a "Red State," all those using social programs are the same ones screaming "Socialism!"
This entire premise is based on your stereotype of one's politics.
Perhaps you need to step back and re-examine your assertion.
> Or based on what the politicians elected by those states say and then vote for. "Vote the most against"...
You're stereotyping entire states and condemning the value of the people therein based on your ghostly spector of a Red State politician.
Yours is a stereotyped, bigoted position.
- > It's more like they're willfully choosing to suffer. So in that case, enjoy your misery!
So, you're going to speculatively stereotype an entire group of people and condemn them based on your own hunch as to their politics and station in life.
While you're certainly entitled to an opinion, nothing about your entitlement precludes that opinion being a bigoted one.
What a bigoted existence.
> Yea I am stereotyping people based on my personal experience and what the author echos in the article. I’m in the Deep South and the article spoke about Illinois. Pretty far away but also the same mindsets.
Ah yes, the classically conservative Illinois which shares so much in common with the Deep South.
- As a sibling comment mentions, non-profits aren't always "above board" in reality, e.g. the NFLs or Susan G. Komens of the world.
The position that I'm coming from is that a newspaper isn't always meant to be particularly profitable, e.g. in my small city our major paper is owned and underwritten by a wealthy real-estate family.
While the paper does good reporting in other areas, including having won a recent Pulitzer, they never publish anything negative about the local real-estate and development. You will never find a piece critical of development or developer mistakes in this paper.
If you're of the mind that papers can and are used as a way of laundering business propaganda for the owner, allowing it a non-profit status would then allow it to be a money-sink. The owning family can now provide donations to the non-profit paper which serves the business interests in the PR sphere. These donations can be written off. This means the tax-payer is now further subsidizing their PR efforts by virtue of a tax write off.
- What would that solve, specifically?
- Exactly my thought! This has "tax loophole" written all over it.
Company gets to subsidize favorable propaganda, while at the same time getting a nice tax write-off.
Edit: For those downvoting, would you care to elaborate? I don't see how this won't be abused. What am I wrong about here?
- > Like saying Jill Stein is a Russian asset because literally 1 post in 10,000 (from troll farms) mentioned her as a "redirection" effort.
Therein lies a good point I routinely use to befuddle, is how do you know these trolls are working on behalf of someone for their benefit, or working on behalf of the opposition as a way to attempt to discredit?
Attribution is hard.
- > All of a sudden the political subs were... reasonable.
Yeah... no. It went full "Not My President" overnight.
Hell, not even overnight. It went full "Not My President" that very night.
And if you think that's bad, had to deal with brass at work (fintech) proclaiming that we needed to spend an insane amount of capital in preparation for the record trade volume we would need to process because the markets were going to collapse.
- > but Russian troll farms used Sanders to divide the left on social media websites.
Weird, IMHO Hillary and the Democrat party really seemed to be the one's doing the dividing.
- > It's well-understood by Marxists how the mode of production determines the cultural superstructure[1] (and vice-versa).
It's not "understood," it's a sociological theory. Hardly hard science.
- Would be great if TFA elaborated on just how they "knew" such a thing.
- As always, the question is how many and to what degree.
- > Some would argue that millennial are entitled to feel "entitled".
Some of us would argue that is a garbage mentality at the root of the problem.
I would sooner wish to emulate the "Greatest Generation" than the Boomers.
- In defense of "the Boomers," and believe me I have plenty of gripes about trends within that generation, we Millenials aren't exactly above reproach.
I can agree that it's not nearly as easy for us as it was for the past few generations, but it's not nearly as grim as most make it out to be. To put it bluntly, I see a lot of the same "me me me" mentality that the Boomers have been criticized for.
There's the idea that life is just handed to us, so long as we "do the right things." It's perfectly possible to own a home, raise a family, what have you. You just might not get to work the job you want, study the degree program you want, or live in the neighborhood you want.
There never was a "turnkey" existence.
- > Really? i thought i ended when everyone was talking about how millennials are ruining companies by not buying affordable products.
I think it's important to differentiate between "media-driven narrative" and real-world relations, though that line is a bit blurry. It seems the former often creates the latter.
Right now I'm not sure that "Ok Boomer" is anything more than a meme.
- It’s not xenopohobia, it’s a hard problem. China actively exploits American tolerance for their own gain, and we have no good way to stem corporate espionage other than a blanket ban.
Even then, good old corruption of non-Chinese is still possible.
- You need to get out of the city from time to time. I've done plenty of business where one or both parties were packing, yet no threat of violence, no sense of coercion.
- Not all degree programs are equal.
- Thank you!
- > Here are just a couple of recent examples that invalidate your claim. They were pretty easy to find:
These are several years old. Can you find something from the past year? Turnover happens, missions change. From the outside, looks like they've changed.
That is not the case at all.