this post was submitted on 28 Jun 2024
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Ads are probably closer to brainwashing than they are to legitimate free speech. Things that are legal can also be problems.
Because they are not "ads"
They use the same propaganda tactics that governments in 20th century perfected
Gets people going
Imagine If I worked for Kellogs and I hired a guy to follow you and yell about how good corn flakes are every time you look at your phone, every time your TV shows go on a break, and every time you pass a billboard in your car, or a marquee on a building. Even if we assume that person does nothing else illegal somehow, that could easily still be harassment, which is definitely not free speech.
Tell that to the courts that's who decided this degeneracy is acceptable.
Don't get me started on them spying
I've long know I wouldn't make a good lawyer because you can't say things like "Listen here you little shit" even when you're right.
Sure way to get some time in the hole haha
When corruption is the process, no amount of good argument will win tho.
I've been called a sovereign citizen as an insult, though I'm just a voluntarist (not sure if ancap or generic anarchist), and that sometimes was past the point of me saying
but I'll admit "the society" wasn't persuaded. Though sometimes it felt that possibly more than half of the people present agreed, but were confident that the majority doesn't.
It's actually a very good propaganda strategy - even if most people disagree with you (as the bad guy), what's important is that they believe that others agree and thus keep their heads down.
Political operatives on socials use this as a smear when they can't counter with a reasonable, factual argument.
"Ohh you don't wan to submit to some corpo/state's idiotic policy, what are you a sovereign citizen"
No, just an adult person who pays taxes and has common sense
I don't think these people are a "real" imho
Some were standing before me, but TBH they likely had acquaintances working in one government embezzling money.