Heroes, Villains, and the Comic Book World of Propaganda – IOTW Report

Heroes, Villains, and the Comic Book World of Propaganda

Patriot Retort –

In a moral panic, propaganda is used to boil down the complexities of any issue or event to the comic book world of black and white, good versus evil, and Superhero versus Supervillain.

We saw this with COVID, didn’t we?

The COVID pandemic response was reduced to a comic book world.

We had a Supervillain named Donald Trump whom the propagandists assigned the most nefarious and evil motives.

And we had not one, but two Superheroes whom the propagandists assigned noble and virtuous motives.

Superhero Andrew Cuomo delivered the most wonderful, informative, and compassionate press conferences, not like that Evil Genius Trump who used his press conferences to peddle “misinformation.” And every time Superhero Cuomo spoke, it was like laser beams striking at the lies delivered from that diabolical monster Supervillain Trump.

Then there was the half-pint Robin to Cuomo’s Superman, Dr. Anthony Fauci. Fauci’s superpower was infallibility. Every word from his mouth was TRUTH and we could unquestioningly trust him. more

6 Comments on Heroes, Villains, and the Comic Book World of Propaganda

  1. Real life is not like a DC or Marvel superhero movie. Trust me on that one. Real life has real life and death consequences, and real people die. Superhero movies are pure fantasy and not real. I used to be a major league comic book geek, not anymore. I prefer to live in the real world and not in fantasyland and that includes Disney which I am beginning to despise more and more with each passing day.

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  2. I think the Twitter video of younger Mob Boy wondering around butt naked in the back ground of his wife’s instructional yoga video eliminates his pussy ass from being a Super Hero. Just sayen it was fxcking hilarious.

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  3. Jacqui Heinrich: “One more on the White House assessment of local food insecurity that’s sort of coming out of all this in Ukraine. Is there any money that’s going to be allocated to provide diesel fuel to Ukrainian farmers to try to mitigate some of this?”

    Psaki: “While we’re not expecting a food shortage here at home, we do anticipate that higher energy fertilizer, wheat, and corn prices could impact the price of growing and purchasing critical food supplies for countries around the world.”

    I have to laugh at both the question and the answer. It’s like reading comic book word bubbles, like they’ve been handed a Globalist script. This ain’t the DC comic books I used to read.

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