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  • Bullshit song by a very misinformed person.

    • It is so close to hitting the mark, but just... misses.

      Be angry at politicians legislating against the good of the populace? Absolutely!

      Be angry at someone who needs a social safety net that also might like sweets? Bad, redneck! Bad!

  • Guy who writes a song removed about obese people on welfare is both stupid and an asshole, shouldn't be a surprise

    Holt said that it's typical for political movements to latch onto cultural artifacts like music or movies to broaden their reach. But in this case, Holt warned that the individuals seizing on the song may lead unsuspecting audiences into their extremist spheres.

    Among the early online boosters of the song were Matt Walsh, a far-right commentator who has fanned anti-LGBTQ sentiment. Walsh posted the song to his X account, to 1 million views. Jack Posobiec, a rightwing activist who promoted the false Pizzagate conspiracy theory and has documented ties with white nationalists, shared it on his X account to more than 5 million views.

    Not an accident, the song's author apparently thinks Jewish people did 9/11

    Also, on the subject of this song being "breakout/viral" - how hard is it to manipulate streaming numbers? Harder than buying palettes of right wing political screeds to get them onto best seller charts? Because that's definitely happened before and it's all the same people involved here

    • Also, on the subject of this song being “breakout/viral” - how hard is it to manipulate streaming numbers?

      It's seemed like the numbers there are 'semi-'manipulated in the way that Kpop can be - hugely inflated by deliberate rewatching and multi-platform streaming, but by individuals who genuinely want the song to do well, rather than bots or purchased fake stats.

      It's really seemed like 'the right' sees Oliver Anthony as "their guy" and rallied behind him and his song in order to push it up the charts as an imagined way of 'owning the libs' - and I think OA's industry backing worked hard to seed that narrative among those circles in order to elicit that sort of boosterism from them.

    • Guy who writes a song removed about obese people on welfare

      It's one piece and everything else in the song is widely believed among voters of all political parties. The guy seems to be an honest to gosh hill billy and his song is resonating because it speaks to the beliefs of well more than half the country. Politicians are corrupt and too powerful, the dollar isn't worth shit, people don't paid enough for the work they do, taxes are arguably too high, and Jeffrey Epstein didn't kill himself.

      I've heard those same opinions expressed by Democrats, Republicans, Libertarians, Greens, and even Communists for YEARS now.

      So good job pretending the whole song is about the probelmatic part, then unleashing Ad Hominem on the Singer / SongWriter, and finishing up the trifecta with a Fox News worthy "Just asking questions..." aspersion regarding its rise in popularity.

      His message obviously isn't for you, so climb back in your Ivory Tower and go back to staring at your art collection while sipping a nice glass of Chardonnay.

13 comments