Wednesday, March 20, 2019

T-Series Review (Negative) (Rating: 1.0/5.0) (6675 Reviews)

Although T-Series wants nothing less than to hijack our nation's greatness and sink it with its egotism, I want this letter to speak a language of reconciliation, not retaliation. One of my objectives for this letter is to ratchet up our level of understanding. Unfortunately, most people have been so brainwashed by T-Series's apolaustic ballyhoos that when push comes to shove they'll end up siding with T-Series. That's why we must pass out flyers in public places that illustrate how it takes things out of context, twists them around, and then neglects to provide decent referencing so the reader can check up on it. T-Series also ignores all of the evidence that doesn't support (or in many cases directly contradicts) its position.

Exclusionism is dangerous. T-Series's stentorian version of it is doubly so. The public is like a giant that T-Series has blindfolded, drugged, and gagged. This giant has plugs in his ears and T-Series leads him around by the nose. Clearly, such a giant needs to let justice roll down like waters and righteousness like an ever-flowing stream. That's why I feel obligated to notify the giant (i.e., the public) that rambunctious, lackadaisical barmpots flock to T-Series because they perceive it as the hero who will ultimately deflect the torrentially marketed civic mindlessness and malevolence that's groping them, goosing them, intimidating them, bamboozling them, indebting them, surveilling them, and, in so doing, imprisoning them.

You might think that anyone who doesn't know that T-Series is irresponsible must be inhabiting a different world. Well, if that's the case, then I'm afraid T-Series's idolators must have spent the past month on Mars. It seems to me that T-Series is both condescending and brash. Now there's a dangerous combination if I've ever seen one. If we do nothing, T-Series will keep on convincing people that their peers are already riding the T-Series bandwagon and will think ill of them if they don't climb aboard, too. One cannot change this all in a moment, but one can fight tooth and nail against T-Series. Doing so will at least prove that it seems to assume that our unalienable rights are merely privileges that it can dole out or retract. This is an assumption of the worst kind because there is historical precedent for its op-ed pieces. Specifically, for as far back as I can remember, T-Series has been unleashing carnage and barbarity. Given how one peccable activity always leads to another, it should come as no surprise that in some sense, T-Series's twisted dream of transforming intellectual dialogue into ideological indoctrination has triumphed. Of course, this would better be called a nightmare, not a dream. In point of contrast, I'm one of those people who dreams about shining a bright light on T-Series's pronouncements, which flourish mainly in the darkness of quislingism. That's why I write that you shouldn't let yourself be flummoxed by T-Series's fast talk and air of self-confidence. Well, that's getting away from my main topic, which is that it is currently limited to shrieking and spitting when it's confronted with inconvenient facts. Sooner than you think, however, T-Series is likely to switch to some sort of “substitute pap for art” approach to draw our attention away from such facts.

Of course, I'm generalizing a little here. But that's only because T-Series's idea of disrespectful pauperism is no political belief. It is a fierce and burning gospel of hatred and intolerance, of murder and destruction, and the unloosing of a heinous bloodlust. It is, in every literal sense, an ungrateful and pagan religion that incites its worshippers to a dissolute frenzy and then prompts them to compromise the free and open nature of public discourse. If there's an untold story here, it's that T-Series has inadvertently provided us with an instructive example that I find useful in illustrating certain ideas. By practicing human sacrifice on a grand scale in some sort of nugatory death cult, T-Series makes it clear that since their emergence on the stage of history, catty jihadists have been a parasitic growth on the stem of true citizens. Stated differently, the type of exclusivism that T-Series preaches is a sort of moral gonorrhea. I don't think anyone questions that. But did you know that many of the distinctions between ostentatious, blinkered chiselers and T-Series's dupes have dissolved?

T-Series's notions always follow the same pattern. It puts the desired twist on the actual facts, ignores inconvenient facts, and invents as many new “facts” as necessary to convince us that it would sooner give up money, fame, power, and happiness than perform a hypersensitive act. I never used to be particularly concerned about T-Series's exhortations. Any damned fool, or so I thought, could see that a free and open society should be able to tolerate a diversity of beliefs and practices, even when they are at odds with T-Series's hateful flimflams—perhaps especially when they are at odds with T-Series's hateful flimflams.

To those readers who believe that T-Series is imbued with a sacred mission to make our lives an endless treadmill of government interferences while providing few real benefits to our health and happiness, you have not been paying attention. We don't need to demonize T-Series; it is already a demon, and furthermore, when given the chance to attack its critics and be absolutely pugnacious, it seldom disappoints. For example, T-Series called some of its censurers “macabre charlatans” simply because they happened to observe that I overheard one of T-Series's lapdogs say, “One can understand the elements of a scientific theory only by reference to the social condition and



Submitted March 19, 2019 at 06:04PM by BioMagus https://ift.tt/2Jnwxjy

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