

It’s a saying. If you can’t understand that I’d reccomend not commenting.
It’s a saying. If you can’t understand that I’d reccomend not commenting.
What’s it matters if it’s comedy?
And then someone made a comment and we went into a discussion. That’s where you showed up with your comment.
So let’s run both your social skills together and determine what your best course of action here is
A. Join in the conversation B. Leave the nice people alone C. Drop all context or etiquette and try and be a contrarian online for some sweet, sweet Lemmy updoots
You’re the type of person that ruins the internet. Log out.
It’s satire lampshading real racism.
When people use “satire” as a shield to tell hateful jokes or mock vulnerable populations, this is often referred to as “punching down.” It’s also sometimes called “pseudo-satire” or “false satire” because it lacks the critical intelligence and moral purpose that defines true satirical work.
It’s not comedy. It’s a clap trap for racists.
It is. It’s readily available on the internet so it’s a very dumb lie to go with.
And I can have opinions on who should comment.
Crawl back out of your ass.