Virtue signalling: Difference between revisions

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{{a|g|[[File:Bring back our girls.jpg|thumb|any sign yet?]]}}
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[[File:Imagine.png|450px|thumb|center|Imagine having the lack of self-awareness to think this was a good idea.]]
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A form of [[preaching to the choir]], only with added moralising, [[virtue-signalling]] is making a statement that ''looks'' brave but is not, predominantly to garner approval. The best way of doing that is to make your “brave” stance to an audience of credulous [[libtard|libtards]] whom you know will uniformly agree with it.   
A form of [[preaching to the choir]], only with added moralising, [[virtue-signalling]] is making a statement that ''looks'' brave but is not, predominantly to garner approval. The best way of doing that is to make your “brave” stance to an audience of credulous [[libtard|libtards]] whom you know will uniformly agree with it.   


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Prime example: [[yogababble]] Adam Newman from WeWork. “At WeWork we don’t discriminate. We are going to build something. We are going to change the world for the better.”  
Prime example: [[yogababble]] Adam Newman from WeWork. “At WeWork we don’t discriminate. We are going to build something. We are going to change the world for the better.”  
Just occasionally, the bullshit filter clicks in, as it did for Gal Gadot’s excruciating “imagine no coronavirus pandemic” effort of March 2020, which really has to be seen to be believed [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bQK32bwvRuI go on, have a look, you know you want to]. The result;t is genuinely, toweringing, magnificently awful. I challenge you to keep watching to the end.
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*[[The dog in the night time]]
*[[The dog in the night time]]

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