@Dexerto Ngl they need to just ban streaming and driving entirely
Want to stream yourself going somewhere? Get an Uber or have someone else drive
At best it is a neutral effect, at worst, it causes accidents and kills people. Pretty easy logical decision
Asmongold explains Keir Starmer's resignation using a WoW raid strategy and it makes perfect sense
"Labour just performed a tank swap. Starmer had too many debuffs so they pulled him out and brought in a new tank."
"The new guy is going to do the same thing for the same raid. They're tanking the same boss in the same way."
"You're Onyxia. Don't fall for the tank swap. He's not the organization. You didn't win, they just reset your aggro."
@ItsRachelShay Yall feed off it everyday. You sexualize pokemon for fuck sake by wearing bikinis with pokemon ears and pretend you like collecting cards. You intentionally focus on lonely loser boys to make money on twitch lmfao. Majority being Indian, Chinese viewers lmfao cope
American patriot @Asmongold read our entire Rape Gang Inquiry report to his millions of subscribers over seven hours.
He has already done more than the entire British media establishment.
An incredible effort.
https://t.co/RKkqx9yY4V
Asmongold is right and you know he’s right
You just don’t like the way he said it
Yall gonna bitch about his takes like you always do
99% of the time this dude is spot on with everything he says
(Except when he wears that gay ass shirt)
It is the bottom 2%
When we think of oppression, we usually think of it top-down: a government, an institution, or a powerful group imposing harsh or unjust constraints on people.
However, criminologists and sociologists often look at high rates of crime—especially violent or predatory crime—as a distinct form of horizontal or community-level oppression. When crime becomes pervasive, it restricts human freedom, strips away basic rights, and traps specific populations in cycles of disadvantage just as effectively as an unjust law.
Here is a breakdown of how committing crime functions as an oppressive force on society:
1. The Restriction of Core Human Freedoms
Oppression is fundamentally about the restriction of choice and movement. Widespread crime systematically shrinks a person's world.
The "Invisible Curfew": In high-crime areas, residents face an unspoken curfew. People lose the freedom to walk through their own neighborhoods at night, sit on their porches, or allow their children to play in local parks.
Mental Monopolization: Living under the constant threat of victimization creates a chronic state of hypervigilance. When your daily energy is entirely consumed by calculating safety risks (e.g., Which route is safest? Where do I park?), you lose the cognitive freedom to focus on self-improvement, education, or long-term planning.
2. Economic Extraction and Forced Poverty
Oppression often manifests as systemic economic drainage. Crime acts as a massive, informal tax on the communities least able to afford it.
Property Destruction & Theft: For a family living paycheck to paycheck, having a car stolen or broken into isn't just an inconvenience—it can cause job loss, missed rent, and a spiral into deeper debt. Crime directly extracts wealth from victims.
The "Crime Tax": Businesses in high-crime areas face astronomical costs for private security, insurance, and asset protection. These costs are passed down to consumers, meaning the poorest communities end up paying higher prices for basic goods.
Capital Flight: Grocery stores, pharmacies, and banks routinely pull out of areas with high retail theft or violent crime. This leaves residents in "food deserts" or banking deserts, forcing them to travel further and spend more time and money just to meet basic needs.
3. The Eradication of Trust and Social Capital
A healthy society relies on social capital—the networks of trust and cooperation between neighbors. Crime aggressively tears this fabric apart.
Subverting Collective Efficacy: When fear takes over, people retreat behind locked doors. Neighbors stop looking out for one another, street-level community oversight vanishes, and the social bonds that naturally keep a community safe disintegrate.
Targeting the Vulnerable: Predatory crime disproportionately impacts those who cannot defend themselves or easily relocate: the elderly, children, and low-income individuals. Exploiting vulnerable populations to serve one's own immediate interests is a textbook definition of oppression.
4. The Structural Feedback Loop
Perhaps the most oppressive element of crime is the structural cycle it reinforces. High crime rates are frequently used to justify aggressive, heavy-handed policing tactics that can inadvertently sweep up innocent citizens.
When a community is trapped between the fear of criminal victimization on one side and the friction of intense law enforcement oversight on the other, the environment becomes deeply oppressive. This cycle stifles local investment, tanks property values, and ensures that the neighborhood remains marginalized for generations.
When we think of oppression, we usually think of it top-down: a government, an institution, or a powerful group imposing harsh or unjust constraints on people.
However, criminologists and sociologists often look at high rates of crime—especially violent or predatory crime—as a distinct form of horizontal or community-level oppression. When crime becomes pervasive, it restricts human freedom, strips away basic rights, and traps specific populations in cycles of disadvantage just as effectively as an unjust law.
Here is a breakdown of how committing crime functions as an oppressive force on society:
1. The Restriction of Core Human Freedoms
Oppression is fundamentally about the restriction of choice and movement. Widespread crime systematically shrinks a person's world.
The "Invisible Curfew": In high-crime areas, residents face an unspoken curfew. People lose the freedom to walk through their own neighborhoods at night, sit on their porches, or allow their children to play in local parks.
Mental Monopolization: Living under the constant threat of victimization creates a chronic state of hypervigilance. When your daily energy is entirely consumed by calculating safety risks (e.g., Which route is safest? Where do I park?), you lose the cognitive freedom to focus on self-improvement, education, or long-term planning.
2. Economic Extraction and Forced Poverty
Oppression often manifests as systemic economic drainage. Crime acts as a massive, informal tax on the communities least able to afford it.
Property Destruction & Theft: For a family living paycheck to paycheck, having a car stolen or broken into isn't just an inconvenience—it can cause job loss, missed rent, and a spiral into deeper debt. Crime directly extracts wealth from victims.
The "Crime Tax": Businesses in high-crime areas face astronomical costs for private security, insurance, and asset protection. These costs are passed down to consumers, meaning the poorest communities end up paying higher prices for basic goods.
Capital Flight: Grocery stores, pharmacies, and banks routinely pull out of areas with high retail theft or violent crime. This leaves residents in "food deserts" or banking deserts, forcing them to travel further and spend more time and money just to meet basic needs.
3. The Eradication of Trust and Social Capital
A healthy society relies on social capital—the networks of trust and cooperation between neighbors. Crime aggressively tears this fabric apart.
Subverting Collective Efficacy: When fear takes over, people retreat behind locked doors. Neighbors stop looking out for one another, street-level community oversight vanishes, and the social bonds that naturally keep a community safe disintegrate.
Targeting the Vulnerable: Predatory crime disproportionately impacts those who cannot defend themselves or easily relocate: the elderly, children, and low-income individuals. Exploiting vulnerable populations to serve one's own immediate interests is a textbook definition of oppression.
4. The Structural Feedback Loop
Perhaps the most oppressive element of crime is the structural cycle it reinforces. High crime rates are frequently used to justify aggressive, heavy-handed policing tactics that can inadvertently sweep up innocent citizens.
When a community is trapped between the fear of criminal victimization on one side and the friction of intense law enforcement oversight on the other, the environment becomes deeply oppressive. This cycle stifles local investment, tanks property values, and ensures that the neighborhood remains marginalized for generations.
It’s easy dumb dumb
When we think of oppression, we usually think of it top-down: a government, an institution, or a powerful group imposing harsh or unjust constraints on people.
However, criminologists and sociologists often look at high rates of crime—especially violent or predatory crime—as a distinct form of horizontal or community-level oppression. When crime becomes pervasive, it restricts human freedom, strips away basic rights, and traps specific populations in cycles of disadvantage just as effectively as an unjust law.
Thank you to @Asmongold, who was the only creator with a reach of millions, for reading the entire Rape Inquiry Report for 9 hours on stream.
Every single MSM network, political commentator, and creator should be ashamed of themselves for their silence.
Bobbi Althoff really traded her whole family dynamic just to chase a fleeting moment of internet clout. The way she handled her rise to fame, coupled with the cheating allegations and that deeply uncomfortable cultural dynamic she leans into, is just painful to watch. Clout is a hell of a drug. 💀
Bobbi Althoff says she experiences racism everyday because she has a Black boyfriend and claims that she wouldn’t receive nearly as much hate if she was dating a White man 😳
She also went off on Tony Hinchcliffe for making a George Floyd joke at the Kevin Hart Roast 👀
“How are you gonna speak on anybody when you look and sound like that?… The reason I get the most hate is because I’m not dating a White guy.”
@ItsKingSlime No your getting hate because you left your man and your child and went to go be a hoe karma will come around because that man she with now will get tired of her
Bruh Gen Z men are such pussies 🧚 Like holy fuck they are so emotional. The amount of times of watched and listens to male coworkers get into emotional arguments with their girl friends or wives like they are women themselves is insane Men are logical 📖 WOMEN are emotional 😭 NO that does not mean men do not have emotion 😢 What it does mean is Gen Z men have been raised by to many women. It does mean they allow emotions to drive their choices as men and it gets them killed and in situations they could have saved them selves from if they would 💭 like men…like holy fuck I see why women are having a hard time dating. Shit pisses me off.
If you seek a baddie—someone who looks good all day, every day, even without makeup because her self-care game is top tier—understand this:
She is going to be looked at. She is going to be hit on. And she is going to be expensive to maintain. Adjust your confidence and your budget accordingly. 💅📈
#HighStandards #SelfCare #KnowYourWorth