Adam
Morgan, the Editor in Chief of the Chicago Review of Books, published
an article today in The Guardian explaining why the Chicago Review of
Books chose to boycott Simon & Schuster, the company publishing
MILO’s new book, DANGEROUS.
The title of the Guardian article reads, “Publishing Milo Yiannopoulos’
book is wrong. My magazine is fighting back.” However the URL of the
article and the Facebook sharing preview reveal the title, “Simon &
Schuster is rewarding alt-right hate speech. We cannot stay silent.”
But
on Saturday, when the biographer of a lesbian artist criticised Simon
& Schuster, Yiannopoulos responded: ‘There is only one place for
lesbians: porn.’”
This may be a simple error but it is also likely that the title calling
MILO’s book “alt-right hate speech” was the original tile of the
article. The Guardian may have realised their error in calling MILO
“alt-right”, a political movement which MILO has repeatedly stated he
is not part of, despite the media’s various attempts to paint him as a
“leader” of the movement, and changed the article title.
Morgan’s article goes on to make a number of claims such as, “2016
taught us that ridiculing women, people of colour, Muslims and members
of the LGBTQ community can make someone immensely popular,” and that
MILO is, “not a conservative intellectual leader with a political
agenda. He’s a clickbait grifter who has made a name for himself
spewing hate speech.”
[FULL]
Aside from "HATE" speech,
ReplyDeletewhat sort of speech
does the Left...much less the alt-Left...HAVE?!?
"He’s a clickbait grifter who has made a name for himself spewing hate speech.”
ReplyDeleteArtists reflect their times. His surreal behavior is a punch in the nose to Leftists using their own fists.
We definitely have mixed feelings about Milo. It's great that he has Conservative instincts and quick wit and uses them to confound the Left. But Tucker Carlson does that too, and without being another smug fucking faggot.
ReplyDeleteAnn Hedonia & Sam Paku
After having my wife 'bring down the house,' as it were, at Milo's Ohio State Q&A, he was very kind and gracious to her, afterwards. Like most 'celebrities,' I think his stage persona is a bit different than his private.
ReplyDeleteHe was "gracious" and his private persona is different? So you're telling us that in private he doesn't say shit like "As much as I love black d***, how could anyone call me a racist?"
ReplyDelete