Tag Archive for: Gen Z

U.S. government will soon resort to forcibly drafting young Americans into military in preparation for World War III against Russia-China-Iran

This is likely to happen in 2025. But government will find out parents of Gen Z are not as agreeable as past generations to offering their kids up to military-industrial-complex.

It’s no secret that the U.S. military has been unable to attract new recruits, and attempts to try and entice young Americans to enlist have backfired. Sometimes embarrassingly so.

In April, Military.com reported the U.S. Army inked an $11 million deal with WWE wrestler and media personality Dwayne “The Rock” Johnson to produce media campaigns to lure young Americans to enlist.

This focused messaging was largely done through the United Football League (UFL), a smaller professional football league of which Johnson is part owner.

Recently revealed internal emails show Army officials at the time were dubious about the potential success of this partnership, but they decided to go ahead and try it anyway. The Army had already tried advertising with NASCAR, which turned into an epic fail.

Now we learn that the Army struck out in its football recruitment campaign as well. It was a total bust.

Internal documents reviewed by Military.com show the UFL deal actually led to a net loss of 38 enlistments.

If the U.S. government continues to pursue its current path of war with Russia and its allies, there will come a time, likely after the election in 2025, that they will resort to forcibly drafting young people into an Army starved for warm bodies. Wars are fought with technology but they still need bodies. But I predict Gen Z Americans will rebel against the draft with equal or greater fervor to which they are resisting voluntary enlistment.

Their parents are also not going to be fond of the idea. Who wants to offer up their child to be consumed by the meatgrinder in Ukraine, Israel or in the Far East against China? None of these killing fields present one iota of danger to the national security of the American homefront. In fact, the more our government gets us involved in these foreign wars, the greater the chance that the homeland will come under attack by Russia and/or China.

Winepress News reports that a retired Navy SEAL called Frogman Tactical said in a statement after the House passed a bill to automate the draft:

“There is zero chance my children will be sent off by government choice to fight their wars. I have been adamant about the choice to serve is a severe sacrifice and I will support my children if they choose to go, however I’d hope they didn’t. I personally couldn’t care less who thinks avoiding war is weak. My children will never be forced. Until my death.”

2024. Leo Hohmann. All rights reserved.


Please visit Leo’s Newsletter Substack.

‘Dystopian Sh*t’: Kamala Harris’ Online Support Is Well-Funded And Inauthentic, Influencers Claim

The ‘Kamala is Brat’ TikTok trend, among other viral Kamala Harris meme videos, are likely an astroturfed effort by the Harris campaign and her allies to manufacture appeal to young voters, several Gen-Z online content creators told the Caller.

Almost immediately after Harris became the presumptive Democratic nominee, old clips of her speaking spread online like wildfire, often adapted into memes meant to make Harris look cool or humorous. Democrats proclaimed that the videos were evidence of organic excitement about Harris, but some content creators claim they were solicited to post about Harris in exchange for money, while others say the effort looks astroturfed as opposed to being grassroots.

One comedian, Steve McGrew, shared an email online which purportedly shows an offer to post positive videos about Harris in exchange for money. The requirements include to “encourage your fans to share, like, and follow Kamala, post one or more memes, post your content on TikTok, Instagram, or both” and requires the Harris campaign be mentioned in hashtags, according to the screenshot of an email from a company called “LaunchViral.” A $150 cash bonus incentive is also offered on a signup webpage.

“We’re excited to offer you a collaboration opportunity with Kamala Harris 2024 Presidential Campaign,” the advertisement email states. The application link within the email has since been deactivated following online backlash.

Lighthearted Harris videos poking fun at her coconut tree anecdote, or “Kamala IS brat” videos, a reference to British Pop Singer Charlie XCX’s new album “brat,” are just another way for Democrats to create a visage of support for their candidate through manipulating social media trends, some content creators told the Caller.

Democrats are “doing all this dystopian shit” to influence the election, according to Chrissy Clark, a Gen-Z conservative commentator who previously worked for the Daily Caller. The Democratic National Committee (DNC) has an “influencer dark network” that is behind these viral videos, she said, adding that it will likely become louder.

Promoting online trends are necessary to build up Kamala’s image and rebrand her as “cool and approachable”, according to Clark. The memes are attempts to drown out the voices of other creators stating they won’t vote for her just because “she’s a woman, or because she is black”, Clark told The Daily Caller.

These meme videos are becoming viral because younger generations interact with them thinking “she is easy to make fun of,” according to social media influencer Savannah Fuhr.

“She hasn’t done a good job of representing the people,” Fuhr told The Daily Caller. “Gen Z is looking for a leader” who will promote policies that drive Americans out of the financial crisis, she added. Although young generations laugh at these videos, it’s not enough to convince them “to actually vote for her”, Fuhr said. 

The Gen-Z voting bloc has increased significantly since the last presidential election, totaling roughly 41 million people eligible to vote in 2024, according to Tuft’s CIRCLE. TikTok, a predominantly Gen-Z platform, is currently filled with videos of Kamala Harris laughing, dancing, and making jokes.

In addition to the potentially paid online content, the Harris campaign is incorporating meme videos into their campaign strategy and embracing the “Kamala IS brat” trend by changing the campaign’s X cover photo to match the lime green style of the Brat album cover.

The trends are creating a feedback loop where mainstream media covers the surge in posts as a sign of organic support for Harris. “She’s gone from cringe to cool”, CNN commentator Van Jones stated. “A whole generation has taken all the content and remixed it in all these incredible TikTok videos.” 

The DNC has previously paid hundreds of thousands of dollars to a media company representing young TikTok influencers, the Daily Caller previously reported. Chris Mowrey and fellow influencer Harry Sisson gained a large following creating pro-Biden videos on Twitter and TikTok while working with Palette, a talent management agency the DNC paid $210,000 in the 2022 election cycle.

Mowrey spoke about the power Gen-Z holds in politics through social media influencing in a video published by CNN. In June, he was spotted wearing a “Biden Campaign Employee” lanyard after the CNN-hosted presidential debate that ultimately doomed Biden’s reelection bid.


As Kamala’s presidential campaign becomes fully operational, Kamala HQ will most likely capitalize on the extensive network the “DNC uses to pay left wing creators,” Clark alleged.

AUTHOR

Brandy Perez

Contributor.

RELATED ARTICLES:

Over Three-Fifths Of Americans Believe Kamala Harris Covered Up Biden’s Health Issues, Polls Find

CCP-Linked TikTok Collected Data Of American Users’ Political Views, DOJ Says

EDITORS NOTE: This Daily Caller column is republished with permission. ©All rights reserved.

Kamala Harris’ TikTok Splash Looks Huge Until You See Donald Trump’s Follower Count

Vice President Kamala Harris made a splash when she launched her TikTok account this week, but it still wasn’t enough to shake former President Donald Trump’s sizeable hold on the platform.

Harris launched her TikTok account on Thursday, which has now garnered over 2 million followers in just 24 hours and over 6.3 million likes on her profile. Though the numbers are sizeable, Trump’s social media presence significantly surpasses Harris, boasting over 9 million followers and nearly 24 million likes on his profile since launching his TikTok debut on June 1.

“Well I’ve heard that I’ve been on the For You page, so I thought I would get on here myself,” Harris said in her first TikTok post. Harris’ page also features her cameo in the hit TV show “RuPaul’s Drag Race,” where she stopped by in the “werk room.”

Since Harris became the presumptive Democratic nominee, her campaign has become the focus of many Gen Z related trends like “brat girl summer,” referring to Charlie XCX’s new album “brat.”

The official endorsement came from XCX’s account on X, where she said “kamala IS brat.” Since then, Harris has gone as far as rebranding her campaign account on X to mimic the branding of XCX’s album, showing an effort to lean into the trend.

Harris’ campaign bio on X, that reads “adding context,” is also a reference to a frequently-memed speech she cackled through during a May 2023 White House swearing-in ceremony of Commissioners for the White House initiative on Advancing Educational Equity, Excellence, and Economic Opportunity for Hispanics.

The statement left many onlookers confused, which sparked a slew of ironic memes and online trends that clipped, quoted and poked fun at the presidential hopeful.

“Part of the extension of the work you will do is, yes, focused on our young leaders and our young people, but understanding we also then have to be clear about the needs of their parents and their grandparents and their teachers and their communities, because none of us just live in a silo,” Harris said during the ceremony. “Everything is in context.”

“I don’t know what’s wrong with you young people. You think you just fell out of a coconut tree?” Harris said during the ceremony. “You exist in the context of all in which you live and what came before you.” (RELATED: House Passes Bill That Forces Chinese Parent Company To Sell TikTok)

This statement quickly became a meme online, flooding social media feeds with remixes and edits of the clip.

Trump has amassed over 9 million followers and over 23 million likes and nearly half a billion views across just five posts. Across Harris’ four posts, she has garnered nearly 57 million views and just over 6 million likes.

In his first post alone, Trump got over 165 million views, over 9 million likes and nearly 300,000 comments.

Although Trump’s social media presence on TikTok has outperformed Harris’, media outlets have fawned over her’ social media debut and trendiness.

Politico praised Harris’ campaign approach on social media, noting that her videos are “largely served up by Gen Z” which is a “critical bloc of voters that’s been lukewarm on Biden.”

When it comes to Trump’s social media presence, rather than focusing on the efficacy of his campaign, outlets instead pick apart his policy record.

Many outlets have cut straight to the criticisms, calling Trump out for joining the platform given his previous calls to ban the app, even though the Biden-Harris administration signed a bill into law that would potentially ban the platform altogether.

Harris and Trump’s campaigns did not immediately respond to a request for comment from the Daily Caller News Foundation.

AUTHOR

REBEKA ZELJKO

Contributor.

RELATED ARTICLES:

Dissident Dem Senator Might Challenge Kamala Coronation, Fight Her for Nomination

EXCLUSIVE: ‘Content Creator’s War Room’: Inside Trump Super PAC’s Plan To Win The Digital Campaign Online

Over A Quarter Of Gen Z Now Say They’re Queer: POLL

Trump Says Banning TikTok Would Help ‘Enemy’ Facebook

EDITORS NOTE: This Daily Caller column is republished with permission. ©All rights reserved.


All content created by the Daily Caller News Foundation, an independent and nonpartisan newswire service, is available without charge to any legitimate news publisher that can provide a large audience. All republished articles must include our logo, our reporter’s byline and their DCNF affiliation. For any questions about our guidelines or partnering with us, please contact licensing@dailycallernewsfoundation.org.

The Power of Woke: How Leftist Ideology is Undermining our Society and Economy

Neo-Marxism is a cultural cancer spreading through America and beyond.


“It’s an important part of society whether you like it or not,” lexicologist Tony Thorne, referring to “wokeness,” told The New Yorker’s David Remnick in January. That’s an understatement.

Wokeness is poisoning the Western workplace and constraining small and family businesses, midsized banks, and entrepreneurs while enriching powerful corporations and billionaires. It’s eating away at the capitalist ethos and killing the bottom-up modes of economic ordering and exchange that propelled the United States of America to prosperity during the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. It’s infecting Gen Z and millennials, who, suffering high depression rates and prone to “quiet quitting,” are not as well off as their parents and grandparents, and who feel isolated and alone even as they enjoy a technological connectivity that’s unprecedented in human history.

What, exactly, is wokeness, and how does it impact business and the wider society?

Subversion

The term as it’s widely used today differs from earlier significations. “Woke”, which plays on African American vernacular, once meant “awake to” or “aware of” social and racial injustices. The term expanded to encompass a wider array of causes from climate change, gun control, and LGTBQ rights to domestic violence, sexual harassment, and abortion.

Now, wielded by its opponents, it’s chiefly a pejorative dismissing the person or party it modifies. It’s the successor to “political correctness,” a catchall idiom that ridicules a broad range of leftist hobbyhorses. Carl Rhodes submits, in Woke Capitalism, that “woke transmuted from being a political call for self-awareness through solidarity in the face of massive racial injustice, to being an identity marker for self-righteousness.”

John McWhorter’s Woke Racism argues that wokeness is religious in character, unintentionally and intrinsically racist, and deleterious to black people. McWhorter, a black linguist, asserts that “white people calling themselves our saviors make black people look like the dumbest, weakest, most self-indulgent human beings in the history of our species.”

Books like Stephen R. Soukup’s The Dictatorship of Woke Capital and Vivek Ramaswamy’s Woke, Inc. highlight the nefarious side of the wokeism adopted by large companies, in particular in the field of asset management, investment, and financial services.

Hypocritical neo-Marxism

Wokeism, in both the affirming and derogatory sense, is predicated on a belief in systemic or structural forces that condition culture and behavior. The phrases “structural racism” or “systemic racism” suggest that rational agents are nevertheless embedded in a network of interacting and interconnected rules, norms, and values that perpetuate white supremacy or marginalise people of color and groups without privilege.

Breaking entirely free from these inherited constraints is not possible, according to the woke, because we cannot operate outside the discursive frames established by long use and entrenched power. Nevertheless, the argument runs, we can decentre the power relations bolstering this system and subvert the techniques employed, wittingly or unwittingly, to preserve extant hierarchies. That requires, however, new structures and power relations.

Corporate executives and boards of directors are unsuspectingly and inadvertently — though sometimes deliberately — caught up in these ideas. They’re immersed in an ideological paradigm arising principally from Western universities. It’s difficult to identify the causative origin of this complex, disparate movement to undo the self-extending power structures that supposedly enable hegemony. Yet businesses, which, of course, are made up of people, including disaffected Gen Zs and millennials, develop alongside this sustained effort to dismantle structures and introduce novel organising principles for society.

The problem is, rather than neutralising power, the “woke” pursue and claim power for their own ends. Criticising systems and structures, they erect systems and structures in which they occupy the center, seeking to dominate and subjugate the people or groups they allege to have subjugated or dominated throughout history. They replace one hegemony with another.

The old systems had problems, of course. They were imperfect. But they retained elements of classical liberalism that protected hard-won principles like private property, due process of law, rule of law, free speech, and equality under the law. Wokeism dispenses with these. It’s about strength and control. And it has produced a corporate-government nexus that rigidifies power in the hands of an elite few.

Consider the extravagant spectacle in Davos, the beautiful resort town that combined luxury and activism at the recent meeting of the World Economic Forum, perhaps the largest gathering of self-selected, influential lobbyists and “c suiters” across countries and cultures. This annual event occasions cartoonish portrayals of evil, conspiratorial overlords — the soi-disant saviours paternalistically preaching about planetary improvement, glorifying their chosen burden to shape global affairs. The World Economic Forum has become a symbol of sanctimony and lavish inauthenticity, silly in its ostentation.

The near-ubiquitous celebration of lofty Environmental, Social, and Governance (ESG) strategies at the World Economic Forum reveals a seemingly uniform commitment among prominent leaders to harness government to pull companies — and, alas, everyone else — to the left.

ESG is, of course, an acronym for the non-financial standards and metrics that asset managers, bankers, and investors factor while allocating capital or assessing risk. A growing consortium of governments, central banks, nongovernmental organisations (NGOs), asset management firms, finance ministries, financial institutions, and institutional investors advocates ESG as the top-down, long-term solution to purported social and climate risks. Even if these risks are real, is ESG the proper remedy?

Attendees of the World Economic Forum would not champion ESG if they did not benefit from doing so. That plain fact doesn’t alone discredit ESG, but it raises questions about ulterior motives: What’s really going on? How will these titans of finance and government benefit from ESG?

Follow the money

One obvious answer involves the institutional investors that prioritise activism over purely financial objectives or returns on investment (for legal reasons, activist investors would not characterise their priorities as such). It has only been a century since buying and selling shares in publicly traded companies became commonplace among workers and households. The US Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), created in response to the Great Depression, isn’t even 100 years old.

Until recently, most investors divested if they owned stock in a company that behaved contrary to their beliefs. They rarely voted their shares or voted only on major issues like mergers and acquisitions. In 2023, however, institutional investors such as hedge funds and asset management firms engage boards of directors, exercise proxy voting, and issue shareholder reports with the primary goal of politicising companies. As intermediaries, they invest pension funds, mutual funds, endowments, sovereign wealth funds, 401(k)s and more on behalf of beneficiaries who may or may not know what political causes their invested assets support.

If a publicly traded company “goes woke,” consider which entities hold how much of its shares and whether unwanted shareholder pressure is to blame. Consider, too, the role of third-party proxy advisors in the company’s policies and practices.

Big companies go woke to eliminate competition. After all, they can afford the costs to comply with woke regulations whereas small companies cannot. Institutional investors warn of prospective risks of government regulation while lobbying for such regulation. In the United States, under the Biden Administration, woke federal regulations are, unsurprisingly, emerging. Perhaps publicly traded companies will privatise to avoid proposed SEC mandates regarding ESG disclosures, but regulation in other forms and through other agencies will come for private companies too.

The woke should question why they’re collaborating with their erstwhile corporate enemies. Have they abandoned concerns about poverty for the more lucrative industry of identity politics and environmentalism? Have they sold out, happily exploiting the uncouth masses, oppressing the already oppressed, and trading socioeconomic class struggle for the proliferating dogma of race, sexuality, and climate change? As wokeness becomes inextricably tied to ESG, we can no longer say, “Go woke, go broke.” Presently, wokeness is a vehicle to affluence, a status marker, the ticket to the center of the superstructure.

ESG helps the wealthiest to feel better about themselves while widening the gap between the rich and poor and disproportionately burdening economies in developing countries. It’s supplanting the classical liberal rules and institutions that leveled playing fields, engendered equality of opportunity, expanded the franchise, reduced undue discrimination, eliminated barriers to entry, facilitated entrepreneurship and innovation, and empowered individuals to realise their dreams and rise above their station at birth.

When politics is ubiquitous, wokeness breeds antiwokeness. The right caught on to institutional investing; counteroffensives are underway. The totalising politicisation of corporations is a zero-sum arms race in which the right captures some companies while the left captures others.

Soon there’ll be no escaping politics, no tranquil zones, and little space for emotional detachment, contemplative privacy, or principled neutrality; parallel economies will emerge for different political affiliations; noise, fighting, anger, distraction, and division will multiply; every quotidian act will signal a grand ideology. For the woke, “silence is violence”; there’s no middle ground; you must speak up; and increasingly for their opponents as well, you must choose sides.

Which will you choose in this corporatised dystopia? If the factions continue to concentrate and centralise power, classical liberals will have no good options. Coercion and compulsion will prevail over freedom and cooperation. And commerce and command will go hand in hand.

This article has been republished with permission from Mises Wire.

AUTHOR

Allen Mendenhall

Allen Mendenhall is an associate dean at Faulkner University Thomas Goode Jones School of Law, executive director of the Blackstone & Burke Center for Law & Liberty, and Managing Editor of Southern… More by Allen Mendenhall

RELATED VIDEO: Freedom is Worth Fighting For

EDITORS NOTE: This MercatorNet column is republished with permission. ©All rights reserved.