(left, Jewish strike leader Fran Drescher makes the Commie raised fist sign)
“How many people do you suppose are now dead, because they saw some Hollywood shill like Morgan Freeman, Michael Caine, or Tom Cruise telling them the “vaccine” was safe and effective, and then decided to take it themselves? Seriously, it’s a question worth asking. How many people did these striking actors and writers have a hand in murdering? Enquiring minds want to know.”
by Mike Stone
(henrymakow.com)
We’re now almost four months into the Writers Guild strike (began May 2, 2023), and a month and a half into the SAG-AFTRA strike (began July 13, 2023), and no substantial headway has been made into ending either one.
That’s not surprising. Whenever a strike occurs, in any industry, the first position of management is to do nothing in the hope that the striking side will lose their resolve and cave in.
What’s also traditional in the case of any strike that lasts over a month is the media ploy of shifting their coverage to the peripheral damage the strike is causing – to the innocent victims who are suffering the consequences of the strike. So of course the Los Angeles Times is now running puff pieces on various crew members who are sitting idle and waiting for both strikes to end. These are people who aren’t striking themselves, but they are now out of work. They’re the ones who keep Hollywood humming behind the scenes.
One such person featured in a Times article from yesterday is Max Schwartz, a set lighting technician who is unemployed. In the article, Schwartz describes himself as fully supportive of the strikers, then adds that if the strike lasts much longer he might have to sell his golf clubs and his prized card collection of “Magic: The Gathering.” Yeah, he’s really struggling.
Somewhat more sympathetic is prop master James Eddy. Eddy says he has about three months worth of savings stockpiled up. If the strike lasts beyond that, he will be forced to move from his Studio City home. “I can’t really afford the rent without a job,” he said. “All I can do is stay optimistic.”
SAG-AFTRA President Fran Drescher has joined in and is now pushing this same angle. Yesterday, she told the Associated Press that the actor’s strike is about all workers everywhere, not just those currently striking.
Granted, it’s never nice to see someone out of work. Still, this sudden sympathy on the part of actors for out-of-work crew members strikes me as phony. I recall how these same actors threatened to fire any crew members who didn’t go along with the virus hoax and “voluntarily” inject themselves with a deadly poison.
(The traitor Tom Cruise to be replaced by AI)
Remember that? Remember Tom Cruise cussing out his own film crew – verbally abusing and threatening to fire them?
We Demanded You Get Jabbed, Now We Demand You Support Us
Speaking of the virus hoax, screen and television actors and writers were among its heaviest pushers. Without Hollywood’s help, it’s doubtful that so many people would have been duped into believing that a non-existent virus was out to kill them. How many people do you suppose are now dead, because they saw some Hollywood shill like Morgan Freeman, Michael Caine, or Tom Cruise telling them the “vaccine” was safe and effective, and then decided to take it themselves? Seriously, it’s a question worth asking. How many people did these striking actors and writers have a hand in murdering? Enquiring minds want to know.
Two thirds of the SAG-AFTRA membership voted for mandatory vaccinations for all their members. If you were an actor during the duration of the hoax, you either took the clot shot or you didn’t work. These same actors were among the most loud-spoken and hostile of anyone in their push for the “vaccine.” If they had their way, the entire country would have been forced to take the jab. Think about that. Now they want your sympathy because they’re not working.
I don’t know if this played a part in their membership voting so strongly for mandatory injections, but SAG-AFTRA membership is predominantly female. I do know that the predominantly female membership is the reason why Fran Drescher was elected president of the guild. Remember, she ran against Matthew Modine (Full Metal Jacket). Would the strike have still occurred if a white male were running the guild?
In addition to pushing the virus hoax, Hollywood has been at the forefront of pushing the stolen election, as well the Great Replacement. If you’re white, yet somehow feeling sorry for the out-of-work strikers, you may want to reconsider your position. They want to replace you. They literally want you dead and out of the way. Yet you support them?
Let Them Eat Cake
Despite the billions of dollars that the entertainment takes in, no one involved with the industry on any level has lifted a finger to help the thousands of homeless people living on the street. Los Angeles has one of the country’s largest homeless populations. There are tents everywhere, literally everywhere, along with trash, drug needles, graffiti, and crime. Meanwhile, this city probably has more millionaires and billionaires than any other, most of them associated on some level with the entertainment industry. Why do they refuse to help their own people?
We had a phony mayoral election here a couple of years ago. A guy named Rick Caruso, a newcomer to politics ran one of the best campaigns ever. His entire platform was based on ending homelessness and crime. Hollywood could have rallied around the guy and got him elected, but they didn’t. Instead, they let the election get stolen and did nothing to protest it. They let the governor’s recall election get stolen too, and said nothing. It’s really hard to have sympathy for such people, even if they are out of work.
Personally, it wouldn’t bother me one bit if the entire industry collapsed or remained on strike forever. Neither will ever happen, but if either did, I wouldn’t care. Some will take offense to that under the argument of cultural loss. I say it would be a cultural boon.
The other day I watched the opening of the movie Shane, along with the climactic gunfight at the end (“I’m calling you a lowdown, Yankee liar.”). Now that’s filmmaking. It’s filmmaking on a level that we haven’t seen for at least twenty years and will never see again. The Great Replacement has made it impossible.
Because of the strike, actors will not be promoting their films or television shows that have already been shot. As a consequence, many have them have been pushed back until 2024. That’s a sign that the industry is confident the strike will be over by then. For now, it’s a waiting game.
—
Mike Stone is the author of Teen Boy’s Success Book: the Ultimate Self-Help Book for Boys; Everything You Need to Know to Become a Man: https://amzn.to/3o0BQdO And the book Using ChatGPT to Predict the Future: How to Discern the Truth, Forecast the Future & Always Be Right: https://amzn.to/3FGpVY7
Related posts:
$28bn power projects up for grabs
Examining Out-of-Place Stone Figures from the Forgotten City of Oxkintok
Charles III Will Be Crowned on the Stone of Scone. But Is It the Real Stone?
Susan Rice returns to Netflix board amid Hollywood strikes
#DisneyGroomer Trends on Twitter – Hollywood Elites Outraged
In pictures: The most striking images from Belarus protest
Views: 0