What's your problem with celebrities in politics?

GettyRoad

Golden Member
Mar 5, 2016
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Celebrities are influential. You want boring politicians and lawyers to be in control of politics and then get upset when no one is interested and oldheads like Mitch McConnell run the country?

Celebrities should have input because 1)they pay taxes like everyone else 2)it affects them too 3)they have influence and platforms and they should use it if they want to

You want politics to be stuffy and boring? And wonder why people gravitate to Trump?
 

ivwshane

Lifer
May 15, 2000
33,381
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I have the same problem I have with most people in politics, they are ignorant on the issues or they are unwilling to accept contrary data that challenges their beliefs, or they try to simplify complex issues.
 

Tsinni Dave

Senior member
Mar 1, 2022
559
1,378
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Yes, he is. He decided to speak about police brutality, which is seen as a political issue.
It's only a political issue because it was made into one by terrible politicians. Police brutality and racial profiling are issues that should be addressed by society as a whole and not used as a cudgel by a political party whose supporters went on to beat cops with American flags.
 

Perknose

Forum Director & Omnipotent Overlord
Forum Director
Oct 9, 1999
46,820
10,512
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OP, I think you are the one with the problem. You like to put forward B and C list "celebrities as being "influential," and those you put forth are generally ignorant right wing racists. They can do and say what they want, but they are not "thought leaders" except to people, like you, who hold similarly abhorrent views. They can simple go fuck themselves, for all I care. So can you . . . which is my way of saying that you are not that bright and that, when you post here, it does not rise above the level of extraneous noise pollution.
 

nOOky

Diamond Member
Aug 17, 2004
3,232
2,289
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I don't care about celebrity opinions, they are entitled to their views and the appropriate responses the same as anyone else. They just may have a better platform for making their opinions known due to their celebrity.
 

BoomerD

No Lifer
Feb 26, 2006
66,037
14,441
146
I don't care about celebrity opinions, they are entitled to their views and the appropriate responses the same as anyone else. They just may have a better platform for making their opinions known due to their celebrity.

And therein lies the problem. Because of their celebrity, most are axcustomed to the "hangers-on" agreeing with everything thwy say, which serves to inflate their sense of self-importance.
 

nakedfrog

No Lifer
Apr 3, 2001
62,125
17,922
136
No inherent problem with celebrities in politics, but their sole qualification should not be "you might remember me from such films as 'The Day I Railed GettyRoad's Mom' or 'Railing GettyRoad's Mom 2: Electric Boogaloo'", they should actually know stuff about issues and governance, how political processes work, that kinda thing.
 

UNCjigga

Lifer
Dec 12, 2000
25,423
10,015
136
My gripe is with influencer kids on TikTok—moreso than any other type of celebrity. TikTok is not a platform for meaningful conversation on any kind of issue. That’s my Gen X take and I’m sticking to it.
 

HomerJS

Lifer
Feb 6, 2002
38,860
31,936
136
Did the OP get his answer?

IMO - Being in politics isn't always running for office. MLK was in politics and didn't run. Colin Kapernick and David Hogg are examples of people advocating for political positions but not running.
 
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GodisanAtheist

Diamond Member
Nov 16, 2006
8,177
9,474
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My dad, an immigrant from central India who grew up dirt poor in *INDIAN COMMUNITY HOUSING* busted his ass off, made it to the US, got a good job, and secured a solid foundation for his family.

When I was a kid Forest Gump was released to much fanfare so my dad brought it home to watch. Once the movie was finished he got up in disgust, wordlessly took the VHS out of the player and took it back to Blockbuster without saying much.

I asked him later what his issue with the movie was, it was a great movie, moving, Tom Hanks did a great job etc. He just sighed and said "I worked so hard to have so little, and this literal retard fails into having more than me."

Now I don't inherently agree with my Dad's wording or the idea that "he has so little" (maybe in comparison to Multi millionaires and billionaires) but the words stuck with me and over time it was kind of facinating to see how well Forest Gump really captured the American mythos: Anyone, literally ANYONE, could make it here. You didn't have to be smart, you didn't even have to be particularly skilled. You just had to have a good heart, work hard, keep truckin', and good things would happen for you.

American audiences love that kind of thing. Part of the reason we love sports celebrity so much. My Indian Ass Dad though...
 
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Dec 10, 2005
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Are you upset that we didn't give 2 shits about what Tom Selleck was saying and your cop bootlicking?
 

woolfe9998

Lifer
Apr 8, 2013
16,242
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The irony here is that the majority of celebs are liberal. Yet you don't see people around here offering up, say, Taylor Swift, to support their liberal views, claiming she is somehow an authority on politics because lots of people buy her music and go to her concerts. I feel like conservatives cling to the smaller number of celebrities who are conservative. But it's best for conservatives not to elevate them too much because if we listened to the majority of celebs on politics the republicans would never be elected.
 

Pens1566

Lifer
Oct 11, 2005
13,501
10,944
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The irony here is that the majority of celebs are liberal. Yet you don't see people around here offering up, say, Taylor Swift, to support their liberal views, claiming she is somehow an authority on politics because lots of people buy her music and go to her concerts. I feel like conservatives cling to the smaller number of celebrities who are conservative. But it's best for conservatives not to elevate them too much because if we listened to the majority of celebs on politics the republicans would never be elected.

Right. And it's not just the difference in # either. The ones on the right also tend to be D-List or worse. We're talking Kevin Sorbo, James Woods, Kid Rock, and the ever pertinent Scott Baio.
 
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