Many of the country's biggest food makers are telling grocers that they will have limited quantities of a number of their products, including items such as Rice Krispies Treats, Sour Patch Kids, some Ben & Jerry's ice cream flavors, McCormick gourmet spices and Marie Callender's pot pies
one of the things which has happened, or at least i think it's fairly new, is that everyone just assumes that the media is the official mouthpiece of The Illuminati, not just of the state but of the Globalist Cabal.
It's conceited and patronising. There's this smug, paternalistic tone to a lot of media these days that's really unpleasant.Nothing wrong with that tone of that CNN tweet, what's the problem?
Paranoid snowflakes.
It's written with the air of an exasperated parent explaining something to a greedy, petulant child. The use of the word 'limitless', as though their readership are nothing but wide-eyed simpletons looking to stuff their faces; talking about the "Before Times," as though they're telling a children's story.
You see it over and over. I've lost count of how many articles I've seen with headlines that basically read like the author rolling their eyes at anyone who isn't in their media/social bubble. All those headlines beginning with "No, ... " followed by something they're trying to refute.
How did you get this picture of Leo in his upscale New York apartment!
In the UK, there's practically now a whole mini-genre of article/tweet where someone takes great pleasure in the idea of scarcity and general hardship - in the idea of it happening to other people, at least - as if it instils moral fibre, or will help toughen up these spoiled millennial snowflakes, or something like that. But it invariably comes from conservatives, so maybe a bit different in intent from that CNN piece, I dunno.OTOH, this is true, sure. But different from the posted example.
It cuts both ways. You get plenty of people gloating about Brexit voters having to deal with the consequences of Brexit or anti-vaxxers being arrested or getting ill.In the UK, there's practically now a whole mini-genre of article/tweet where someone takes great pleasure in the idea of scarcity and general hardship - in the idea of it happening to other people, at least - as if it instils moral fibre, or will help toughen up these spoiled millennial snowflakes, or something like that. But it invariably comes from conservatives, so maybe a bit different in intent from that CNN piece, I dunno.