He's in on it. They have to sell hard to get normies on board. After that they can outlaw dissent, which is their ultimate dream.
The more absurd the better, because of sunk-cost mentality for everyone that "goes along to get along." People who let this happen are required by their own conscience to never back out.
The social engineers have gone full bore because this is their gambit to gain a terrible control over society. Unquestioning loyalty of a populace too cowardly to resist, and then too ashamed to refuse to obey them after.
I think the blatancy is part of the ploy. The media trusts in their ability to sell so much that they have moved up a phase to selling obvious shit as a form of demoralization. The comedian in question may just be a washed up nobody who's long stopped trying very hard, but the producers and writers are rolling with that, I think.
Less cynically, this is a knock-on effect of 2008 - present politics: mask fully dropped. Comedy used to be funny because the writers and comedians used to pretend to be for everybody. That pretense tempered their blithering idiocy to the point it was actually a consumable product. It also, as you point out, made their ever-present propaganda actually somewhat effective since it was designed to convince rather than berate.
He's in on it. They have to sell hard to get normies on board. After that they can outlaw dissent, which is their ultimate dream.
The more absurd the better, because of sunk-cost mentality for everyone that "goes along to get along." People who let this happen are required by their own conscience to never back out.
The social engineers have gone full bore because this is their gambit to gain a terrible control over society. Unquestioning loyalty of a populace too cowardly to resist, and then too ashamed to refuse to obey them after.
Can he not even make his blatant propaganda funny though, so people don't realize it's propaganda?
That's what he and Jon Stewart used to do; they were masters at it. This is just sad.
I think the blatancy is part of the ploy. The media trusts in their ability to sell so much that they have moved up a phase to selling obvious shit as a form of demoralization. The comedian in question may just be a washed up nobody who's long stopped trying very hard, but the producers and writers are rolling with that, I think.
Less cynically, this is a knock-on effect of 2008 - present politics: mask fully dropped. Comedy used to be funny because the writers and comedians used to pretend to be for everybody. That pretense tempered their blithering idiocy to the point it was actually a consumable product. It also, as you point out, made their ever-present propaganda actually somewhat effective since it was designed to convince rather than berate.