Have a RADIANT HANUKKAH! ...Also wishing you all happy but very generic holidays™, from your favorite Brands™!
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The holidays just got merrier | Wishing you a radiant Hanukkah | Order now to get product in time to consoom for the holidays
I saw this, and had to post. This is far (far!) from unique, and I actually like their whiskey, but their marketing department is predictably...for modern audiences, or whatever. You know the thing. C'mon man.
Shit makes me sick. I'm not even Christian, but say the word, brothers, and we'll retake the Holy Land. Jerusalem will be ours!
Deus Vult!
And merry Christmas (season), you filthy animals!
Site didn't cooperate with archving, but here's the source for those curious.*
* Also, just so no one accuses me of photoshopping, the text is on hover, so this is a combined image. I did
shoopPaint it, but nothing is edited aside from underlining and combing of hover text.Silence, Brand!
And, again, merry Christmas!
Jews control the whiskey.
Nooooo! That's not True! That's impossible!
'200 Years Together' sure as hell was an ardous read, but an eye-opening one.
Whiskey isn't red. I chugged some tonight and it was always brown (Brown like the colour of drink it is from the white people that make it). Nearly Christmas so why the hell not?
This is just more interracial faggotry by inferiority.
The brand belongs to Bob Dylan.
"Bob Dylan was born Robert Allen Zimmerman (Hebrew: שבתאי זיסל בן אברהם Shabtai Zisl ben Avraham)[1][13][14] in St. Mary's Hospital on May 24, 1941, in Duluth, Minnesota,[15] and raised in Hibbing, Minnesota, on the Mesabi Range west of Lake Superior. Dylan's paternal grandparents, Anna Kirghiz and Zigman Zimmerman, emigrated from Odesa in the Russian Empire (now Ukraine) to the United States, following the pogroms against Jews of 1905.[16] His maternal grandparents, Florence and Ben Stone, were Lithuanian Jews who had arrived in the United States in 1902."
Who, this guy, talking about having sold his soul? Weird shit, and not what I expected to find in a minute's search.
Also, didn't realize how much he looked like Neil Gaiman, who's a bit of a psycho himself. Wonder if Gaiman sold his soul too?
Maybe its just my area of the world, but this is the first year I've actually seen Hanukkah being even acknowledged around the town and businesses. And we have an actual Jewish temple with pretty good traffic right in town.
I'm sure you guys have a different experience in your necks of the woods, but it really feels like they are ramping up the open Jewishness this year in response to the massive hate they are under.
Not just your area of the world, I agree with your assessment; they seem to be pushing the Jewish stuff hard this year. They've hated on Christmas for years (which was more my focus here), but they do also seem to be putting more attention toward ze Jews now. Which could just be a natural/corporate response to the whole Israel/Hamas mess, but still.
Its always had this undercurrent of "don't bring it up out of respect" for most anyone. Like we all knew Hanukkah existed, and most sitcoms or the like would have an episode about it. But it didn't get corporate memos and postits this widely.
And now they are everywhere. Overtly bringing Jews into conversation everyday.
I genuinely can't tell if that's the work of the pro or anti Jewish side. Because they don't benefit in anyway from increased exposure, as it just makes it more likely people will start noticing. Yet they make up the bulk of the string pullers who could make such a thing happen.
It is Jews pushing it and yes, it causes more noticing. They aren't thinking clearly. When Israel gets brought up, all rationality they have goes put the window, like Ben Shapiro how he goes bat shit and his absolute double standard for anything Israel. And that's why they've gone nuts and started firing people who speak out against Israel (Scream 6 actress), disciplinary action against students and potential hires. They're so bent on punishing people for wrong think they don't realize it makes people think "wow Jews are assholes" and makes the problem worse. Same with the Hanukkah push.
Bonus points for BMWF in the background
I saw Fallout 76 added the Hanukkah candle, whatever it's called. It serves as jetpack skin. It surprised me out of a company like Bethesda. I thought leftists were Palestine supporters, even though their warped, subversive ideology is a result of Jewish propaganda.
It's called a holiday candle. ;)
To be fair, it's not Christmas yet, but Hanukkah has already happened. It makes sense that they'd specifically mention Hanukkah during Hanukkah.
We'll have to see if they pull the same Generic Seasons Greetings shit on December 25th.
Sure, sure...but what are these "holidays," then? It's obviously a euphemism. Also, they must have something specific in mind, since you can get it by "the holidays." On what date are these holidays? And apparently that's not Hanukkah, since that's already begun. It's pretty clear that they mean Christmas, the massive holiday this time of year, but just won't say it. It's near universal, everyone celebrates it, not just Christians.
Kind of a moot point, although I guess worth keeping an eye out. Again, I don't bear any particular ill will to this particular company, it's just something I happened to stumble across, as I've had it in the past, and noticed they had store pick single barrel cask strength stuff in my area.
This isn't a cry to cancel them, or anything. Just noticing that they at least seem to be engaging in a worryingly common trend. I'll legit make a correction if I happen to see them wishing anyone merry Christmas. Could admittedly happen, although I don't really expect it. The people - and especially brands - wishing 'happy holidays' probably won't also wish merry Christmas.
I'd even be somewhat happy to be wrong. Again, I like their stuff. If it really is just a case of 'oh, well, it wasn't Christmas yet, that was still a week and a half away,' great. We'll just have to see.
You'd be surprised how many boomers are still careful to make sure to include Kwanzaa in their holiday greeting repertoire. They fell for the meme in the 60s and still think it's real even though absolutely nobody actually celebrates it.
I promised I'd issue a correction if I was wrong, and thought I'd give an update regardless. They wished us happy seasons and holidays seven more times. No mention of Christmas. About what I expected.
Sometimes being the devil's advocate means actually advocating for the devil.
All good, not blaming. Just wanted to update you.