When I was a kid, it seemed that the Olympics were the biggest thing in the world.
When you had sports leagues that had championship series and games every year, the idea that there was a competition that was so big that it only took place once every four years made it seem extra important.
I remember around the time of the 1996 Summer Olympics, I got heavy into the history of the games. I probably had more Olympic stuff from the 1996 Atlanta games than anything else I knew.
If I only knew how the Olympics were going to turn into some damned woke propaganda festival I probably would have set all of it on fire in my backyard.
I mean really, does every damned thing that happens these days have to be some celebration of woke debauchery?
Seriously, what the heck ever happened to an Opening Ceremony for the Olympics that wasn’t some pervert show or highlighted baseless liberal values?
I was traveling during the Opening Ceremonies of the Paris games this year, and it happened to be on a television in an airport.
Tired to pieces of looking at my phone all day while stuck in airports, I checked it out.
I got sent back in time watching the opening ceremonies. By that, I mean I was convinced that I was back in 1996 watching an episode of that HBO show Real Sex where they just basically showed perverts doing pervert things.
You’ve probably all seen what happen in some form. I mean really, should there have been even the remotest possibility that a testicle would be exposed on international television?
Of course, this means that people are going to have to take a side either or morality or perversion.
One company that is taking the side of morality is C Spire. They issued a press release that said the following:
“We were shocked by the mockery of the Last Supper during the opening ceremonies of the Paris Olympics. C Spire will be pulling our advertising from the Olympics,” the tech company said in a post on social media.
I am proud to see the private sector in Mississippi step up and put their foot down. God will not be mocked. C Spire drew a common-sense, appropriate line. https://t.co/R38yJye97I
— Governor Tate Reeves (@tatereeves) July 27, 2024
They did the right thing here. There are much better ways to get the word out about a company than a worldwide pervert show.