Posted August 2, 2017 10:40 am by Comments

By Michelle Malkin

"My Black is Beautiful" Procter and Gamble campaign

By Michelle Malkin

“My Black is Beautiful” Procter and Gamble campaign
Michelle Malkin
Michelle Malkin

USA – -(Ammoland.com)- Once upon a time, brothers-in-law William Procter and James Gamble sold candles and soap. Their 19th-century family business grew into the largest consumer goods conglomerate in the world — launching the most recognizable brands on our grocery shelves, including Tide, Pampers, Crest, Nyquil and Old Spice.

Now, Procter & Gamble want to conquer a new market: identity-politics pandering.

Industry marketers aren’t satisfied with selling useful products people want and need. They’re hell-bent on transforming successful businesses into social justice busybodies.

P&G’s “My Black is Beautiful” campaign released a new video last week called, “The Talk.” It “depicts the inevitable conversations many Black parents have with their children about racial bias to prepare, protect and encourage them” across the decades.

The ad plays as a kinder, gentler version of Black Lives Matter propaganda, but the underlying themes are the same:

  • Little progress has been made since the days of Jim Crow.
  • Racial discrimination against black Americans is inevitable.
  • Police officers are the enemy.

One especially offensive scene depicts a suburban black mom preparing her bubbly teenage daughter, a new driver, for “when you get pulled …Read the Rest

Source:: AmmoLand

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