Table of Contents for Jason Schreier:
- Twitter Experience
- Impressions of Blood, Sweat, and Pixels.
- Concluding Review of Blood, Sweat, and Pixels.
And the result….
Also, I had no idea what he meant by this now infamous tweet at all when it went viral:
I had to look up what on earth the word “Chud” meant. It’s apparently from a Far-Leftist podcast about called Chapo Trap House and references a poorly reviewed 1984 Horror film with the term meaning “Cannibalistic Humanoid Underground Dwellers” as the meaning. He and others in the Far-Left leaning predominately White subcultures seem to like using this term a lot. I’ve come to the conclusion that whomever is using the criticism “Chud” … is not comporting their worldview to any sensible reality. From what I briefly looked-up, it seems extremely childish and silly and I can honestly say that being blocked for the most mildest of criticisms has made me severely doubt this man’s journalistic integrity, since I had read his article fully before giving him that criticism. I’m honestly just more disappointed than anything that Bloomberg, one of the best business news organizations of which I’ve enjoyed many articles and think highly of, would allow one of their journalists to make childish insults to anyone with mild criticisms and then block me and others because he probably doesn’t like what we have to say, but doesn’t see it as worth conversing despite the honest feedback and so didn’t even give me the time of day with a response and would much prefer to ignore that I exist. That’s just my personal take away, because he chose to block instead of responding even though I had clearly been commenting on his article after reading it. I already sent my criticism to Bloomberg and nothing seemed to happen, so maybe I’ll look more into Wall Street Journal in the near-future as they seem less ideologically marred. I don’t want this to seem like I’m spewing hate in some calculated manner, so here’s a news article that I think is very good at understanding the problems of misogyny and gender violence in Mexico:
