Adrian Sol
Daily Stormer
February 25, 2017
Think it’ll stop at bump stocks? They’re coming for your virtual assault pistols next!
We’ve just passed the greatest tragedy our nation has ever faced – a Jew shot up a school – and yet I’ll bet half of you didn’t skip a beat and went right back to playing violent video games.
Have you no heart?
Think of the victims! How do you think the surviving families feel, knowing you’re still playing PUBG, shooting your virtual guns into virtual people without a care in the world?
The Hoggman judges you: pure evil.
You people make me sick.
It’s time to make a step forward as a society and ban not just guns, but shooting-based video games.
Facebook announced the removal of the Bullet Train demo from its virtual reality experience booth at CPAC (Conservative Political Action Conference) after public outcry in light of the recent mass shooting at a school in Parkland, Florida.
Wow this sucks. That was probably the #2 reason to attend CPAC this year.
#1, of course, was Marion.
Mmmmmh…
Developed by Epic Games to help show off the Oculus headset’s VR capabilities back in 2015, Bullet Train has the player rampage through a futuristic train station shooting armored guards and a giant automated drone boss. It’s part of an anthology of short VR experiences Facebook uses to demo the hardware at various events, including at CPAC this week. The social media company recently decided to remove Bullet Train from the setup after public outcry over the optics and timing, spurred on by videos and screenshots circulated by Now This News and others.
Facebook is the company that owns Oculus, the most high-profile developers of VR technology. This is actually an interesting fact in itself. The founder of Oculus, Palmer Luckey, is a young right-wing goy who funded a pro-Trump “meme research program” during the election.
The Jews certainly didn’t want that kind of guy in control of the future of VR, which is potentially the next big step in media.
You can be sure that Palmer would have responded to the shooting by switching the characters in the bullet-train to European-style socialists, instead of cancelling the demo altogether.
“There is a standard set of experiences included in the Oculus demos we feature at public events,” vice president of virtual reality, Hugo Barra, said in a statement emailed to USA Today about the company’s decision to remove the game. “A few of the action games can include violence. In light of the recent events in Florida and out of respect for the victims and their families, we have removed them from this demo. We regret that we failed to do so in the first place.”
What kind of logic is that?
Violence is an inherent aspect of the human condition. Are we going to fundamentally reform the laws of physics and the social order in order to protect the feelings of a few people who got shot up?
Newsflash: tens of thousands of people get shot every year.
How are these newest victims any more relevant than the 10,000 that preceded them?
More importantly, what weight do human lives truly have when compared with vidya?
Tough questions.
On Twitter, Barra added,
“We got this wrong. Our demos come w a standard set of content, some are action games w violence. These shouldn’t have been present, especially in light of recent events & out of respect for the victims & their families.”
The European-style socialists running Facebook are way over-reaching with this nonsense. They’re trying to create the meme that this event is basically a world-changing cataclysm somehow, and now everything has to be different and gay.
No more fun allowed for the goyim.
The reality, of course, is that people are far more desensitized to violence and emotional manipulation than ever before. Nobody really gives a damn about these shooting victims – especially after that slimy press conference those kids gave.
Half of America is pretending to care in order to push their gun-grabbing, vidya cancelling agenda, while the other half is like “fuck you, IDGAF.”
But this is still useful to show where everyone’s loyalties lie, for anyone who wasn’t paying attention.