Killers Of The Flower Moon Review: A Cautionary Masterpiece On The Insidiousness Of White Men
Imagine beginning a movie review about a couple evil Jews or Blacks (not that any such thing would be made these days) with this:
Time and time again throughout history, Jews have proven they cannot be trusted. In Martin Scorsese’s twenty-sixth film “Killers of the Flower Moon,” he shows us another staggering real-life example of that very warning. The legendary director’s magnificent epic traverses several years in the 1920s to tell the story of the wealthy members of the Osage Nation who discovered a massive oil well on their Oklahoma land — and as a result found themselves victim to a deceitful murder plot designed to put every dime in the hands of entitled Jews. “Killers of the Flower Moon” is a cautionary tale about the ubiquitous insidiousness of Jews, laying bare the notion that they will take everything from you that isn’t nailed down no matter the cost. Even the ones that seem innocent and good.
Thank you for pointing out the blatant racism being promoted today against white people. I looked up the company (SlashFilm) as well as the parent company (Static Media). They don’t look jewish at all.
But the degree that “the insidiousness of white men” is so widely repeated on the search results of the link you provided indicates the search engine was assuredly programed to approved this type of message and allow it to spread far and wide. In contrast, the technology would have cancelled “the insidiousness of jewish men” the minute the initial review was uploaded.
The movie review that you refer to has been blocked. Please give details of the review.
There is no development of the title you give to this article, and therefore no discussion which you invite. Have you been blocked? How can we get round it?
Blocked me too. It was there this morning.
https://www.slashfilm.com/1291931/killers-of-the-flower-moon-review/
Try using DuckDuckGo as a search engine. Was able to get to it that way but not through the link you provided.
I typed in the movie title and the first 5-7 words of the review. Sent me right to it.