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https://twitter.com/i/status/1647022654585438209

Egard Watches, a Florida-based boutique timepiece and jewelry firm, has done it again.

The company, founded by Ilan Srulovicz, followed up on its “What is a Woman” ad with a spot calling out Budweiser and Nike for embracing transgenderism. The ad is titled, “ERASED – A message to woke corporate America (Nike & Budweiser),” and features a young woman pursuing her lifelong goal of being the fastest woman in the world.

James Golden, aka Bo Snerdley, shared the ad on Twitter along with the caption: “An incredible and powerful ad. Budweiser brand and every woke company considering erasing women, please take note. This is how it’s done!

“When I was a little girl I had this dream that seemed so impossible: I was gonna be the fastest runner in the world,” the woman narrates. “I got this little nugget of an idea from my dad, he used to watch me run and say ain’t no woman alive that can beat you and I believed him. He made me feel invincible.”

“It wasn’t easy, I trained hard. Harder than anyone else I know, but I was made for this,” she continued. “I was an unstoppable force, a life dedicated to perfection. But even perfection wouldn’t be enough.”

As ominous music plays, the young woman is seen in the starting blocks of a race… lined up against a transgender woman with razor stubble.

“This ad is necessary to demonstrate the inequality and injustice that is being perpetrated on female athletes — and women in general. We care when women are mistreated in the workplace, but athletes who have practiced and sacrificed for many years are told to shut up,” Srulovicz said in a written statement.

“Once we allow the re-classification of people based entirely on how they self identify we open a dangerous window into erasing standards across the board,” Srulovicz continued. “It’s not just sports but prisons, age of consent, medical treatment and more. We can not accept untruths in society without accepting the long term consequences of them. This is why we stand with women on this issue and are making a statement to stop the erasure of decades of hard fought battles for equality.”

The What is a Woman ad was released during the height of the controversy surrounding Penn State swimmer Lia Thomas, a biological male competing — and dominating — as a female swimmer.

“How long do we sit idly by and not stand for the sacred value of womanhood as it loses all meaning?” the two-minute ad said. “Because we believe that womanhood is a birthright.”

Here’s a quick sampling of responses to the story, as seen on Twitter:





Last edited by giftedamateur
@1130 posted:

vid on the guy threatening people true name is thomas. He lives in 913 area code, NE Kansas

I wondered about him. Surely he knows people in his area would know him and be on the lookout for him. As one poster said, good way to put a big target on his back.

Granted, there wasn't that much to lose, but Liberals have lost what little bit that was left of their minds!

https://www.foxnews.com/politi...d-democrats-new-bill

Last edited by giftedamateur

The St. Louis Post-Dispatch quotes the former chief creative officer at Anheuser-Busch, Robert Lachky, who said that the choice of a transgender as a brand ambassador to hawk Bud Light was a massive mistake.

”The minute you step into the political or religious spectrum, when you know your target audience is going to have a real issue with this, you know you’ve alienated at least half of your target audience,” Lachky said. ”In the end, people don’t like getting preached to, especially when it comes to drinking beer.”

Bud Light sales have plummeted 26 percent as the crisis drags on into its second month among accounts of store shelves packed with the product while other beers not manufactured by Anheuser-Busch are experiencing a surge in demand.

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