[ CYPHER CODE #769 ]
The outrage machine only runs on black and brown identities.

[ CYPHER CODE #770 ]
White victims don't cut the mustard.

[ CYPHER CODE #771 ]
You can't start a George Floyd movement with a fat, white lesbian. 

BRIEFING

There are a lot of different groups in this country. White males, Karens, gay men, Blacks, Hispanics... you name it. But one of the most unpopular groups has to be lesbians. Let's get into it.

The "lesbian" phenomenon just never caught on, did it? Like it or not, gay men have their own culture. In many circles they're known for fashion, aesthetics, and turning rundown neighborhoods into beautiful, charming places to live.

But lesbians tend to make many Americans feel uncomfortable. Even progressives get the creeps.

SOURCE

I was driving with a friend today and she told me that when she sees women dressed like men it makes her uncomfortable.

This really surprised me, mostly because this friend is really open minded about pretty much everything. And I know she wasn't being judgemental when she said this - she was just being honest about something she didn't understand.

I actually almost told her that I find masculine women really attractive, but blurting that out isn't really the way I want to come out to her lol.

I asked her if she was talking about transgendered people or gay women, and she told me she was talking about lesbians. I asked her why it made her uncomfortable, and she said she didn't know why exactly. She went on to tell me that she doesn't have any problems with gay men, but gay women freak her out. She said that she obviously knows that just because a woman is gay, it doesn't mean this woman will have a crush on her, but it still makes her uncomfortable for this reason.

This is probably my biggest fear about coming out to friends. I have several close friends who are women, and I've never been attracted to any of them and I never will be. I don't want to come out and lose the closeness that I have with them because they're worried my hugs mean more than they do.

Has anyone had a similar experience to this?

Many of these lesbian couples come across as masculine and aggressive. Typically, they dress frumpy and look like they're in a contest to look as unappealing as humanly possible. That’s not me trying to be a mean guy. It’s perception and reality. The male fantasy of the “hot lesbian” couple you’d see in a Playboy magazine doesn’t really exist in real life.

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This is the typical lesbian couple.

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And the truth is, the left’s outrage machine runs on a very specific fuel, and it's not overweight white lesbians.

The George Floyd saga wasn’t about a death or injustice. It was about identity, and it worked because the story fit the pre-approved hierarchy: a black victim and a white cop. This was the clear "oppressor narrative" and a ready-made moral script the media could scale nationwide. And that formula matters more than the people who are involved.

When the victim doesn’t fit that framework, the machine sputters and stops. A white chubby lesbian woman doesn’t activate the same emotional outrage. She doesn’t advance the racial grievance narrative, which is the foundation of all things "left." Renee Good doesn’t symbolize systemic oppression in a way that mobilizes mass outrage. The left can try to force it with headlines, candlelight vigils, and activist theatrics, but the response falls totally flat because the audience has been conditioned to prioritize skin color over circumstance.

They can't start a "George Floyd Part 2" with a white, overweight lesbian lady. It just ain't gonna happen...

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DEBRIEFING

If all of this outrage was really about human life, empathy would scale evenly across the board. But it doesn’t. All of this attention, anger, and mobilization are distributed very selectively, based on political usefulness. When a case can’t be weaponized to reinforce power structures or justify ideological narratives, it becomes a burden instead of a rallying cry. Sure, they'll try to spark a fire, but they'd have more luck lighting a match underwater.

The failure to ignite a new George Floyd moment here doesn’t expose how identity politics isn’t about actual people. It’s all about leverage. And when the identity doesn’t give that leverage, the outrage never shows up.

NOW YOU KNOW

When a death can’t produce power, it gets ignored.