- The conservative advocacy group One Million Moms launched an online petition telling Burger King to edit or remove an Impossible Whopper ad.
- The ad features the reactions of Burger King customers eating an Impossible Whopper, with one man saying “Damn, that’s good.”
- The profanity earned backlash from One Million Moms, who also campaigned against the LGBTQ+ ad on the Hallmark Channel.
- Burger King is the latest target of , a conservative activist group “the exploitation of our children, especially by the entertainment media,” .
- https://thehill.com/changing-america/respect/lgbtq/477945-conservative-group-calls-for-burger-king-to-remove-impossible
- Mom, are you fed up with the filth many segments of our society, especially the entertainment media, are throwing at our children? Are you tired of all the negative influences our children are forced to contend with? If so, we urge you to become a member of OneMillionMoms.com.
- https://onemillionmoms.com/about-us/
- This summer, the world was convulsing over climate change, hurricanes, terrorism, and Trump. Meanwhile, the far-right group One Million Moms was clutching its pearls over ... Toy Story 4.In one of its numerous calls to action, One Million Moms asked its followers to sign a petition objecting to a blink-and-you’ll-miss-it moment with a female couple in Toy Story 4. It was just the latest effort for the furtive group, which agitates against positive LGBTQ representations as its cause célèbre.
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- That number, 4,525, was about 0.45 percent of one million. On Facebook, the page had a far bigger following than it did on Twitter. In fact, 98,649 people liked the page as of December 17 2019; a lower 93,533 followed the page for updates. The larger number was 9.8 percent of one million:
One Million Moms: Intolerance of Biblical Proportions
How a fundamentalist Christian group markets intolerance of gays and lesbians.
Pragmatic politics focused on the public interest for those uncomfortable with America's two-party system and its way of doing politics. Considering the interface of politics with psychology, cognitive science, social behavior, morality and history.
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