Message from @Andy
Discord ID: 299668031850676225
kek
>Tfw you shoot the Tsar bomb out of the sky with Soumi rifle
>tfw an asian is better at being a depressed school shooter than you
@Templar-CA I finished it
@BlackMetalWitch NOW WE MAKE SHIRTS!
@Haupstürmfuhrer Pepe Who did the /v/ shooting?
Can someone redpill me on why Assad dindu. Nuffin
nope
Did asssad use the gas
No
Proofs?
The Jews did it
False flag af
There is no gas
China isnt gonna do anything
>Wanting nuclear war
China is colonizing Africa
GODO
REMOVE NIGGER
Yes, and replace the Afrikaner and Boer
very good, goyim
"Pepe the frog" autocompletes as a search option at my college's research library.
hue
To be honest, I dont care as much as I used to do.
Like what can I do besides getting rid of commies?
>Godo
Yes?
Lol
Oh gosh the articles that come up are so bad
RACIST TRUMP FROGS
Guys, I should get into a new hobby
Is Steampunk good?
Q. When did memes become a force in American politics?
A. The 2008 election was the light-bulb moment. Campaigns were trying to reach out to younger voters on emergent social media platforms like YouTube and Facebook. Shepard Fairey's ''Hope'' poster went viral, inspired countless parodies and was an early breakthrough that shed a light on social media's potential for crowdsourced campaigning.
There were also so-called ''single serving'' sites like Barack Obama Is Your New Bicycle, which really blew up. That was a very simply laid-out website that would display randomly generated non sequiturs that portrayed Barack Obama as your helpful next-door neighbor, like, ''Barack Obama warmed up your car for you,'' or ''Barack Obama left a message on your blog.''
The general message was: Barack Obama is good for you, he is in tune with the social media generation.