Mortal Kombat Beats Competition, Brutalizes Senses

The gory Mortal Kombat 11 video game, with 8 million copies sold worldwide, has been banned for its over-the-top brutality in China, Japan, Indonesia and Ukraine. That hasn’t stopped Mortal Kombat (2021)—the R-rated movie—from dismembering the competition at the box office.

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MK21 grossed $22.5 million domestically, earning it the top spot last weekend. Deadline reports MK21 had the biggest R-rated opening during the Covid-19 pandemic.

That ought to make you sick. What are we teaching the next generation about the value of human life when we let them consume images of wall-to-wall death? You can read the rest of this column HERE.

LucasFilm Cancels Gina Carano: This is the Way

She survived the Empire’s Death Star blast on planet Alderaan. Here on Earth, #Mandalorian mercenary and fan favorite @GinaCarano took a direct hit when LucasFilm and Disney+ vaporized all future appearances of the actress in any Star Wars projects. Her crime?

Was she arrested for reckless and drunk driving like Bruce Springsteen—causing JEEP to put the brakes on his Super Bowl Ad? Did she advocate explicit sex acts with multiple men like Cardi B does in her new No.1 Spotify single UP? Was she glorifying smoking pot and oral sex like CJ does in Whoopty? Nope.

The Gatekeepers of Diversity and Tolerance at LucasFilm were ironically intolerant and impatient with Carano’s pattern of “controversial” and “abhorrent” tweets including her:

  • Support of President Donald Trump

  • Refusal to include pronouns in her Twitter bio

  • Anti-mask beliefs and stance against the prolonged COVID shutdown

  • Call to open up churches and businesses

These tweets prompted LucasFilm Overlords to privately begin plotting a course to drop the rising star. But her post yesterday on Instagram was the final straw:

“Jews were beaten in the streets, not by Nazi soldiers but by their neighbors … even by children. Because history is edited, most people today don’t realize that to get to the point where Nazi soldiers could easily round up thousands of Jews, the government first made their own neighbors hate them simply for being Jews. How is that any different from hating someone for their political views.” [Emphasis added].

A thoughtful person understands Carano’s point: Having neighbors turn against their neighbors—as was the case under Hitler—is a bad thing and spawned the rise of fascism. It happened then. It could happen again. How is her observation of history anything but factual and logical? Clearly Carano is concerned about the rise of covid-snitching neighbors as evidenced in San Diego, Akron, Chicago, and Austin among many other cities.

Alas, LucasFilm and Disney+ executives fail to understand, as has been said elsewhere, there is a “distinction between banning hate speech and banning speech it hates.”

Ironically, liberalism portrays itself as being compassionate, loving, and quick to embrace diversity—except when you disagree with them. The adjacent sampling of hate-filled, profanity-laden tweets aimed at Carano by a fleet of “tolerant” Woke Commanders is an example of “Allodoxaphobia”—the fear of hearing other opinions.

Civil rights activist and author John Perkins is rightly concerned about a country “marked by the sins of racism, sexism, and all the other –isms, where we can’t disagree without also hating one another.”

He’s right. We can lob verbal grenades in social media all day long and even fire them from their jobs—or, preferably, we can follow the Lord who said, “come and reason together” (Isaiah 1:18).

This is the [better] Way.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Cardi B and the Year the World Got Sick

When I say the world got sick, I’m not referring to the corona virus. I’m talking about the complete and utter moral failure and lack of discernment by youth around the globe enabling Cardi B, a morally bankrupt hip-hopper, to be named “Woman of the Year” by Billboard magazine.

Does that sound like an exaggeration?

Take a moment to look up the lyrics to “WAP”—brace yourself, they’re explicit. Go ahead. Do it. Then explain how this pornographic song hit the No.1 spot on the Billboard Hot 100 chart—for four weeks—if it didn’t have a massive listening audience. In fact, “WAP” also became the first No.1 song on the Billboard Global 200 chart. You might want to read that again.

National Public Radio (NPR) lost all credibility with me when they listed “WAP” as their No.1 Song of the Year for 2020—a song they described as “raunchy fun.” NPR isn’t alone in their drooling over the latest hip hop smut-fest. With 93 million first week streams by jaded listeners, last year “WAP” set the world record for the “most streams for a song in a single week.”

As of this writing, there have been more than 205 million views of the video and just shy of 1 billion global streams of “WAP.” That’s sick.

Billboard’s December cover story gushed that 28-year-old Cardi B’s “unapologetic voice resonated far and wide in 2020 when the world needed it most.” Seriously? The world needed yet another XXX-rated hip hop song pumped into the kids AirPods at a time when parents have lost their jobs and, in turn, their homes?

How does a salacious sex-romp benefit family businesses which have been forced to close their doors forever?

How are lewd lyrics helping children, who have been deprived of friendships and peer interaction, cope with isolation, depression, and thoughts of suicide?

I’m still struggling to understand how Cardi’s “unapologetic voice” is what the world “needed most.”

For her part, Cardi acts surprised by those who would take issue with her vulgar lyrics. After all, she grew up listening to hardcore female rappers. She told Billboard, “I’m so used to listening to raunchy female rap music since I was a little girl” that “WAP” “to me was just a regular raunchy female rap song.” She adds, “I represent America.” I sure hope not.

For better or worse, America—and the world—are listening.

What are the implications for this generation of young listeners who stream her music? Who is helping teens process Cardi B’s fixation on genital pleasure and her “filthy bit of joy” (NPR) in light of God’s gift of sex and human sexuality? Who is raising a biblical standard of purity in a culture which has largely traded love for lust and where courting has been replaced by copulating?

Focus on the Family remains an excellent resource for moms and dads as they navigate their parenting journey in these turbulent times. Click here to learn more.

A final thought. The darker the night, the more we need light. When it comes to entertainment choices in our homes, Philippians 4:8 provides a spotlight to live by: “Whatever is true, whatever is noble, whatever is right, whatever is pure, whatever is lovely, whatever is admirable—if anything is excellent or praiseworthy—think about such things” (NIV).

That’s what the world needs most.