Wednesday, October 29, 2025

Trump Administration Using Nazi-Like Recruitment Posters

The Labor Dept is using AI-generated recruitment posters for its "Blue Collar Boom" ad campaign, glorifying white, macho Christian males, similar to the propaganda posters used by the Third Reich.

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Trump Labor Dept promotes Aryan workforce in creepy Nazi-style ad campaign boingboing.net/2025/10/27/t ...

[image or embed]

-- Jennifer Ouellette (@jenlucpiquant.bsky.social) Oct 28, 2025 at 8:22 AM

Comments

More from the cited article ...

... "The American Dream belongs to the American People," says the Labor Department's latest propaganda poster, put up on Instagram two days ago, which shows a retro image of a clean-cut young (white) man set against a pastoral hill with a church and an American flag. Another poster from five days ago, featuring a Sunday-clad church family (White? You bet!) sitting in a pew, advertises "A dream worth fighting for!"

And then there is poster after poster, since at least August, showing variations of the same Aryan-American worker type, with slogans such as, "Your Nation Needs You!" "Make America Skilled Again!" and perhaps the most fascist of them all, "Build Your Homeland's Future." ...


#1 | Posted by LampLighter at 2025-10-28 10:55 PM

@1 ... "The American Dream belongs to the American People," ...

Those posters and their accompanying rhetoric seems to define who Republicans think are the "American People."


#2 | Posted by LampLighter at 2025-10-28 10:56 PM

This is targeted more at a Nick Fuentes audience member than a Charlie Kirk audience member.

Which of course makes sense after a Nick Fuentes audience member murdered Charlie Kirk.

#3 | Posted by snoofy at 2025-10-28 10:59 PM

"The American Dream belongs to the American People"

Claiming ownership of a dream
is just the sort of petty selfishness
that exemplifies The Banality Of Evil.

#4 | Posted by snoofy at 2025-10-28 11:01 PM

@#41 ... Claiming ownership of a dream
is just the sort of petty selfishness
that exemplifies The Banality Of Evil. ...

I had not thought about that point of view.

But I do agree with it.

Claiming ownership of a dream means an intent to control the thoughts and aspirations of people.

Control of the dream is wrong.

Inspiring people to dream of the future and how the future can be better is correct.

Which President had the inspirational Hope posters?

Oh yeah, fmr Pres Obama.


#5 | Posted by LampLighter at 2025-10-28 11:10 PM

What artist put Obama in their HOPE poster? Obama had nothing to do with it.

#6 | Posted by LegallyYourDead at 2025-10-29 07:10 PM

Well, the dump is a nazi.

#7 | Posted by bat4255 at 2025-10-29 07:14 PM

"The tools of conquest do not necessarily come with bombs and explosions and fallout. There are weapons that are simply thoughts, attitudes, prejudices to be found only in the minds of men. For the record, prejudices can kill, and suspicion can destroy, and a thoughtless frightened search for a scapegoat has a fallout all of its own for the children, and the children yet unborn.

And the pity of it is that these things cannot be confined to the Twilight Zone."

#8 | Posted by Derek_Wildstar at 2025-10-30 12:55 PM

Nazi!

*Drink*

#9 | Posted by BellRinger at 2025-10-30 11:05 PM

@#9

Do try harder to be relevant.

#10 | Posted by LampLighter at 2025-10-30 11:12 PM

@#4 ... "The American Dream belongs to the American People"

Claiming ownership of a dream
is just the sort of petty selfishness
that exemplifies The Banality Of Evil....

Yeah.

But, how does stating that the American Dream belongs to the American People cause the apparent push-back of your comment?

imo, each American should work to build the world they want to live in.

Is that opinion of mine wrong?

#11 | Posted by LampLighter at 2025-10-30 11:16 PM

Dido - Here with Me (1999)
www.youtube.com

Wasn't that the theme song of a UFO-inspired show on TV?

Lemme look ...

Found this ...

Roswell (TV series)
en.wikipedia.org(TV_series)

... Roswell is an American science fiction television series that presents a timeline where the Roswell UFO exists, and aliens are hiding in plain sight as a trio of high school-aged teenagers.

Developed, produced, and co-written by Jason Katims, the series aired on The WB from October 6, 1999 to May 21, 2001, and later on UPN from October 9, 2001 to May 14, 2002. Sixty-one episodes in total were broadcast over the show's three seasons. ...

Production

Roswell High was originally developed by 20th Century Fox Television and Regency Television for the Fox Network, but it eventually landed on The WB (retitled simply to Roswell) thanks to the latter network's offer to extend a full 22-episode upfront commitment.

The pilot episode was filmed in 12 days with a budget of $2,000,000.[3]

"The Morning After," the second episode of the series, was the first episode with the full title sequence utilizing the theme song, "Here With Me" by Dido. ...


#12 | Posted by LampLighter at 2025-10-30 11:24 PM

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