>make gun parts in America
>get delisted by credit card companies
What in the HAY
Ponies is this true?
Valve recently purged a bunch of titles due to payment processors too.
https://x.com/nichegamer/status/1945457604131447091What are the Jews planning?
>>394255This is why people need to learn to make their own shit. 3d printers can do metal now if you have a kiln.
Thevirtualfoundry.com
>>394271It's not just about gun parts, it's about payment processors testing how much power they can leverage. If they can force censorship of art and determine what goods get manufactured, even in the context of government-contracted industries, they will be able to rule over us and control our culture and our economy. Not to mention the national security risks in credit card companies vetoing government weapons contractors.
>This is why you people to (ignore the problem) and (settle for something less than ideal) that is equally vulnerable to unlawful oversight
No. 3D printing isn't at all a solution to armies of kikes a demo-crattle deciding what you can and can not buy with your credit card.
>>394273This.
If we don't have the freedom to spend our money on what we want, is it really our money? It becomes little more than Soviet-style ration cards at that point.
Credit card companies operate with near total monopolies with digital transactions. If they're allowed to cut access on arbitrary terms, they have an egregious amount of power over our economy and culture.
>>394272I understand that payment processors should not be able to pull this shit, but what can we actually do? At least learning to make your own shit reduces the amount of leverage others have over what you will own.
>>3942733D printers are not equally vulnerable as people can even make their own printers. The shitlibs are going to get worse about this shit and all of us need to get proactive and learn to produce our own goods.
>>394277>but what can we actually do?Well, imo this should be the kind of issue that calls for legislation, although I doubt politicians are willing to help us.
The best thing we can do is raise awareness though. Credit Card companies are doing this to see what they can get away with quietly, so don't let them go unopposed and spread memes about how shitty this practice is.
>At least learning to make your own shit reduces the amount of leverage others have over what you will own.This is certainly true for personal survival, but the fight is bigger than survival. Video game platforms like Steam, art commissions, art forums, and message boards like /mlpol/ are all at risk for censorship by credit card companies because they rely on digital transactions, which means they could potentially wipe out vast swathes of internet culture all at once.
They're not afraid to do it on popular sites either. They convinced Tumblr to kill itself by banning NSFW art, which was a death sentence for that site. They are ready and willing to destroy entire online communities, big or small.
>>394282It is bigger then survival. I agree we should raise awareness, but we should also be learning to build things and building communities. If we had our own mesh networks, manufacturing, and crypto currency the kikes would never be able to establish control ever again.
>>394255Having been in the manufacturing industry for many many years, the short version is yes. Longer version is that its much worse under the surface of what you see.
My first boss was a pistol collector. There was one model he had, a 1911, that was nearly perfect except for the trigger being made out of aluminum. After work hours he put in a lot of effort into making a stainless steel trigger for it, for himself. Once he got something he liked, he made a couple hundred extra and just put a post in some sort of gun forum and sold some of them from there. Somehow his insurance found out he was selling gun parts and doubled his insurance premium for no extra coverage because of the triggers he was now occasionally selling from an internet forum.
Mind you, this is just the trigger, none of the mechanisms involved, so its just a couple of pin holes and some serrations curved in a way that feels nice on the finger.
Brownells was blacklisted by UPS for shipping gun parts suddenly without any warning from UPS... while they had $50k of gun parts in the middle of being shipped to customers. Source? here is one
https://www.concealedcarry.com/news/ups-cancels-brownells-account/ - happened 3 years ago. Not sure what the fallout is from that, I don't order stuff from brownells very often at all. They mostly sell tools to people who work on guns and gunsmiths. They don't sell completed firearms.
Say what you want about Gab.com - but they too ran into payment processors and banks canceling them. They ended up building their own payment processor backend stuff and completed the papaerwork for being their own bank. Gabpay is the only mostly non-cucked payment processor I know of. Maybe Gabe Newell will build their own too, like what Gab did.
There are many more stories like the ones above. Hopefully the new systems people build will stick around.
>>394255The org that had payment processors bully Steam are now using their influence to have articles about their behavior pulled down. Keep in mind one of the major goals of this org is to have major games like GTA V and Detroit Become Human pulled.
Archived article
https://web.archive.org/web/20250719204151/https://www.vice.com/en/article/group-behind-steam-censorship-policies-have-powerful-allies-and-targeted-popular-games-with-outlandish-claims//v/ mods are clamping down on this story. Gamergate 2 against cuckservatives and payment processors?
>>394566Is this another example of activist investment grabbing companies by their balls to unironically kill themselves? Even worse is that this is a group forcing another group to force ANOTHER group to do shitty things. It's such egregiously evil behavior, what the fuck.
>>394567My theory is that the financial elites were given everything in their lives, but genuine love and affection from their parents and they make that everyone else's problem.