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U.S. Subscriptions At Ultra-Woke Disney Slow To A Crawl After Company Loses Left-Wing Political Battles

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Ubiquitous

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Aug 12, 2022, 9:16:11 PM8/12/22
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Domestic subscription rates for Disney’s flagship streaming service
have slowed to a crawl after the entertainment conglomerate engaged in
left-wing political causes.

Although Disney reported on Wednesday that total subscriptions for
Disney+ increased from 87.6 million to 93.6 million during the third
quarter of its current fiscal year, the vast majority of the growth
arose from international users, with only 100,000 new subscriptions
coming from Americans. The latest figures represent a significant
slowdown from the 1.5 million new domestic subscribers added by Disney
during its fiscal second quarter.

Indeed, toward the conclusion of the second quarter — which, for
Disney, ended on April 2 — the company leaped into the fray of
contentious left-wing political battles. Beyond vowing to “take action”
against the state of Texas for officials’ orders to investigate
transgender procedures upon children as child abuse, Disney opposed
parental rights legislation in Florida signed by Republican Governor
Ron DeSantis banning classroom instruction about sexual orientation and
gender identity from kindergarten to third grade.

“Our goal as a company is for this law to be repealed by the
legislature or struck down in the courts, and we remain committed to
supporting the national and state organizations working to achieve
that,” a Disney spokesman told The Daily Wire.

Despite its fervent activism, Disney appeared to be drastically out of
step with the American public. In an exclusive poll from The Daily
Wire, 64% of Americans — including 62% of Democrats and 57% of
independents — supported the Florida law.

In response, DeSantis repeatedly vowed that Disney would “never run
this state” during his tenure and signed legislation nixing the Reedy
Creek Improvement District — a 39-square-mile special governing and tax
district near Orlando, Florida, that hosted Disney World.

“Someone said Disney has all these special perks,” DeSantis explained.
“Should you retaliate against them for them coming out and demagoguing
this bill? I don’t believe you ‘retaliate,’ but I think what I would
say is, as a matter of first principle, I don’t support special
privileges in law just because a company is powerful, and they’ve been
able to wield a lot of power.”

Meanwhile, a Disney producer openly boasted about her “not-at-all
secret gay agenda,” as well as the company’s efforts to infuse
children’s productions with LGBTQ content. Disney launched a “Pride
collection” of rainbow-colored merchandise for children in late May.

Disney is by no means the only American corporation facing backlash
from consumers for promoting LGBTQ content. Insurance company State
Farm was forced to back down after outrage over its plan to donate
books about transgenderism to schools and public libraries for children
as young as five years old, while streaming service Netflix elected to
take a hardline stance against censorship amid employee backlash to a
comedy special from Dave Chappelle critical of transgenderism.

Though many Americans want companies to advance certain causes beyond
their bottom lines, another exclusive poll from The Daily Wire recently
showed that most American investors would rather see companies pursue
profits rather than pontificating on political matters. While 29% of
respondents to the poll agreed it is a “good thing” for companies to
leverage their financial power for political or social means supported
by executives, 58% — twice as many — said it is a “bad thing.”

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Let's go Brandon!

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