Then im wrong. Up here in Canada, when i go to a site for work (mainly mines, farms, and grain/feed elevators) we don’t see people rolling up in prius’, kia souls and honda civics. It’s all f150s, tundras and 1500s loaded with equipment. I know thats anecdotal experience, but we also constantly are bombarded by marketing towards our blue collar trades people. Most of these people leam conservative politically. Most of us make really good wages. So that’s been my perspective.
Now im not saying trades workers and labours are their only marketing audiance, im saying its part of a wide array of audiences they try and market to.
I think the issue with the OP is equating specifically truck and utility vehicle owners to the flag styles = douche bag drivers. When the flag could be on any vehicle. While theres plenty of douche bag drivers in other vehicle’s.
Are there racists that use the flag as a statement, yes. Are there veteran’s who use is mourning in remembrance for fallen service members, yes. Are there people who just buy shit because they like USA and the color “looks cool”,yes. Now again, im not even from the USA, this is just whats projected out to us, and what information we have.
It really comes down to the individual who has the flag, and what it represents to them. One would need to ask the individual the “why”, which didn’t happen in OPs original post pre-edits.
But we’ll just have to agree to disagree on tradies and labours being one of the target demographics for truck/utility vehicle marketing.
Thanks for your addtional perspective on the topic buddy.
My dude, its the same platform. Its the battle.net launcher. Now you can just buy it through steam and launch battle.net from steam without just adding it as a “non steam game”.
The reviews are 100% valid. Hows it devalidate a users gameplay experience becuase the battle.net app launches from steam all of a sudden?
I launch my battle.net client from steam for all my battle.net games via “adding non-steam game”.
How is that unethical in any manor?