“Stupid is as stupid does.”
That saying, popularized by the 1994 movie Forrest Gump, has been around a good while. The expression means that a person’s intelligence can be judged by his actions. Someone can have a law degree from Yale, but if he drives his car at 35 mph on an acceleration ramp while merging onto an interstate, then he clearly isn’t as bright as his degree might otherwise suggest.
Sometimes people confuse stupidity and ignorance, but they are two altogether different beasts. Ignorance means a “lack of knowledge or information.” A D.C. politician who keeps voting to spend bucketloads of money when the country is trillions of dollars in debt is not ignorant.
This brings me to the recent controversies that erupted when two major corporations, Anheuser-Busch and Nike, decided to feature a transgender TikTok star in their advertising. In an ad for Bud Light, faux-female Dylan Mulvaney appears in a bathtub of bubbles, blowing soapsuds from his hands and trying to strangely flirt with the camera as he enjoys a beer. Nike features this same man-girl in social media ads for athletic leggings and sports bras. “They’re so comfortable and buttery soft,” wrote Mulvaney, “perfect for workouts and everyday wear!”
Both advertisements brought a barrage of criticism from consumers. In one short video posted all over social media, singer-songwriter Kid Rock says: “Grandpa’s feeling a little frisky today. Let me say something to all of you and be as clear and concise as possible.” He lifts an automatic rifle, blows away several 24-can boxes of Bud Light, turns to the camera, and, with middle finger raised, says: “F*** Bud Light! F*** Anheuser-Busch!” In Florida, the owner of a liquor store is refusing shipments of the popular beer, and many others have declared they’re done with it as well.
Nike customers are voicing the same outrage:
I really used to enjoy @Nike as a brand but I will never wear another shoe from them after they feature Dylan Mulvaney as their new ambassador for women’s clothing.
When will these brands understand that women do not want men dressing up as them to advertise their products?
— Ada Lluch 🇪🇸 (@ada_lluch) April 5, 2023
So, time for a question: Did these corporate advertising departments act in ignorance? Or are they just that stupid?
Neither option speaks well of these executives. If Anheuser-Busch doesn’t understand that most of its customer base consists of ordinary folks who don’t drink IPA beers—people who might be unsympathetic to a man flouncing around as a woman—then that ignorance is just pathetic. They need to get away from their drawing boards and visit some local bars and convenience stores, and they’ll see who buys their beer.
On the other hand, if the makers of Bud Light decided to feature Dylan Mulvaney in spite of their customers in hopes of joining the woke mob, then that decision was stupid. The point of a company manufacturing beer is to sell beer. To try to sell that beer while offending many of your customers is the very definition of stupid.
The key is that those of us who oppose this insanity need to stand for our values. These companies will get away with their stupidity if Americans like us financially support this nonsense.
Dylan Mulvaney is a laughable figure who will soon be forgotten, and the companies using him to promote their goods are pathetic, but an identical stupidity plagues our nation’s government, corporations, and cultural gurus. It’s a disease that stems from several causes—intellectual arrogance, for one, and an ignorance of human nature—but also making this list is a lack of common sense.
Common sense tells us that to judge people by the color of their skin, as critical race theorists advocate, is in itself racist. Common sense tells us that men participating in female sports contests as women is unfair and sick. Common sense dictates that closing down an economy, shuttering schools for months, and instituting vaccine mandates, as governments did during the pandemic, will inflict horrible damage on a society.
“I would rather be governed by the first 2,000 people in the Boston telephone directory,” conservative writer William F. Buckley Jr. famously said, “than by the 2,000 people on the faculty of Harvard University.” Later, he added this preface to that statement: “I rejoice over the influence of the people over their elected leaders since, by and large, I think that they show more wisdom than their leaders or their intellectuals.”
Two hundred years earlier, Voltaire noted that “Common sense is not so common.” The so-called elites of our country seem determined to prove the truth of that aphorism.