Don't Use Bonfire If You Care About Artistic Freedom. My Problems With Bonfire and Their Censorship.

Subscribers:
15
Published on ● Video Link: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xCOZhzqHBsQ



Game:
Bonfire (2020)
Duration: 4:10
5 views
0


Hi guys. This is TheologyMatters.
Today we're talking about Bonfire and more specifically, their design approval system. So before I begin, I want to said this is an objective issue. One that affects both sides. You'll figure out why I say this in a moment. So how did my journey on Bonfire begin?
Last year, I looked for a place to do business with custom t-shirts. Eventually, I landed on Bonfire. At Bonfire, I created many designs like my "I'm Catholic" shirt and even the most controversial at that time "Member of the Patriarchy". That lasted for about a year.
So why did it have to stop?
I had been reading "The Case For Patriarchy" by Timothy Gordon which in the book, he talks about the goal of feminism even the beginning stages that eventually would create the borderline man-hating society and female superiority. While reading, I also was educating myself on the teachings of the Church including its social teaching and how conservatism will fail without the Church. Anyways, while I was in the Chick-fil-a line waiting to give my order, I was thinking of a shirt that I could use the MAGA slogan on. The Make Blank Adjective Again. Until, I created the one phrase that would politically send enemy and brother against me.
Sooooo, yeah. Either you chuckled with a "you have a death wish", think I hate women, or think that I'm going to far. And possibly all of them.
Anywho, after I created the design, I decided to order it.
And with the big brain play also some trolling.
I called the order "Will This Order Pass" and within two days the order had been refunded. So I checked first if it was a finance issue, but it wasn't. Next, I reached out to Bonfire to see what was up. And then the predictable happen. They responded with the most vague, no dip Sherlock response. So naturally I answered back. Maybe a little too aggressive.
My response included my bibilical basis for the design and also pointed out the hypocrisy with another campaign that had the words "gay sex" on it. In other words, its artistic censorship.
This is proof of the gay sex campaign. (Gah)
They didn't respond to my rebuttal.
So I send another inquiry saying I had sent in an inquiry a week before and then recounted the story of asking Bonfire what's up. I explained where the design's inspiration came from and also a solution to appease them.
To this day, I have not received any word back from Bonfire to this day of recording.
In conclusion, Bonfire, you failed this man. You just like YouTube chose when to enforce rules and restrictions only on one side. Now, I sound like Steven Crowder.
So, during the winter break and the last semester, I have moved
my designs over to Spring, which had the balls to print the "Make Women Submissive" shirt.
__________________________________________________________________
Enjoy the video and help me out by subscribe to this channel and following me on social media.
__________________________________________________________________

MERCH: https://theologymatters.creator-spring.com/
TWITTER: https://twitter.com/TheolgyMatrs
RUMBLE: ?May?







Other Statistics

Bonfire Statistics For TheologyMatters

TheologyMatters presently has 5 views for Bonfire across 1 video, and less than an hour worth of Bonfire videos were uploaded to his channel. This makes up less than 0.12% of the total overall content on TheologyMatters's YouTube channel.