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Netflix’s Ted Sarandos Visiting White House to Discuss Warner Bros. Purchase as Attorneys General Say It’s Bad for America

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Netflix’s top brass, led by co-CEO Ted Sarandos, is reportedly heading to the White House for high-level talks on acquiring Warner Bros. Discovery amid a fierce bidding war with Paramount—and now a chorus of Attorneys General is crying foul, claiming the deal spells doom for American interests. This isn’t just corporate chess; it’s a seismic shift in media power that could reshape Hollywood’s narrative machine, the very one churning out anti-gun propaganda like clockwork. Picture this: Netflix, already a streaming behemoth with originals that routinely demonize firearms and Second Amendment heroes (think *The Crown* glossing over royal gun cultures or dystopian thrillers portraying armed citizens as villains), swallowing Warner Bros.’ vast library. From *The Matrix* sequels to DC’s woke reboots, that’s an arsenal of content primed for even heavier progressive spin.

For the 2A community, the red flags are waving harder than at a Trump rally. Consolidation like this hands unprecedented control to a handful of execs—Sarandos included—who’ve publicly trashed gun rights. Remember his 2022 defense of *Cuties* amid backlash? Now imagine that mindset curating Warner’s output, amplifying ATF puff pieces or scripting Superman as a red-flag law poster boy. Attorneys General, likely from red states, aren’t wrong to push back; this merger could turbocharge the cultural war on firearms, flooding airwaves with narratives that normalize confiscation while burying pro-2A stories. White House involvement reeks of Biden-era meddling, too—expect antitrust reviews laced with DEI mandates, forcing even more content quotas that sideline armed self-defense tales.

The implications? 2A patriots need to watch this like hawks. If Netflix wins, we face a monopolized megaphone blasting disarmament dogma 24/7, eroding public support for our rights. But silver linings exist: boycotts work (just ask Bud Light), and indie creators are rising via platforms like Rumble. Stock up on ammo, tune out the stream, and support 2A filmmakers—because if Hollywood consolidates further, the real battle for the narrative goes prime time. Stay vigilant, America.

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