Slovakian politician rants on woke games during eu debate

A member of the European Parliament interrupted a discussion on video game preservation with criticisms of diversity in titles like Assassin's Creed Shadows. The comments came during a plenary session in Strasbourg on May 21.

Milan Uhrík, leader of the far-right Republic Movement party from Slovakia, spoke during the debate on the Stop Destroying Videogames initiative. He claimed that wokeness and political correctness are harming the industry and gave examples including games where players must assume a queer character or an African samurai in Assassin's Creed Shadows.

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Illustration of SVT Agenda debate with Jimmie Åkesson accusing Greens over energy and vote compensation.
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SVT Agenda leaders' debate heats up over energy and vote compensation

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Party leaders debated energy, healthcare, economy and migration in SVT's Agenda on Sunday evening. The tone was more restrained than in the autumn debate, but tensions rose over the parliamentary vote compensation system and energy policy. Jimmie Åkesson accused the Greens of trying to 'buy' votes from independents.

The Stop Killing Games campaign presented its case to the European Parliament, receiving a favorable response from officials. Committee vice chair Nils Ušakovs highlighted concerns over games becoming unplayable after purchase due to discontinued services. Officials pledged further investigation into consumer protections for digital games.

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The European Parliament is voicing growing concerns over US interferences, including sanctions against figures like Thierry Breton and Judge Nicolas Guillou. A special commission led by Nathalie Loiseau plans a session on the issue. At the European Commission, Ursula von der Leyen appears to be looking the other way.

Culture Minister Wolfram Weimer, facing accusations of state control after constitutional protection checks on leftist bookstores, called for greater freedom of opinion at the Leipzig Book Fair. Critics accuse him of sidestepping the controversy that led to boos at the opening ceremony.

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A group of gamers and activists gathered outside Electronic Arts headquarters in Redwood City on May 11 to voice opposition to the company's recent layoffs, microtransactions, and a planned $55 billion acquisition by Saudi Arabia.

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