I think you're reading a lot into what I am saying.
I haven't said Bullet Club or their shirt is part of the problem. I am simply saying the image is tone deaf after a tragedy.
The assumption that my core instinct after Vegas is that some wrestling stable should lose their income is misleading. It obviously wasn't the first thing I thought about after Vegas. My first instinct after Vegas was my usual fuck the US and their lack of meaningful gun control. My thoughts about the Bullet Club t-shirt aren't even that big of a deal but since this is a wrestling thread I thought I would bring it up. You seem to be inflating my investment in seeing the shirt removed from HT.
It's simply a concern, and a valid one, that the shirt might look a little tone deaf after a tragedy like this.
I'm not saying the shirt is the cause of the issue or that removing the sale of the shirts will somehow fix the problem. That's ridiculous. I am just saying that as a promotion tool it's ultimately problematic to promote yourself in association with guns in a country that has a gun violence problem. I don't think that's unreasonable at all.
You seem to keep claiming that I am suggesting that there is a link between BC and actual gun violence in America. Specifically this: "There is no real link between violence and violent media, unlike links between bigotry and bigoted media. They are just different things and need to be be approached differently.". I haven't said that at all. I'm just saying it's tone deaf and inappropriate.
Also, for the record, I love Bullet Club and the shirt. I don't want to see it go either. I just have concerns that as a promotional tool, as fantastic as it has been, it may be a problem down the line when trying to expand to the US. That's all.