SyFy Loves Union Protesters, Hates Those Darn Company Owners

SyFy Loves Union Protesters, Hates Those Darn Company Owners

One of the biggest hit series on the science fiction cable channel SyFy is “Warehouse 13,” a show where federal agents traipse about the country recovering “artifacts” that have dangerous, other worldly powers.

The show’s latest installment indulged a few real world, left-wing political tropes – slamming capitalism, praising unions and attacking southerners.

(Some spoilers ahead …)

Monday’s episode centered around the recovery of an “artifact” hidden somewhere in a West Virginia steel mill that is undergoing a union strike.

Naturally, as soon as the agents get to the steel mill, they are immediately suspicious of the steel mill’s owner, and they interrogate him as if he is an obvious criminal just because, well, he is a business owner, after all. Naturally, the owner is played as a dismissive, jerk. Because, well, he’s a business owner.

At one point the owner tells the agents that in this economy he’s hard pressed to keep the lights on to which one of the agents dismissively says, “Oh, get down off your cross we need the wood.”

As the episode continues, the union members are all presented as dedicated folks, interested only in what is best for “the workers.” Though the agents do cast temporary suspicion on the union’s shop steward — a suspicion that’s quickly dispelled — the owner is considered suspicious throughout the episode.

Naturally, the mill owner does turn out to be a bad guy (though not the bad guy). As the plot has it, the mill owner was caught abusing workers in the past, and this time sabotaged his own machines at the mill to hurt his workers for “insurance money.” Naturally they don’t bother to explain how that would work.

And, maybe it’s just my natural conspiracy theorist stealing over me, but, gee, why do you think that they made a steel mill owner one of the bad guys? Did it maybe have something to do with the lefty narrative that Mitt Romney and his Bain Capitol killed a steel worker’s wife?

These jabs weren’t the only ones aimed at certain sectors of the country featured in this episode. Two of the show’s characters also attacked America’s great southland, specifically North Carolina.

One of the main characters in the show is gay. For the episode he is sent home for reasons I won’t try to go into here, but he’s unhappy to do so. Turns out he’s not on speaking terms with his mother. As they arrive at his mom’s home, he shares why he hasn’t returned home in years.

“My mom and I had a fight,” he said.

His partner asks, “what, about the gay thing?”

He replied, “No, this is New Jersey, not North Carolina.”

So, the message of “Warehouse 13” seems to be that unions are good, business owners are sleazy bad guys who want to hurt people and anyone living in the south is a mindless bigot and hater.

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