The act of pretending an undesirable political outcome puts you in serious physical danger, for the pupose of portraying people with whom you disagree as inherently violent or uncivil.
Perfected by American lefists in the aftermath of the 2016 presedential election, most notably through gimmicks like wearing "safety pins" in public and social media ramblings.
Derives from the act known as "flopping" in basketball, where a player pretends to get hurt in order to have a fouled called against an opponent.
Perfected by American lefists in the aftermath of the 2016 presedential election, most notably through gimmicks like wearing "safety pins" in public and social media ramblings.
Derives from the act known as "flopping" in basketball, where a player pretends to get hurt in order to have a fouled called against an opponent.
Person A: dude this safety pin thing is catching on.
Person B: Yup. The left really takes flopping to a whole new level.
Person B: Yup. The left really takes flopping to a whole new level.
by bengera November 14, 2016
where your flip-flops on friday
by lezzgetit May 03, 2022
by Newspaper June 28, 2022
by HarroldKnards August 29, 2019
by Bill Chancelhuaser March 23, 2024
by a1sauceypants July 02, 2020
When a TikToker is forced to abandon the app—whether due to a ban, burnout, or Wi-Fi tragedy—and awkwardly crawls back to ancient social media relics like Facebook and Instagram to satisfy their social media addiction. It’s like leaving a party at a nightclub and ending up at a bingo hall.
“Ever since TikTok got banned in their country, Sarah’s been posting motivational quotes on Facebook. Such a total TikTok flip-flop.”
by Calibudz22 January 21, 2025