hastur
UnspeakableCuteness
hastur

Incorrect, I am focusing entirely on the content of their criticism, and nothing else. Its how I came to the conclusion that their entire critique is based on nothing more than racism and xenophobia.

“Mighty whitey”, you’ve used that term as a racial slur several times now. Its a good thing I’m not white or I’d be terribly offended. I can’t imagine what it must be like to live in a country where being persecuted for being white is now an accepted norm.

I haven’t mentioned anything about the director. Infact the director’s level headed response shown in this article suggests that he’s simply taking the racist and xenophobic attacks in stride.

To be fair to Blizzard, Hearthstone has 9 classes, each with their own set of class-specific cards.

You asked for examples of how American culture critics were able to generate so much concerted negative press that they successfully browbeat foreign companies into submission, and I gave you the ones I could recall without any prior preparation. You are entitled to your opinion that such blatant acts of xenophobic

Well, the prevailing arguement just last month was that anybody who didn’t like the Ghostbusters (2016) trailer was simply a misogynist, correct?

Now playing

Wrong? No, I’m not wrong. I’m just allowing racist xenophobes to continue being racist xenophobes.

And here I thought that 2 companies working together across national boarders to create a movie would be a positive, not a negative. But alas, the fact that it was a cooperative effort only serves as ammunition for racist xenophobes to further their agenda.

He’s not the hero, he’s a hero, one of several in a diverse multiracial cast, in a fantasy movie about fighting dragons. We have 2 white guys, a Chillean guy (whom I assume is playing a Spanish character), a Turkish guy, and a few big name Chinese actors.

I’m not surprised that people hardly remember, since the US usually moves from one manufactured controversy to the next.

Considering that the US has a history of successfully coercing companies in other nations into adherring to their set of values using this exact same tactic of publishing an unending torrent of negative press from culture critics, you’ll understand if most of the world is weary anytime any American culture critic goes

And I would say that American culture critics should not try to force their narrow-minded cultural values on other nations, as they have been wont to do, because it relies on the racist and xenophobic assumption that they know better than other cultures.

Whether or not criticism is oppression depends entirely on the intent of the critic. In this case, the culture critics are pretty clearly trying to oppress the Chinese film industry.

Exactly, and my valid criticism regarding the whole thing is that the US culture critics are being racist xenophobes for trying to force their own narrow-minded cultural views upon the Chinese movie industry.

Not that many, but there were some due to the silk and spice trade, correct? Let Matt Damon be one of them.

Its definitely happens on an annoyingly regular basis. However, you do have a point that its independent of whether or not the criticism raised over Matt Damon’s casting is valid or not.

Wait, if I’m anti-SJW for calling out racism and xenophobia, does that mean that SJWs support racism and xenophobia?

Criticism is not oppression.

US culture critics attempting to oppress Chinese nationals? Sounds incredibly racist and xenophobic to me.