Yeah yeah, the masses have to be made to suffer because some douchebags run things a certain way. I’ve read all of the rationalizations and justifications, its still racism.
Yeah yeah, the masses have to be made to suffer because some douchebags run things a certain way. I’ve read all of the rationalizations and justifications, its still racism.
I’ve mentioned several times already that US culture critics have the right to criticize. However, they do not have immunity from criticism, especially when they criticize something from outside the US.
My house is infested with Zubats. Being the shut-in recluse that I am, I plan to build an army of Golbats, all named aphabetically: Aolbat, Bolbat, Colbat, Dolbat, Eolbat, Folbat, Greg, Holbat, etc.
I do get how things work, I get that its socially acceptable to be racist against white people in the US, and I get that all this stuff about context and history is just an convenient excuse for racist xenophobes to continue spouting racist statements with impunity. Sure context and history is important, but in this…
I have explained. They’re ranting about the race of one character and calling it white-washing, thereby insinuating that they want that one white character to not be there.
If American culture critics are so used to being able to make racist statements with impunity that they can’t handle any pushback, then that’s their problem and not anyone else’s.
When enough of them say the same thing based off of racist ideals, it leads to oppression. This happens annoyingly often with the US.
There’s no progress to be made on that front because the ethnicity of the American culture critic was never an issue to me. I am aware of a person’s ethnicity and how the ethnicity of a critic like Jen Yamato could potentially rile people up when she’s critiquing a half-Chinese made movie, but I personally didn’t care…
Its not necessary for dealing with Asian-Americans, but its something you have to keep in mind when dealing with people who’re actually living in Asian regions, like the Chinese studio, director, actors, and audience.
Its more in line with how Chinese trailers are done when a film features an odd-one-out in terms of casting. The non-Chinese usually has slightly more screen-time, and will have some speaking lines, as an attention grabber.
Incorrect. I’m saying that the culture critics are racist and xenophobic because they have racist and xenophobic beliefs. The act of criticizing isn’t inherently racist nor xenophobic, its their reasoning that makes them racist and xenophobic.
That is unfortunate, but not unexpected.
And you have given no counter-arguements beyond “they’re not”. It appears we are at an impasse.
Expressing frustration borne out of their racist ideals.
Questions? I see no questions in articles like these, only racism and xenophobia. That entire article is basically a gigantic rant about both Matt Damon and the race of his character, based entirely on 1 trailer. The writer didn’t even watch the Chinese trailer.
Any word if there’s gonna be an iOS port?
Just because its a trope doesn’t make it not a racist slur. You used it as a derogetory term targeted at Matt Damon’s race, therefore its a racist slur. All you’ve done so far is continue to insist that the blatantly obvious racism and xenophobia committed by those culture critics is not racism and xenophobia, whilst…
Its rigged I tell ya, RIGGED!
Tsundere doesn’t target a particular gender. Both guys and girls can be tsundere.
It doesn’t matter if “mighty whitey” has a trope page. You used “mighty whitey” as a derogatory term that’s based on race, therefore its a racial slur. I know that racists tend to be blind to their own racism, but its pretty obvious for everyone else.