kamaireturns
Ka Mai uses a burner 'cause he hates social media
kamaireturns

It’s not nihilistic. It’s realistic. Corporations exist to make money.

I didn’t make any insults.  I stated the facts as I saw them.  The perspective on display was privileged and lacked empathy, and a lack of empathy is a moral failing.  

I’m trying to kill two more hours until quitting time.  

Anger is not a zero-sum game. You can be angry at more than one thing.

Also it’s not nihilistic to see that corporations are full of shit. I don’t think you quite understand the correct usage of that term.

You may have a point, but the way you’re expressing yourself right now makes you sound so aggressive that it’s hard to not dismiss whatever you’re saying as a rant.

If video games don’t intersect with real world issues, then Blizzard doesn’t get to pat itself on the back for things like “inclusion” or “diversity,” and it doesn’t get to specifically cite the opinions of Korean feminist groups as examples of how great they are at those things.

You’re trying to hold a corporation responsible to what they say they want to do, which is extremely naive.

The issue of school uniforms is not nonsense. The issue of what outfits dva wears most definitely is.

Maybe it’s because literally no one in the article or in these comments is expecting perfect representation.

People looking towards corporations for perfect representation are failing themselves because common sense can tell us that that’s a naive thing to expect.

Okay. We’re aware. What else ya got?

You didn’t address my point: that this is not nonsense to the people that have to deal with the sort of sexual objectification symbolized by the Korean school girl uniform, i.e. girls in Korea.

Yes, as described in the article, they have the “privilege” of being sexualized as minors by adult men, sexually harassed, and treated as second class citizens in their country.

No, it’s the failing of a company that touts its “representation,” and then “represents” a Korean woman in a costume that is a symbol for sexual harassment, misogyny, and the sexualization of children in the Korean culture.

You can’t believe it because you’re privileged enough not to have to deal with the actual issues that the people who are made to wear these sorts of uniforms in real life have to deal with, and you’re also not empathetic enough to understand the perspective of another fellow human being, and how such a thing might

I mean, that’s one interpretation, but I don’t buy it. She’s shown to be cool and confident long before she becomes the director. And one might argue that it’s for that reason she is chosen. Her characterization and the interactions with her subordinates goes well beyond “well, she’s the boss, and this is my job.”

It’s the corporate capitalist wing of the Chinese government. It’s goals are to use Capitalism to influence companies in Capitalist countries, for the purpose of promoting it’s own authoritarian values and suppressing pro-democratic speech among the workers in those countries.

Something tells me the big issue isn’t capitalism.

Every bully is a coward.