Fighting racism with racism isn’t, like. A thing. By definition, people who are targets of racism cannot be “counter-racist” against the people being racist at them—prejudiced, sure. But maybe read up on that, first off.
Fighting racism with racism isn’t, like. A thing. By definition, people who are targets of racism cannot be “counter-racist” against the people being racist at them—prejudiced, sure. But maybe read up on that, first off.
There are ways to pay for it, remove tax cuts for the wealthy, raise taxes on corps and the money hoarding rich. Drop the military budget by a few percentage points, get rid of Fossil Fuel subsidies. Shes not a radical, she wants action on things that we have just been sitting on for decades.
Brad Bird has already made his Fantastic Four movies. He just called them The Incredibles.
Something you didn’t pick up on, Tom, was how Marvel managed to make as true-blue American an icon as Cap an international one … basically by making him a 1960s rebel somehow time-warped into a 1940s B-movie serial.
Sincerity doesn’t have to equal hokiness, and this movie understands the difference perfectly. Cap does the hard things knowing exactly what they might cost, and Chris Evans shows that in every scene. This movie turns me into a pile of goo every time I see it, and I’m not afraid to admit it.
I rewatched TinTin recently and it was still a good time.
More like “Adult Take”!
Considering I saw some demo footage of Beyond Good and Evil 2 the other day and had a panic attack at the scope they’re going for, hearing this is like getting wrapped in a security blanket.
Surprised Ben didn’t just go in anyway. He seems the type of guy to do that.
There’s no attitude I find more repellent than aggressive hipster posturing. At some point people apparently decided that ironic detachment was the “cool” thing to do, and all it does is drag down everyone.
Except that is a complete mis-characterization of my statement and the facts to fit your opinion and views. Additionally by your statements I can tell you did not read the cited studies so don’t ask for evidence and deny it exists when received. The problem and the difference is the physical component which you are…
To put it simply there is no equivalence between the two due to physiological reactions, namely: Brain Chemistry
here’s the problem, and you’re really not getting it (as you keep doing this weird goal-post moving and straw-man kinda thing), these are people who are actively harming other individuals and taking away their agency.
It seems like many people hate that there’s a grey area in history, with complicated stories. Hell let’s just look at present day America:
I, like a lot of people seemingly, take issue with your perspective here. In 2018 more than ever, surely, it’s worth remembering that people are human and the ideals of “good” and “evil” are largely useless. I’d much prefer the people of the game be humanised (you know, because they were human?) rather than faceless…
Something missing from this review that Polygon mentioned in theirs is the closing words of the campaign from the book “Lovely Bones”. “Murderers are not monsters, they’re men. And that’s the most frightening thing about them.”. To me, DICE including this at the end shows they got it, that they knew what they were…
Eh, I don’t agree that a game like this should literally have to demonize every individual German soldier while telling a story, which is what you seem to crave. I’m sure plenty of Germans didn’t believe in what their country or their murderous leaders were doing during the war.
This reminds me of one of my favorite quotes from Captain America. “So many people forget that the first country the Nazis invaded was their own.”
Oh, Das Boot. You just know somewhere on the internet, in the year of our Lord 2018, someone has a dumb take saying Das Boot is bad because Nazis.
But there’s a problem. It’s 2018 and I don’t need or particularly want media to humanize Nazis. I acknowledge that history is complex, and I’m glad that Battlefield treats it that way. But The Last Tiger’s extraordinary production value is hell-bent on telling the tale of “the Good German” while glossing over the…