Not an answer.
Not an answer.
1. If people are going to assume Depp’s guilty because he got arrested for being drunk, it’s only fair to assume she’s guilty of what she’s accused of for being arrested for fighting with her girlfriend.
Why do you ignore the allegations and evidence he presented but give credence to hers? Just because she’s a woman and he’s a man? Even though the study I quoted showed women in relationships that involve violence hit men more than men hit women, and about half of all domestic abuse is “both of them abuse is each…
For being drunk, true, but he’s never been charged with domestic abuse either, same with Heard, so why do you assume his guilt but not hers?
Yeah, makes her a hypocrite and Jezebel should have found literally almost any other celebrity to quote. It’s that simple. She’s not a victim when she’s a co-perpetrator. She’s not Tina Turner here.
Depp’s never been charged with anything either, why do you automatically believe he’s guilty? He doesn’t have a record either, but you insist he’s guilty.
Yeah, that’s the one. She got into a fight with her girlfriend. On top of that, here’s the thing. Why are HER allegations of abuse credible, but his aren’t? Just because she’s a woman? On top of that, half of all domestic abuse is reciprocal. As in both husband and wife or boyfriend and girlfriend being equally…
They’re not “picking apart”, they’re just assuming he’s guilty because he got accused. So why is her accusation credible but his isn’t? Especially when she got arrested and put into jail for hitting her girlfriend previously?
You know I’m referring to this article, why are you arguing the semantics game instead of addressing the substance of my point? “It’s a bad idea to draw attention and quote her when she’s abusive, why quote an interview with her?” “Well this isn’t really an interview” is missing the forest for the trees.
But the difference is she’s the one who actually got arrested and everything and he isn’t, that should have been proof enough for you because in a domestic abuse call or similar it is basically ALWAYS the man who’s arrested when a call is put out to the cops, even if the man himself made the call. The fact it was her…
And now you’re still just insulting me rather than addressing my actual point. You really are being just incredibly weasley and disingenuous. You won’t actually address the substance of my argument, you’re just “ad hominem” attacking me.
So I point out real evidence that the person Jezebel chose to interview is a bad example of someone to interview in regards to “revenge porn” because she’s herself an abusive partner to Johnny Depp, and instead the site’s patrons choose to upvote you based on insults alone and under a dumb assumption I must be a dumb…
Wasn’t Amber Heard found out to be abusing her husband Johnny Depp? Why are you giving her a platform to speak about this when she’s not the right person to approach? In fact, she’s quite possibly one of the worst. https://www.usatoday.com/story/entertainment/celebrities/2019/07/26/johnny-depp-claims-amber-heard-put-c…
I LOVE Kojima but he doesn’t really make stories well. They’re overcomplicated or obtuse and using blatant stereotypes for his characters and overdone tropes and far, FAR too much focus on a woman’s T&A while pretending he’s somehow being empowering to them.
I’m more disappointed in Ava’s existence. She is terrible. Too much of a focus on her.
We didn’t really SEE “forcing them to change”, Steven literally just talked to them and then all the damage they did was handwaved away when it wasn’t outright ignored. On top of that, getting close WOULDN’T be an impossibility, Steven, himself a diamond, could get to them with ease, the Crystal Gems were holding…
“Unlike many other characters, actually has the goal of hurting people, which is new territory for the show.”
There have been literal studies on the danger of forgiving your abusers, the Breaking Point could have destroyed the Diamonds, and you could fix the damage they’ve done while still having them be punished in some way. Shame on you for making excuses for what’s a bad story.