New elements are introduced in serial fiction all the time. There's no point in a story, whether it's the 7th film or the second act of the 1st film, where new minority characters become tokens.
New elements are introduced in serial fiction all the time. There's no point in a story, whether it's the 7th film or the second act of the 1st film, where new minority characters become tokens.
She may think she's lost favour with the Lord of Light.
If they're discovering real science that would be cool.
But what does this link do to service the story? Why do people want her to be related to an existing character?
Leia knew of Obi-Wan from the beginning. He was her only hope, as per her message.
And there wasn't any reason why Jabba couldn't have been on another planet right? Prior to Jedi the only thing we knew about Jabba was that he hires smugglers and puts bounties on the ones that fail. All they got out of returning to Tatooine was Luke and Han's exchange about being born there and dying there. The space…
Thanks for the reply.
Fair enough, I'll try not to put my foot in my mouth in the future.
Not anything I ever said. I don't know why health can't be a part of the conversation on a societal level. Is it because public health and body-shaming are completely separate conversations?
I don't know what your point is.
Why?
Just watched this and it looks awesome! I love that this and the main saga star women. I can't wait to share these with my niece as she grows up.
I want magic back too, but not cheap soap opera plots like (Force) amnesia.
God I hope they don't introduce mind-wipes or other weapons of mass ret-conning.
I'm not, never did, but wasn't clear at all originally. I'm just gonna bow out because I misinterpreted the discussion from the beginning. I'm not really adding anything.
None. As such I cannot give them an accurate picture of their health so I do not tell people whether or not their weight is unhealthy.
It isn't. I grasp it just fine. I just said I'm not qualified to comment on another person's health, and therefore shouldn't do it.
Of course. For it not to be shaming it has to be an honest and reasonably-held position to take. I can't make that call because I am not a doctor. I figured we were speaking in the abstract about informing people about how healthy their weight is.
An accurate picture of their health is so much more important than them feeling good.
Telling someone they are at an unhealthy weight doesn't seem like shaming them to me.