Good olâ fashioned nightmare fuel.
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@foxytomboy
Good olâ fashioned nightmare fuel.
Whitewashing: An American tradition. Hollywood shapes how we are seen and *not* seen. But we donât have to give them our money and views. Ghost in the Shell and Death Note are more missed opportunities to showcase Asian-American talent. Letâs not watch them.
*major wasnât Asian and wasnât meant to be portrayed as an Asian
I mostly agree with the pic. I hate what Americans do to Japanese media. Canât accept casting scarjo in fucking ghost in the shell when there are countless Asian actors to choose from.
Why is Goku there?
Why do other countries blackwash or yellowwash or brownwash white characters? Do activists give a shit? Do any activists really give a shit about anything or is it all ego?
Nobody complains when every single person in a korean movie is asian, but God forbid you draw a character too white or cast a white actor for a movie for a predominantly white audience. Hell you donât even need to go to other countries. We routinely recast white characters with black actors and the same people who complain about whitewashing celebrate it like the hypocrites they are.Â
And they act like white people are just claiming characters and celebrating the âwhitewashingâ when really most people hate it. Nobody fucking liked the dragonball movie and everyone criticized the casting of Goku. So youâre blaming like the one or two people responsible for the decision on a raceâŚthat actually hated the decision for the overwhelming part.
Hey man I'm no trying to start shit, also I'm not sure if you are Muslim or not, but as a Muslim and someone from the Middle East I think you may be misinformed about the enforcement of hijab. Actually, only Saudi and Iran make women wear headscarves of any kind. There are more places that it is banned than enforced. I actually find the American Flag hijab trend to be great and a good symbol for a broadening view and hopeful future.
I know that those countries enforce the hijab and some even ban it. However, there is unofficial pressure on wearing the hijab and the niqab throughout the Muslim World.  Perhaps, you are familiar with that. As for the American Flag hijab trend, I can see why you see it that way. I donât have a problem for anyone wearing a hijab as long itâs their choice. Like any other person, he or she is allowed to express their religion. Thatâs the great thing about living in the U.S. As for me, I see it being disgusting and disrespectful on what the flag symbolizes here in the U.S.. It represents freedom and liberty. Those oppressive societies that exist within muslim countries such as Saudi Arabia use the hijab, nijab, and the burka to put women in their place. To see a liberating symbol twisted into being used as an oppressive symbol yet masquerading as a liberating symbol, in my opinion is horrendous and ridiculous.
please dont tell me you are serious omfg
I am super cereal, OMG.Â
So do you like anything? Not to be rude but a lot of your post are to be against something, why not be positive?
My latest post should answer your question. If not, I draw what I want. If you donât like it, then sucks to be you.Â
Hello everyone. I want say thank you for the all 100+ followers. I didnât expect it honestly. So, I decided to make something a little special.Â
I find it rather odd that some Feminists support Islam, saying that itâs a Feminist Religion. So, I made this. Time and time again, I read stories of women being treated as second class citizens in Muslim countries such as Saudi Arabia. Women are forced into marriages in a young age and live out their lives being abused by their husbands and even killed. Itâs tragic.Â
Itâs deemed âIslamphobicâ to criticize Islam. Like any ideology, itâs open to criticism.Â
Day without A Woman passed. This scenario came up since the majority of nurses are women. Good thing the strike backfired. Imagine if this actually happened? All of this for the fight for âfemale equalityâ. What a joke.Â
This is the dumbest shit Iâve ever seen congrats you topped a shitpost
Thank you! Itâs a great honor.Â
Day without A Woman passed. This scenario came up since the majority of nurses are women. Good thing the strike backfired. Imagine if this actually happened? All of this for the fight for âfemale equalityâ. What a joke.Â
I'm not sure when you posted that last thing about pronouns, but they/them used as singular is now grammatically correct! It's been added into many dictionaries, and is now used as a gender neutral term, or instead of putting "he/she".
Thatâs fine. Again, for me personally, I will only use they/them pronouns as singular when asked. Itâs not something that I will use every day. Itâs also not often that I will come across someone who prefers to use those pronouns. As for the other gender neutral pronouns, I refuse to use them.Â
I'm here to facilitate a discussion, I don't mean to be aggressive and I am genuinely curious. Why are you opposed to the idea of using preferred pronouns, especially they/them or equivalents for people? It isn't much effort on your part, and if it was normalized, wouldn't that mean that fewer people would do it for attention (although I can assure you that is very rare)? I have been raised in a very liberal bubble, and while I will probably not change my opinions, I need a new perspective.
For they/them pronouns, it doesnât make sense grammatically because those are plural nouns. Yes, itâs true that the singular form of them was common 14th to 16th century and its usage is continued through the 1970s and 1980s to describe someone who is âgender neutralâ. I will use it in that way if that person asks me even though in my opinion, itâs not correct.
Yes, coming across people who prefer the they/them pronouns is rare and I will use them when I am asked to. However, other pronouns other than they/them and the regular he/him and she/her, I donât agree on using. I have more a problem with it especially when one can get fined for not using a preferred pronoun in the work place. One example is that such a law is in effect in New York. To have something like that written in law is abhorrent because itâs language policing. You assured me it is very rare yet there are laws out there that has the majority bend down to the minority.
I can tolerate using they/them pronouns when asked, but not when using ze or hir. I donât agree with these pronouns along with the idea of identifying as non-binary. All it is to me are people expressing themselves in fashion and thatâs fine. However, when one identifies as non-binary just because one dress outside of the norm is ludicrous to me. To even go as far as making up these preferred pronouns to attempt feel âspecialâ. I am a female who dresses in casual male clothing. I am still female because I have the sexual organs. I am comfortable with that. Unfortunately, those with gender dysphoria have to go through hormone replacement therapy to feel comfortable in his or her own body. The concept of ânon-binaryâ belittles the experience transgender people go through while transitioning to male to female or female to male. It also goes against the human racesâ sexual dimorphism.
Them/they pronouns I can tolerate and I have used them in past. However, using other pronouns other than that I donât agree with and I wonât be using them.
The American Flag being used as a hijab and as a feminist symbol is dumb. The women in the middle eastern countries are required to wear hijab, niqabs, or burkas. They have NO choice. We are lucky to be living in countries where we can wear whatever we want.Â
So women wearing something they decided to wear in a free country canât be a symbol of wearing things you want to wear?OP, youâre literally saying that in the same paragraph.
How about this.... Why do you think a hijab is paraded as a feminist symbol while women in Islamic countries such as Saudi Arabia and Iran donât have a choice about wearing it is ok? Young girls indoctrinated in Islam have absolutely no idea why they have to wear a hijab, niqab, or a burka. Later on, they are molded into thinking that they are doing this for their gracious sky daddy and have to wrapped up like a piece of candy. Ultimately, these women are arranged to be married to who they donât know and they canât marry non-muslims either. Some of these women are married early. Maybe, some of these women will realize that this is not how they want to live and want to leave the religion. Thatâs too bad.Â
According to the Quran 4:89 "They wish that you should reject faith as they reject faith, and then you would be equal; therefore take not to yourselves friends of them, until they emigrate in the way of God; then, if they turn their backs, take them, and slay them wherever you find them; take not to yourselves any one of them as friend or helper.â
The punishment for apostasy is death. Thatâs why seeing as the American Flag being used as a hijab to represent freedom and liberation is disgusting and disgraceful. It spits in the face of young women in islamic countries that are treated as second class citizens.
Also, I find it funny you hashtag this as right wing. Whatâs next. Are you going to call me an islamophobe? Fuck you.Â
Hah, pussy hats.....
We are lucky to be living in countries where we can wear whatever we want. - yeah and choosing to wear an article of clothing styled after the flag of our country is as much a celebration of a woman's right to choose as not wearing that article, women here were once forbidden to wear pants yet the robes/dresses of the statue of liberty and lady justice are to this day invoked as feminist icons.
Thatâs true. I made this drawing in response to the We the People poster which has a woman wearing the American Flag as a hijab to represent unity, diversity, and freedom. I find that poster absolutely absurd. It spits in the face of the women in those countries who have no choice but to wear it. In 1979, the Iranian government made it required for women to abide to the Islamic dress code. That sparked demonstrations throughout the country. They lost in 1983. Look at Iran now. I donât agree with how the hijab is used a feminist symbol, especially here in the West. People are free to wear whatever we want. I donât care if someone wears an American Flag as a hijab. However, itâs awful when a government requires its citizens to wear something because of their race, gender, and anything else regarding to their background. Not only that, when a religion dictates what the person wears. If one wants to wear an American Flag or any flag of that matter as a hijab, go for it.Â
The American Flag being used as a hijab and as a feminist symbol is dumb. The women in the middle eastern countries are required to wear hijab, niqabs, or burkas. They have NO choice. We are lucky to be living in countries where we can wear whatever we want.Â
Today is Martin Luther King Jr. Day in the US. We celebrate victories of this great man who lead the great civil rights movement which brought equality when there was such thing as institutionalized discrimination and racism. If he was alive today, he would be disgusted by the Black Lives Matter movement. This movement is pissing on the victories that MLK fought for.Â
Because you know, black people canât be racist. Thatâs impossible!
Here are Faces of Racists. Like love, hate transcends sex and skin color.Â