In this episode, Doc Crusher finds herself in a world where people keep disappearing from the Enterprise, and she's the only one who remembers them, even when the ship physically could not be run with just her and the other people.
And then it gets worse.
Turns out she's in a pocket dimension made from her own thoughts and fears.
MeToo's own popularity disproves the idea that society doesn't #BelieveWomen, even if you aren't aware of the many pre-MeToo scandals revolving around a woman's accusations of men's sexual misconduct.
Also, the twist in the episode is literally "Crusher herself is responsible for the problem." She's literally making it up.
If there's one thing about the Zutara fandom which infuriates me more than their nonstop tendency to demonise the heck out of Aang and Mai, it's when they insist that any and all hatred of their stupid ship is rooted in...*checks notes* misogyny.
The original Lilo & Stitch is very relevant to the ICWA as it shows a US government agent attempting to separate an indigenous woman from her child ward to put her into the care of the state, something that has happened and continues to happen to indigenous children.
A black government agent.
One who goes out of his way to give her chance after chance, and turns out not to be as bad as he might seem.
It's almost as if the movie was making a point about how judging people by surface characteristics and their origins is wrong.
There's absolutely no evidence that Bubbles decision is motivated by racism.
Nani is unable to find a job due to the tourism business taking over her land and Lilo is objectified enough to mirror the behavior (taking photos of white tourists rather than white tourists taking photos of her) and gets removed from her traditional dance because of a rich white or white-passing bully.
Hawaii is the most heavily Asian state in America. There's more Asians than white people. I'm pretty sure most of them aren't native either.
Also, about 1/10 of tourists to Hawaii are Japanese. We also can't assume mainlanders are white either.
Nani's "dog" (an alien) apparently attacked a "tourist" couple (other aliens, trying to capture Stitch).
You can't just leave that out.
That gets you in hot water pretty much everywhere, regardless of skin color.
The "tourist" even tried to downplay it to avoid causing a fuss and blowing his cover, and the Native Hawaiian boss fired Nani anyway.
The original movie is still making a strong point without ignoring the inconvenient bits. Or saying that taking pictures of locals when you go travelling is "objectifying".
I am literally from a non-white-majority country that lives mainly on tourism, and very few people would get offended if a tourist took pictures of them. I'm not even sure Lilo was offended.
I strongly doubt she'd call it "objectification".
And there's no evidence the "alien "tourist" was perceived as white.
Unless you somehow forgot what happened in the actual scenes and didn't spend a second actually checking on Youtube like I just did.
So you made up a story from dreams and fairy dust.
Of course, this is about the level of logic I'd expect from someone who thinks Killmonger's motives were right, even though they were "cause global race wars to spite an entire country for killing his dad, who was trying to cause global race wars".
Anyway, that was about as far as I got in the post before I strained my eye-rolling muscles. Any valid points are completely buried under this Mr Fantastic nonsense.
Once again, radfems ignore that trans men also exist, and that pro-trans people don't actually think of trans women as "men".
Like many bigots, they're projecting their own thinking onto eveyrone else.
I also like the fact that their idea of "not-misogyny" and respecting Women's Opinions™ involves ignoring the many non-trans women who also hate TERFs, all the time, extremely vocally.
Some guy on reddit: I hate [female character on show],for X, Y, and Z reasons.
Various people: Wow, you're such a misogynist!
Me: Do any of you have any actual evidence of sexism?
All of them: I don't need evidence! It's obvious!
One of them: I bet women cover their drinks when you pass.
Me:
Imagine someone says "you should have evidence before you call people misogynists", and then you immediately assume they're an even worse misogynist.
Many of them also claimed the fandom had a general problem with "misogyny", and one person even said most men are misogynist(-ish) by default, and the show's fanbase was mostly men, therefore most of the fans were misogynist.
Which is not only not how it statistically works, but it's actually an even stupider, more sexist argument than calling one guy misogynist with no evidence.
I don't think there was even any evidence OP was a dude.
For the record, this particular fandom has a longstanding rep for "misogynist" fans.
The irony is that assuming tomboys must be trans is sexist.
Maybe this is “extrapolating” from the fact that Gwen had a spidey flag in her room at one point in Spider-Verse 2, even though, y’know, that doesn’t make her trans herself.
You know that shoes often have white laces, right? And Hobie is from an alternate universe, where the punk lace code might not even exist, and therefore not have any white-supremacist connotations?
Heck, Hobie seems like the type of person to wear white laces just to piss off 88ers.