monocle_layton said:
Seriously I remember watching Fullmetal and then going to a different anime. Having to hear a teenage/older woman shout out "kawaii samaaaaa" with a pitch that borderlines earrape pisses me off. Who actually finds that appealing? I get some women have high-pitched voices, but it's ridiculously overblown
Yeah arrogance bothers me too, along with the offended part (both of which are seen more often nowadays). It really sucks because some people just can't be a bit more moderate and have to either be offended by absolutely everything or be an edgelord 100% of the time. The part on identity confuses me though. Do you mean people constantly focused on the way others think of them?
No offense but you aren't much better. It's easy to just go ahead and hate all (blank) but you gotta be a better person and realize there are too many humans to believe in such broad generalizations,especially against half the population. I had a class once and sat w/ some girls who were...far from saints, and it annoyed. However, I just stayed calm and chose to not put too much thought into it. I'd recommend it honestly - the rotten apple will always stick out more due to it being different than the others, right? Gotta keep that mindset and realize the majority of feminists, women, and any other group will have flawed people. It isn't fair to hate them all.
Yeah I get making a typo - we've all been there. However, the amount of poor spelling and grammar on social media (especially Facebook) makes me hate myself.
Yeah people need to stop with the "bah both sides!" nonsense. If someone in the 1700's said "yeah we shouldn't have slaves, but we shouldn't give blacks rights to be fair to both sides", would he be considered a good person? No, he wouldn't. This type of thinking is used too often and I believe it's because people don't want to be criticized. If people always tried to appeal to others, then figures such as Malcolm X would've never existed |
No, I mean the people who are obsessed with their own identity and issues related to it. Like a gay person who crafts their whole life into a reflection of their sexuality. A person like that takes any discussion about it very personally and will conflate it as an attack on them if it's challenged. They'll only want to see things through only that facet of themselves or that lens. People do this with their race, religious beliefs, hobbies, sexuality, political beliefs and practically anything they like a little too much. The sum of a person is much more than their identity or one aspect of themselves.