Hai Elin~
and Roxas, good for you.
I'm over here about to do back flips in joy because I'm about to actually begin more fun training the Marine Corps.
*it's more academic than pew, pew so I'll still be around.
Hai Elin~
and Roxas, good for you.
I'm over here about to do back flips in joy because I'm about to actually begin more fun training the Marine Corps.
*it's more academic than pew, pew so I'll still be around.
"I am... Sheik. One of the last of the Sheikah tribe..."
Having the protagonist in your show repeatedly call a character who identifies as male to female transgender (reading the background to the character seems to suggest that she actually identifies as female, but I've not seen the show, so forgive me if I'm wrong) a man is making fun of the character. It's the same as willfully using "he" to refer to a male to female transgender person, or referring persistently to a female to male one as "she", "doll", "sweetie" and suchlike. The implication in both cases is that transgender people are not "real" women or men, but simply frauds. It's the same reason that saying that you'd "go gay" for a given transgender woman or referring to trans women as "traps" is offensive. You're ultimately just treating them as men in disguise.
Acceptance for a transgender person means accepting them completely as the gender they feel that they are. If you're drawing lines in the sand and saying that "this person is really a man / really a woman", that's not acceptance at all. It's just a less violent form of discrimination.
I can't even really reply to this. I'm such an oaf.
I actually had no idea how bad transgender discrimination was in the west but I googled and...I guess I don't watch the news a ton, and these kind of stories probably get buried. I should have expected it of course, considering all the homosexual discrimination that goes on here.
Also Elin, apologies for offending you, that was not my intention.
It's okay.You didn't offend me. That kind of comedy is, like you say, absolutely everywhere, and most people don't even realise that there's anything wrong with it. Still, the more depressing news stories I see about transgender people (and transgender women in particular), the harder I find it just to laugh it off as harmless fun, and nowadays I feel obliged to at least point out why it's not a good thing. Like I say, in Japan it's not quite so bad being that it by and large only contributes to silly stereotypes and not violence or extreme levels of discrimination. But even those stereotypes make it much, much harder to live with what is already a very humiliating, unpleasant condition. :/
After a quick look back at info that came out right around E3, apparently it wasn't just digital copies (which is what I thought), but all copies. Essentially, it was "load a disc based game and install it, and it's tied to your account and you can play it from any XB1, and share it with up to 10 friends if you so choose."
I agree that your breakdown works, but I've found that with pretty much everything, the more complicated you make it, the less likely people are to use it or the more frustrated they get trying to find the options that they want. Also, the more fractured you make all of the options, the more likely you are to run into problems, or for people to find loopholes to circumvent your safety measures.
I agree with why XB1 had the DRM that it had, but the rewards from having to put up with said DRM weren't worth the hassle. Also, the lack of explanation for what would happen if you didn't "check in" with their servers after 24 hours didn't sit well with me. The XB1 had promise, but the rest of it was so flawed or under explained that it wasn't worth the risk.
Yeah, it's pretty terrible. It's a big part of the reason that I want to escape from the west for at least a few years. In Japan, there is seriously almost no transphobia. Granted I sometimes face racism, but it usually just takes the form of dumb stereotypes and ignorance, and most people are pretty okay with you once they realise that you speak Japanese and aren't compliant with their stereotypes about foreigners, so it's not too difficult to ignore.
In the west, by comparison, I'm genuinely afraid to go outside a lot of the time, have very limited job prospects, and am regularly treated badly by people I have done absolutely nothing to wrong. And I live in, according to recent surveys, the most LGBT-tolerant country in Europe, and have had all sorts of good fortune come my way, so the situation for others is even more grim. I guess you could view it as running away, but it just takes too much out of you to live like that.
Anyway, this is the hangout, so I'll avoid any more srs bsns. :'D Sorry.