They'll complain about anything and everything anyway, regardless of merit.At which point Biden starts to employs EOs, and the Republicans would complain about abuse of EOs to bypass Congress.
Make them complain about good things
They'll complain about anything and everything anyway, regardless of merit.At which point Biden starts to employs EOs, and the Republicans would complain about abuse of EOs to bypass Congress.
Japan has updated its penal code to make insulting people online a crime punishable by a year of incarceration.
An amendment [PDF] that passed the House of Councillors (Japan's upper legislative chamber) on Monday spells out that insults designed to hurt the reader can now attract increased punishments.
Supporters of the amended law cite the death of 22-year-old wrestler and reality TV personality Hana Kimura as a reason it was needed. On the day she passed away, Kimura shared images of self-harm and hateful comments she'd received on social media. Her death was later ruled a suicide.
Three men were investigated for their role in Kimura's death. One was fined a small sum, and another paid around $12,000 of damages after a civil suit brought by Kimura's family.
Before the amendment, Japanese law allowed for 30 days inside for insults, or fines up to ¥10,000 ($75). The law now permits up to a year inside and imposes a ceiling of ¥300,000 ($2,200) on fines.
He also makes the point about authenticity, which I think is very true, although I don't necessarily think it's a problem with actors so much as it is a problem with writers and directors covering topics they don't really understand.Tom doesn't come off that bad in that interview. He just seems to be saying that at the time, people were fine with characters being gay, but not actors, so they were fine with him in the role. Now, there is more acceptance of LGBT people in Hollywood (notice how I said more, not that it's a 100% thing), so there's no reason to cast a straight guy in a gay role, and he personally wouldn't feel comfortable accepting the role for that reason.
I think my favorite part of this debacle is that the writer has Miles Thor say "By Odin's fade" when Odin is bald. And still has a beard!So, Marvel recently decided to do a What If? storyline in their comics. This time, the scenario was "What if Miles Morales became Thor?" This is why you need to have a consultant on staff if you are going to be a white guy writing a mixed-race character. Or at least, someone who can tell you, "Dude. No."
I think my favorite part of this debacle is that the writer has Miles Thor say "By Odin's fade" when Odin is bald. And still has a beard!
"Because this gaggle of ignorant white people knows absolutely squat about black culture before then and can't be assed to check with anyone who does."When Thor is black, this part of his character is shown by all of his fashion and cultural indicators being from 1991.
Has become? The witch trials and crusades were the same way. Jesus discusses the same thing in the BibleI think the most potent lesson to learn from all this is how cosmetic 'justice' has become. It's no longer about changing people into better individuals, but merely just measuring the final outcome to see if the world APPEARS 'just'.
That was a really good roast of the Post.
I'm curious as to how you define "woke".That was a really good roast of the Post.
A bastion of wokeness on the eastern coast.
Of roastings of Post, I love Bill's the most.
And I too wish wokeness would become a ghost.
Alas, this is wokeness, a parasite host.
Be a long time before it's gone, been toast.
Well, wokeness is a lot like porn, in that it's hard to define, but one knows it when they see it. Certainly there's been a lot of occasions where people have claimed something is "woke" and I have to wonder what kind of kool-aid they're drinking.I'm curious as to how you define "woke".
Ah, so Bill Maher, Jimmy Dore, Ben Shapiro and Dave Rubin are woke. Trump would be the wokest thing that's ever happendWell, wokeness is a lot like porn, in that it's hard to define, but one knows it when they see it. Certainly there's been a lot of occasions where people have claimed something is "woke" and I have to wonder what kind of kool-aid they're drinking.
That said, if I had to define wokeness as an actual philosophy, the following tenents would broadly apply:
-The most important thing about you is inherent traits rather than personal traits (or, what you are is more important than who you are), and the best way to treat individuals/society is based on said traits. Usually, this is racial (e.g. wokeness explicitly rejects ideas such as individuality and colour-blindness - see White Fragility for instance), but can be expanded to other areas (in essence, explicitly anti-liberal). Often this manifests into obsessiveness over representation and quotas, and the knots that arise (e.g. calling Asians "white adjacent.")
-Intent doesn't matter, impact does (and associated standpoint theory)
-Hyper-sensititivity to everything and anything (which isn't exclusive to wokeness, but it's certainly a trait)
-Individuals can be sorted into good/bad and/or oppressed/oppressor. There are no shades of grey, and any attempt to do so is problematic (see The Coddling of the American Mind)
-While I'm not sure if this is 100% true, wokeness often falls into the realm of luxury beliefs, in that the people who are most woke tend to be well off. It's why, at least in the US (as far as I can tell), ultra-progrssives tend to be more woke than working class (there's parallels in Oz too - there was a book I read this year that delved into the phenomenon, though didn't frame it through wokeness, you can see the book thread for my review of it)
-Cancel culture is usually associated with wokeness, but this isn't 1:1 - cancel culture has no set political affiliation, so as insane as some students in the US seem to be (and workers), this isn't inherently woke.
So, in a sense, the WaPo stuff fits wokeness in that it has:
-Hypersensitivty
-Impact matters more than intent
-No room for shades of grey
It's a mindset I've seen crop up, and I can't say I find it an appealing philosophy. Far as I can tell, it's mostly reserved for the US and UK, so on an individual level, I have little to worry about wokeness here, but, well, this is the woke world thread.
My feeling from decades of media watching, all the way back to the 80s, is that "woke" (or "political correctness" as it used to be) is almost always far less significant than it is usually presented to be.Well, wokeness is a lot like porn, in that it's hard to define, but one knows it when they see it.
So, what you're saying is that the problem of "wokeness" is one of cultural appropriation?Picture for a moment a bougie, white person like a politician or newscaster telling people to "stay woke", using that same slanted grammar to try and fake a connection to the black community, and take in the cringe of that situation.