Don't tell them that, they need their strawman argument.Hat Man said:"If race doesn't matter then why not make the character black"
If race doesn't matter then why not make the character white?
That simplistic logic works both ways.
Because the truth is that ultimately it does matter, and in my opinion anyone who claims otherwise is lying, either to you or themselves, or ignorant. I accept no other alternative. Before I go on, it is important here to realise that although smaller films made on a tighter budget offer a better return on investment, the industry itself is perhaps fatally addicted to the work which is generated by massively-budgeted high profile films. While this approach was certainly never efficient it did work well enough when companies had a much easier time accessing capital than they presently do. This hard scrabble for capital means that there is more pressure than ever for the companies behind the US movie industry to minimise loses, and maximise profits. Which leads us back to Heimdall. Whether anyone necessarily likes it or not, casting a black man for the role generates more ticket sales then the few ticket sales it loses. And that is really all there is to it. The same underlying principles also work to make the majority of the protagonists of mega-budget Hollywood films handsome straight white men.Warachia said:If you said that you wanted to change a character to a black character because you think there aren't enough non-white super heroes on the big screen and you're using it to represent a minority then it would make sense, if you say that you're doing it because they were the best candidate for the role then skin colour really wouldn't matter, but changing it for literally no reasoning besides changing it makes no sense, and that's why some people (including me) are confused.
Yay, recognition!BlackIronGuardian said:AntiChrist said:"Zimmerman mode activate"?
What does Bob Dylan have to do with any of this?
Tight reference, guy.
DITTO!!! I desperately feel the need for DANCING KITTENS!!!jamesbrown said:I have no idea what anyone said in this forum, but I am sure this wont be read and there are some essay long fights going on about -isms; so as a light-hearted individual I am going to lighten the mood a bit.
I'm talking "Old School". I'm older than you, btw. Whatever your point of view on this polarizing subject...it was in poor taste. I remember watching the L.A. riots LIVE on T.V. in my college years, FYI....Grey Carter said:I honestly think I know what I'm doing. I certainly intend well.
A dispatcher cannot order or instruct you to do anything as their authority extends only as far as suggesting a course of action. Say that five times fast.JimB said:Perhaps not by the legal definition, but by the definition of a predator following his prey, I think he did, and I use the word with a clean conscience. He decided that young boy was his prey, and my proof is, rather than leaving the supposed criminal to the police as he was instructed to do, he followed Martin and forced a confrontation.
Given what's coming up, I don't think you remember the trial quite that clearly.JimB said:I have faith in my memory. If you think it's inaccurate, I invite you to link me to evidence, but as it stands, I am quite positive I've heard trial coverage explaining that the forensics do not bear out Zimmerman's story.
SYG was never invoked in the trial, because this was a simple case of self defense. Martin in this case if he survived could not have invoked SYG or self defense seeing how he assaulted Zimmerman; these two laws only apply when you're not acting illegally which Martin did.JimB said:I don't think that bears up. Let's ask ourselves what could have been done differently to avoid this conflict.
Trayvon Martin could have not attacked George Zimmerman. That's fine, but it doesn't hold up, because if Zimmerman is justified for shooting Martin on some "stand your ground" principle, then Martin is equally (and probably more, since he didn't use a lethal weapon) justified for standing his own ground.
When you're being assaulted, you're justified defending yourself. Zimmerman already lost Martin when he was following him, the latter then came back to initiate the conflict.JimB said:George Zimmerman could have not shot Trayvon Martin. No, that is apparently off the table because he was smaller than Martin, so it's a wash when it comes to actively participating in the conflict itself. If one person was justified attacking, then the other was as well. Let's go back in time further.
Let me fix that for you: Trayvon Martin could not have come back and initiated assault so George Zimmerman would not have to shoot him for having his face smashed into the concrete. That's actually pretty fucking reasonable.JimB said:Trayvon Martin could have stayed home to not go buy Skittles so George Zimmerman would not have seen him to be suspicious of him. That's fucking ridiculous.
Let's also blame the guy who invented guns, gunpowder, and metal. I'm sorry but no, the one responsible for the assault is the one who committed said assault, no one else. We can talk about who or what lead to and slowly escalated towards the conflict; ultimately it's the guy who throws the first punch/kick/bullet.RoonMian said:Actually, I think the ones responsible are the guy who came up with the whole "stand your ground"-law idea, the guy who came up with the idea of neighborhood watches and taking the monopoly on violence away from the police and general gun culture.
I'm sorry for being such a nit-picker but it was a dispatcher, not an officer. At no point in time did Zimmerman talk to the police prior to the shooting.thenoblitt said:...Trayvon ran away, and then the officer told Zimmerman not to pursue...
What you're saying is racist. "How can I be racist if I'm defending Trayvon Martin?" you may likely ask. It's the racism of low expectations. You inherently attribute violent behavior to blacks (in this case Martin), and give him zero personal responsibility or self control that a normal human being would have. Your entire argument hinges on the assumption that just being near this "child" (a large athletic 17 year old child, lol), warrants a beating. As though being in the general vicinity of a young black male is the equivalent of poking a bear or jumping into a lion's cage.JimB said:I don't think that bears up. Let's ask ourselves what could have been done differently to avoid this conflict.Sarcasmed said:He was 6'1", 170lbs, and a football player. He was nearly a head and shoulders taller than Zimmerman in height. In all likelihood, he would have been tried as an adult had he survived the conflict. The only question is how many years Trayvon would have spent in jail. It's not even a question whether he would have been guilty or not.JimB said:Zimmerman bears more responsibility for the conflict than does the child he killed.
There is only one person that bears responsibility for his actions that night, and it is the man who attacked Zimmerman without provocation.
Trayvon Martin could have not attacked George Zimmerman. That's fine, but it doesn't hold up, because if Zimmerman is justified for shooting Martin on some "stand your ground" principle, then Martin is equally (and probably more, since he didn't use a lethal weapon) justified for standing his own ground.
George Zimmerman could have not shot Trayvon Martin. No, that is apparently off the table because he was smaller than Martin, so it's a wash when it comes to actively participating in the conflict itself. If one person was justified attacking, then the other was as well. Let's go back in time further.
George Zimmerman, having alerted the police, could have not followed Trayvon Martin, as the 911 dispatcher said. I think that's fair, but let's see what Martin could have done.
Trayvon Martin could have stayed home to not go buy Skittles so George Zimmerman would not have seen him to be suspicious of him. That's fucking ridiculous.
Viewed purely from the lens of "whom could we reasonably ask to have done something different that would not result in a dead child," George Zimmerman is the one who erred. He bears the responsibility for creating this conflict. It did not exist before George Zimmerman made it exist.
And to think you managed to beat out Coelasquid in the Webcomic competition.Grey Carter said:WHITE GUY DEFENSE FORCE GO!
*Guitar Solo*
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Its when Milf friendzones you.Eternal_Lament said:Of all the things that attract attention in this comic, of all the things that draw one's eye, one thing sticks out to me:
.....what exactly is the "Son zone"?
Show me one other comic that characterizes angry internet white dudes as motherfucking Gorangers. I'll take unfunny and misinformed, but unoriginal? Please.Lono Shrugged said:Wow, the comic while originally not really funny, unoriginal and misinformed, made the basic point that the "average white male" (a stereotype) is whiney and self absorbed. Considering the views and responses and anger that has been whipped up over a few panels, I think the authors have created their finest work. Here I was chuckling at 'hover hands' without any idea of the hilarity that would ensue in the comments. Man alive...
Then race does matter after all.EvilRoy said:"If his race doesn't matter, why should I go back and redo this modelling/drawing/writing work to make him black?"
Which comic are you talking about, and are you talking to me or to Evil Roy? Your quote nesting is very confusing.Owyn_Merrilin said:Except you have the starting phrase wrong. It's an obvious reference to the arguments over things like, again, Idris Elba as Heimdall, where one side would say "they shouldn't cast a black actor, because the character has always been white." And the other side says "But the race was never a big part of the character, so why does it matter if he's black now?" Then this comic jumps in halfway through the argument, where the guy with the second position has apparently managed to get the guy with the first position to concede that the race didn't matter.
I was using "you" in the generic sense. I thought that was obvious from the context, since neither you nor I have mentioned any specific character of any race.Specter Von Baren said:I wasn't aware we were fighting about it.
This is an impossible question to answer in a hypothetical, since I don't know what character is being referred to. There probably isn't a specific one at all in mind, but let's say it's Link just for the sake of having a name to use. I would guess that the black dude from Critical Miss is arguing to change Link to a black character because Hyrule is as white as a Saltine dipped in mayo, and he would like to feel as if Nintendo isn't excluding him not out of active hatred but out of passive dismissal, as if black people are beneath being represented as protagonists in video games.Warachia said:I'm not sure that it's so much them not caring but still fighting for it, and more that they want to know why anybody cares enough to make the change in the first place if it doesn't matter.
Who said anything about changing for the sake of change rather than to accomplish a specific goal?Warachia said:I'm in the same boat as Specter, so maybe you can help me understand why some people change it simply for the sake of changing it.
Then why call 911, if you're just going to ignore them anyway?furai47 said:A dispatcher cannot order or instruct you to do anything as their authority extends only as far as suggesting a course of action.
It was by the police when they refused to arrest Zimmerman for the forty-something days between the shooting and his arrest.furai47 said:Stand your ground was never invoked in the trial, because this was a simple case of self defense.
The eyewitness accounts conflict on that, and I think Martin would probably have a different story to tell if he had been left capable of telling it.furai47 said:Martin, in this case, if he survived, could not have invoked stand your ground or self-defense, seeing how he assaulted Zimmerman; these two laws only apply when you're not acting illegally, which Martin did.
Christ. Nothing on the planet Earth or the reaches beyond is non-lethal.furai47 said:While not as effective as a handgun at close range or as godlike as they are in Call if Duty, fists and feet are not non-lethal.
And you have the evidence of this, yes?furai47 said:When you're being assaulted, you're justified defending yourself. Zimmerman already lost Martin when he was following him, the latter then came back to initiate the conflict.
No, my question is, "How is it racist to apply the same justifications to both Martin's and Zimmerman's actions?"Plunkies said:What you're saying is racist. "How can I be racist if I'm defending Trayvon Martin?" you may likely ask.
Wow. No, you're the one doing that. I never said a word about any black person other than Trayvon Martin, and I never said a word about the motivations behind his behavior. He felt threatened, so he took violent action. This is exactly the same thing George Zimmerman did. To extrapolate from that that I think his actions were motivated by inherent violence rather than the fundamental human instinct of fight or flight, and then to further extrapolate that I think black people are inherently less capable of controlling animal instincts, is completely insupportable and is nothing but you projecting.Plunkies said:You inherently attribute violent behavior to blacks[...]
What does self-control have to do with being stalked by an armed man twice your age who is following you with aggressive intent?Plunkies said:[...]and give him zero personal responsibility or self-control that a normal human being would have.
No, my argument hinges on the belief that Zimmerman lied when he said he didn't approach Martin. Remember the testimony of the girl Martin was on the phone with.Plunkies said:Your entire argument hinges on the assumption that just being near this "child" (a large athletic 17 year old child, lol), warrants a beating.
Guess whatever you want if it helps you sleep better at night, secure in your belief that anyone who disagrees with you is a mindless sheep bleating out the media's spin rather than someone who believes he has a better understanding of the facts than you.Plunkies said:Oh, and by the way, you don't seem to have watched the trial at all. I'm guessing you're one of those people who were simply told what to think by the media, instead of going to the source and forming your own opinion.
I have never seen any other film where Mario Van Peebles plays a Battleship captain, but it doesn't mean American Warships is not a Battleship knock off piece of shit.Grey Carter said:snip
What justification? There is no justification. That's what makes it illegal. You can't go around violently assaulting people.JimB said:No, my question is, "How is it racist to apply the same justifications to both Martin's and Zimmerman's actions?"Plunkies said:What you're saying is racist. "How can I be racist if I'm defending Trayvon Martin?" you may likely ask.
Fight or flight? He felt threatened? Once again you give Trayvon Martin no control over whether or not he chooses to act like a violent thug. He didn't feel threatened or he wouldn't have gone back to confront Zimmerman, and there's no fight or flight instinct when you GO BACK and attack someone. Fight or flight is a defensive mechanism, not an offensive one.Wow. No, you're the one doing that. I never said a word about any black person other than Trayvon Martin, and I never said a word about the motivations behind his behavior. He felt threatened, so he took violent action. This is exactly the same thing George Zimmerman did. To extrapolate from that that I think his actions were motivated by inherent violence rather than the fundamental human instinct of fight or flight, and then to further extrapolate that I think black people are inherently less capable of controlling animal instincts, is completely insupportable and is nothing but you projecting.Plunkies said:You inherently attribute violent behavior to blacks[...]
Again, he wasn't stalked. You're using charged and biased words instead of relying on facts. Zimmerman could not have followed or stalked martin because he lost sight of Martin, as indicated by the 911 call. Martin had 4 minutes to go home and instead chose to wait for Zimmerman near his truck at the T intersection. And based on where Martin sprinted away while Zimmerman was still in his truck, Martin would have had to double back to initiate a confrontation at that intersection, in the opposite direction of the house he was staying at.What does self-control have to do with being stalked by an armed man twice your age who is following you with aggressive intent?Plunkies said:[...]and give him zero personal responsibility or self-control that a normal human being would have.
Yes, I clearly remember the embarrassing and perjury filled testimony of Rachel Jeantel. She placed Trayvon Martin as instigating the confrontation, despite changing the words of said confrontation (lying under oath). But in both stories, the thing that remained constant was Trayvon Martin initiating the confrontation by saying "Why you following me?" to which Zimmerman in her first story said "What are you talking about?" and in the second story said "Why are you in my neighborhood?" or something to that effect.No, my argument hinges on the belief that Zimmerman lied when he said he didn't approach Martin. Remember the testimony of the girl Martin was on the phone with.Plunkies said:Your entire argument hinges on the assumption that just being near this "child" (a large athletic 17 year old child, lol), warrants a beating.
But you clearly don't have a better understanding of the facts. You seem to have few facts at all. You rely on emotion, charged words, lies, misrepresentations, but I've yet to hear many facts from you. You insist Zimmerman is the cause of the incident but fail entirely to provide evidence for that claim just as the prosecution failed during the trial.Guess whatever you want if it helps you sleep better at night, secure in your belief that anyone who disagrees with you is a mindless sheep bleating out the media's spin rather than someone who believes he has a better understanding of the facts than you.Plunkies said:Oh, and by the way, you don't seem to have watched the trial at all. I'm guessing you're one of those people who were simply told what to think by the media, instead of going to the source and forming your own opinion.