Conversation
Notices
-
Embed this notice
@ArdainianRight @smugumin @ChristiJunior @hachi @jarofrubies @Cayhr @Tamamo
"There is no such thing as a soul"
- people who have no soul
-
Embed this notice
@hachi @Cayhr @ChristiJunior @Tamamo @jarofrubies @smugumin You can see it in the eyes of trannies and whores, that blank, soulless stare. This stuff really does destroy people from the inside out.
-
Embed this notice
@ArdainianRight @Cayhr @ChristiJunior @Tamamo @jarofrubies @smugumin Stop with this "soul killing" nonsense.
-
Embed this notice
@Cayhr @smugumin @ChristiJunior @jarofrubies @Tamamo Killing the beauty of a language with hideous jargon and clunky phrasing, along with heavy penalties for deviation, is yet another endeavor to kill the soul.
-
Embed this notice
@ChristiJunior >dumber
Nonsensical language, promoting falsehoods, and encouraging self-destructive acts. ✅
>uglier
Actively celebrated destruction of beauty (especially feminine and natural) ✅
>less free
Coerced speech, difficulty navigating to find mates (because which one is a real woman?), and social pressure to change your entire mentality and habits around said individuals ✅
:reimu_sigh:
@smugumin @jarofrubies @Tamamo
-
Embed this notice
@Cayhr @smugumin @jarofrubies @Tamamo EVERYTHING about trannies and tranny rights make the world dumber, uglier and less free.
-
Embed this notice
@smugumin [Wow I ended up ranting, LONG] What I hate most about the pronouns is the appeal to triviality. "It's just some pronouns how hard is it to respect them?" What people don't really seem to understand is that pronouns are very important, and play so much more of a role in our social dynamics than just "I identify as," which is an insult to reality and the truth. Furthermore, it's used twofold.
First is that it's a psychological validation mechanism for transsexuals and the varieties of mental illness. In real life, just telling everyone you are a "she" when people can clearly see you are a "he" does not work. Not to mention the look of confusion someone will get if you say you are a "xir," or non-binary. Even if said tranny is Thailand's hottest model, getting naked will reveal the truth exactly 100.00% of the time (a medical approach via DNA/skeletal inspection works too). At least with internet anonymity these kinds of people get a bit more power. Even if someone is not a tranny, the practice became normalized through coercion and social engineering, so if they alone are not enough to validate their existences, using other/hetero people to practice announcing their pronouns aids them in that endeavor. That's the insidious part of it all; people were strongarmed into their pledge of allegiance.
Second is that it's a political weapon. If you "misgender" someone, you are either not in the know or intentionally refuse to use someone's pronouns. Both are flags to THAT SIDE that the "misgenderer" is an enemy. And then they go ALL OUT to purge that individual, both men and women (lol, feminists fell down the hierarchy of victimization points). This makes you have to think: Why can this side of the political aisle get away with ruining someone's life for a tiny infraction, citing hyperbolic discomfort and attacks against their feelings, but when we start noticing patterns of bad actors or endorsers/condoners of said bad actors, we get chastised for being evil? Almost like the game is stacked in one side's favor.
On the internet, defaulting to the pronoun "he" is more than just an allusion to the fact that majority of internet users were men (and still is, no source needed), it was also a survival tactic. Catfishing is a legitimate problem, and you could lose valuable time and assets. Default pronoun "he" is the product of assuming everyone on the internet is a guy.
I don't know what the reason is in real life, but I know professional literature did use to default to "he" when describing an ambiguous entity such as "the player." Maybe it's a case of "most likely scenario," and tie breakers default back to he. In the more unsullied corners of the internet like obscure code documentation, I've noticed the appearance of language where "users" are default referred to as "he" and "him." Based. And while "they" would still be grammatically correct, I have adapted to the tactics of the enemy, and tend to use he/she to specify ambiguous nouns now.
So at the end of it all, pronouns in bio = pattern of bad actors. That includes @jarofrubies, who... seems to have clearly not followed his own advice, lol. If users are to go to misskey and leave behind Twitter culture, then that means exactly that: Twitter culture. Annoying language of Twitter, pledges of allegiance in the bio, and everything else. By the way, you know the heavy influx to misskey is a bandwagon thanks to JP Twitter, because there are plenty of other Japanese instances. Why only misskey? If there's anything the JP users should be understanding, is that they should be watching misskey's immigrarnt population very closely (which technically includes me; I recently reserved a name there like I did on pawoo and a few other instances).
Lastly, there are people that are sick and tired of the back and forth. Do you know why it keeps happening? Because no one is willing to put the foot down and stop the spread of cultural rot. At least on this side of the fedi, people are vocal about it. :reimu_sigh:
@Tamamo
-
Embed this notice
@Tamamo @jarofrubies yeah i was about to say that. i wonder how many zoomies dont realize that pronouns in bio and trannyshit in general just wasnt a thing ever before like 2014~2016. not "rare". not a thing. people would at most say ASL and even that was rare. you had to exert massive effort grooming estranged teenagers to have that weird shit take off
-
Embed this notice
@jarofrubies >LEAVE TWITTER CULTURE AT THE DOOR
>Pronouns in bio