Bonnie's thoughts on men: warranted?

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Comments

  • I Doubt i'll be surprised. Lmao

    I'll do it later though, should be fun.

    Kennyftw posted: »

    lol... You should checkout out "Are these quotes from feminist, or storm front (White supremacy group)." You might be surprised

  • One tiny incident?!? Lol!

    After the group meets Arvo and his group, practically the only things out of Kenny's mouth are racial slurs, or ethnic slurs. (However you want to phrase it, it amounts to the same thing, and gets old real fast.)

    Add that to his racial profiling of Lee and his percieved 'urban' skills, and i'd say it's pretty clear that Kenny has pretty defined opinions of anyone who isn't like him.

    Don't you use Kenny's 'urban incident' as one of the reason to dislike him? One tiny incident makes him racist? Is this any different?

  • Yes, you're right, it is.

    Lilacsbloom posted: »

    Wait, I thought feminism was about equal rights for both men and women o_o have I been lied to all these years?

  • Correction it's quotes from Social justice, not feminists. they do kind of go hand in hand.

    I Doubt i'll be surprised. Lmao I'll do it later though, should be fun.

  • Very similar.

    Kennyftw posted: »

    Correction it's quotes from Social justice, not feminists. they do kind of go hand in hand.

  • He cited that particular incident.

    He was angry. People use all kinds of insults when they're angry. Do they mean it? Not necessarily.

    Also, the man who had knew and never racially insulted: Belgian wife, an Indian girlfriend, a mixed race little girl, a Hispanic man, an Asian man, a Pakistani man, a African man (Mike), an African woman, an African baby.

    And recall Kenny apologized for calling Lee urban. What else do you need? He might say stupid shit, but both instances are too separated, and there's isn't enough of them to classify him as a racist.

    Thinking he might a little prejudiced is totally okay, but I question full on racism.

    I think we should just agree to disagree and not let an argument about a video game character cause a fight.

    Adieu.

    Arya_Stupid posted: »

    One tiny incident?!? Lol! After the group meets Arvo and his group, practically the only things out of Kenny's mouth are racial slurs, or

  • I have been plenty angry and yelled at all kinds of people about all kinds of things. Never once in my life have i degraded someone for their race/ethnicity or the place of their birth, nor would i, for any reason at all.

    If things like that come out of your mouth, you are a racist, or at the very least a very racially insensitive person. Whether you meant them or not, makes no fucking difference whatsoever - you are promoting those beliefs.

    But you are right, this conversation is over

    He cited that particular incident. He was angry. People use all kinds of insults when they're angry. Do they mean it? Not necessarily.

  • I'm going to address this real quick, because I feel that this is important. Don't waste your time and respond, cause this will probably still get us no where.

    I have been plenty angry and yelled at all kinds of people about all kinds of things. Never once in my life have i degraded someone for their race/ethnicity or the place of their birth, nor would i, for any reason at all.

    Where you in direct danger? Were your friends? Arvo almost got then killed intentionally. That is a whole different level of anger entirely.

    Arya_Stupid posted: »

    I have been plenty angry and yelled at all kinds of people about all kinds of things. Never once in my life have i degraded someone for thei

  • Arvo is not a 'healthy male with no obvious disability'. Unless your eyesight is as bad as his, you'd probably notice his broken leg...oh, and the fact that he's a scrawny teenage boy.

    Also, why are you fixating on Bonnie pointing out the obvious? She spent a long time with Carver, the ultimate fucked-up example of an "alpha male" - whose cruelty and arrogance eventually resulted in him getting his face splattered.

    Hbh128 posted: »

    Carver and Luke are very different, and we know from 400 Days that Howe's used to be a good place, but that changed wen Carver started takin

  • Hmm. Actually I think the disabilities do help narratively to make Kenny seem more out of control.

    I'm focused on what Bonnie is pointing out because the source of the problem sn't that every man has an alpha male side to them, and alpha male behavior was not the reason why Kenny, Luke and Mike frequently clash. And because I'm also staying on topic. I don't see how Carver's arrogance and cruelty alone are clear indicators of a man with an 'alpha male' personality. He wanted to raise a child and he ruthlessly pursued that desire at the expense and detriment to anyone who got in his way. There's nothing more to it.

    Bokor posted: »

    Arvo is not a 'healthy male with no obvious disability'. Unless your eyesight is as bad as his, you'd probably notice his broken leg...oh,

  • I can understand circumstances in which case such opinions were formed by the observers. In the game, there's Bonnie and Jane. Bonnie mentions it, and Jane never talks about it with Clementine, whose opinion is determinant. In the scenario I talked about, people are more likely to believe that because they don't have a database of valid perspectives and information to give them as much insight as we have today(to rehash what I said earlier). The substitute for that is older people who have been alive long enough to observe the behavior of a lot of people(namely men), and they don't come with a mouse & keyboard(or cooling fans, lol). On top of that, the internet itself would become dormant without people to maintain it and keep it running. Wow, this is actually kind of fascinating.

    Said 'elders' will be few because it'd suddenly become difficult to live as long as they do, and to live even longer. So I guess there's an example of a perspective that would become relevant again. But, the sudden change in the ratio people who know better about male behavior and temperament - from a majority to a minority(of people who know better about the subject) - doesn't make them any less right. But you do make a good point about traditional perspectives returning from 'outdated' status.

    rousseau posted: »

    And there we have an interesting overarching theme for season 3 Though it rather applies in the long run and not really for Bonnie; she

  • People have spoke about this before, but overlook what she truly said. "All the men I know..." Bonnie's speaking from experience, not generalizing the entire gender. Although, in a sense, don't a lot of people like to feel superior than another?

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