The knives we hide

2023-Oct-24, Tuesday 14:03
dorchadas: (Iocaine Powder)
A while ago, I met someone at an anime convention. She ended up becoming part of the anime-going friends I had, and I ran into her a couple times at parties after that until I moved to Japan. In Japan, I followed her Livejournal and I learned that she got much closer to another of those anime-going friends, they started dating, got engaged, made a wedding website, and the wedding was scheduled for just before I was going to move back from America. There was a post on her blog with quotes like:

A lot of quotes interspersed with story below )
dorchadas: (Mario SMB3 Boss Bass Eating Mario)
Not going to comment on the war in Israel because I've had enough of that but I am going to talk about the extremely weird response some terminally online leftists have had to criticism of all the people posting this is what decolonization looks like takes (100K likes btw). For example:
It turns out there is a large portion of the online Left that really does confirm to the stereotypes right-wingers have of them--they're cruel, bloodthirsty racists who exult in the death of white people (and anyone they think of as white, like Jews--the fact that there are black Jews probably never occurs to them). Fortunately, they have no political power and no prospect of ever getting any.

But the weird part is the quoted tweet above (which isn't the only one like it). Like, okay, you "believe" that you have committed a crime for which a righteous punishment is being murdered and having your possessions seized and in your daily life you just...keep doing it. There are organizations out there for gifting property to Native Americans right now! If they really think, "I live on stolen land, the people who used to live here would be justified in killing me to repossess it," why are they still doing it? It reminds of the jokes I've heard about how tone-deaf land acknowledgements are. Like:
"We acknowledge that this lecture is taking place on unceded Lenape land...what was that? 'Give it back'? Why would we do that?"
It's just an extremely weird form of masochistic virtue signaling. They know that there's no chance of a Haudenosaunee death squad kicking down their door and torturing them before executing them, so it's easy for them to say that it's a morally correct action.

But it's weird, right? This is weird.

Edit: And as also pointed out elsewhere, it's telling how these comments immediately buy into the Western (genre) image of bloodthirsty warriors attacking settlers to get land back instead of, like, an extremely boring and drawn out legal process where a bunch of people have to sign a hundred pages of documents.
dorchadas: (Warcraft Face your Nightmares)
I haven't played World of Warcraft in over a decade but I still keep up with the storyline out of nostalgia and curiosity, but with everything that's happened since Legion it's getting harder and harder to care. Nowadays, it's that classic feeling of watching a trainwreck.

Here's the latest controversy:


The Shadowlands expansion is very, let's say, controversial for introducing a new villain called the Jailer and, in order to build some kind of narrative weight behind him, implying that he was the secret mastermind behind essentially everything else that happened in the Warcraft universe despite his presence never being hinted at and not being required for any previous story development. After two years where he never once actually explained what his plan even was other than to "remake reality," he dies and claims that he was really trying to unite the cosmos because:
"You preserve that which is doomed. A cosmos divided will not survive what is to come."
Okay, whatever, I guess there's another universe that's going to invade the Warcraft universe or something.

Maybe the next expansion is the moment World of Warcraft finally becomes a JRPG and the players have to kill G-d.

Anyway, dreadlords. Throughout Warcraft's history, the demonic dreadlords are shown as consummate manipulators and schemers, and often disguise themselves as other people. This can be cool--I remember how neat it was doing Stratholme, fighting the over-zealous Scarlet Crusade, and having Grand Crusader Saidan Dathrohan transform into the dreadlord Balnazzar halfway through the fight. Gasp! The dreadlords had created the Scarlet Crusade, which was dedicated to fighting the undead Scourge, which the dreadlords had also created?? What were they planning??

The latest twist is that but in overdrive. Assuming that Mal'Ganis and Kin'tessa were indicating that they were impersonating all the people they transform into during the fight, they were manipulating, in order: The Twilight's Hammer, the Dark Iron Dwarves, the Arakkoa Outcasts, Kael'thas's blood elves, the Vrykul, the Blue Dragonflight, the Twilight's Hammer (again), the Twilight's Hammer (again again), the Order of the Cloud Serpent, the Mogu, the Burning Legion, the Nightborne, the Alliance (raid on Zuldazar), and Kul Tiras. "The Horde" is, of course, absent from this list. Emoji Ork shake fist

This isn't all. There's a piece of loot called Alandien's Tortured Twinblades whose flavor text reads
"A trophy from Kin'tessa's favorite deception."
Alandien is the Demon Hunter trainer trainer in infiltration, which is fun and ironic except that Demon Hunters have an ability called Spectral Sight that lets them see demons in disguise, so it never would have worked. And I like how these demons were impersonating other demons, because even though the Burning Legion is literally an army with an actual command structure, sometimes you just have to do things yourself. Or manipulate other people into doing them instead of just ordering them to do it.

There's nothing wrong with revealing that a scheme or a villain was secretly part of a greater plot. Warcraft itself did this with the Burning Legion, revealing in Warcraft III that the Orcish Horde was actually a ploy by an army of demons to invade Azeroth, but there are some key differences: we already knew that demons existed and were tied to the orcs because in Warcraft: Orcs and Humans warlocks could summon them; it was revealed gradually over three games; and the revelations in Warcraft III specifically emphasized that the orcs took on demonic power of their own free will because they wanted to be better at genocide--they weren't manipulated into it, and thus retain agency. Shadowlands skips all that and tries to provide borrowed credibility to the Jailer and still doesn't manage to make him a compelling villain because even if he is a master manipulator the players never learn why he's manipulating people!

I might have my problems with the plot of Endwalker--which mostly come back to "it's the most cliche anime plot imaginable"--but at least we know why the villains did their villainous deeds.

I am very curious to see how much more train the WoW devs find to wreck.

Review: Cats

2020-Jan-15, Wednesday 11:59
dorchadas: (Cowboy Bebop Butterfly)
"At 9:20pm? That movie? Then?"
-[instagram.com profile] wanderluster_kp

"You guys are insane. I would rather die."
-My Japanese tutor

"The second time through was genuinely everything I hoped it would be 😻"
-[twitter.com profile] arsduo

"Dancing kitty emoji Cats Dancing kitty emoji, or 'What if American Idol Winners got Reincarnated?' "
-[facebook.com profile] tom.hen.12

"Dancing kitty emoji Cats Dancing kitty emoji was okay."
-[facebook.com profile] hillel.wayne

"That was the worst movie I’ve ever seen."
-[instagram.com profile] britshlez
So I saw Dancing kitty emoji Cats Dancing kitty emoji.

Ineffable! )
dorchadas: (Dagoth Ur)
Had an interesting encounter yesterday that's worth preserving.

I was waiting at the Bryn Mawr L stop for the train so I could go down to the Anime Chicago Mixer when a man in a black suit, with black shirt and black tie, and wearing red hat walked by me. As he passed me, he paused and looked off toward the sunset, as the sun was just slipping behind the buildings along Bryn Mawr. He looked at me and said, "The sun’s passing away quickly." Then he smiled and chuckled to himself and, without waiting for a response, walked away.

Bryn Mawr and the L run perpendicular to each other, which means I was technically at a crossroads. So what I'm saying is that I'm pretty sure I met the devil.
dorchadas: (Office Space)
Love it when someone I knew in university reposts a status from a Nazi in his zeal to condemn people for caring too much about the Manchester bombing and not bombings in Syria or Iraq.

The shared post only mentions "Zio-Imperialism," which is a pretty big red flag. So I tracked down an essay by the writer about how accusations of antisemitism are offbase and, well...

Blatant antisemitism )

I can probably stop there, I think.

I'm going to defriend him regardless because he's been close to this edge before multiple times without stepping over, but I at least want to hear his explanation.
dorchadas: (Default)
Step 1: Go to http://iwl.me/
Step 2: Enter "HURRR DURRRR BELLA LUVS VAMPIRES HURRRRR DURP DURRRRR" into the text field.
Step 3: Click "analyze."

When I actually use my own writing, I get different answers:

My 2004 NaNo (an Exalted story of the First Age, using the previous incarnations of my game's characters): Neil Gaiman.

My 2006 NaNo (The story about magic coming back and a ton of people dying that I won with, and posted a bit here): Lewis Carroll.

Five Years After (A story about two people having coffee 5 years after college): Lewis Carroll again.

Is the Life (A story I wrote for a writing contest in high school. It has vampires): Chuck Palahniuk.

The Gates of Horn and Ivory (My 2005 NaNo, unfinished): Anne Rice.

The First Step (A short story using the same characters as the previous entry, but otherwise unconnected): Chuck Palahniuk again

Watcher's Eyes (A story set in the world of the novel I was writing in high school): Lewis Carroll again.

Fallen One (A story about the trial of an angel): Dan Brown. I guess it's the angel bit?

Shadow Realm (A bit of random, pointless drivel, in my opinion): Ursula K. LeGuin

The Mask and the Mirror (One of the old "Aaron Knight" stories I wrote. Tentatively connected to the same world The Watcher's Eyes is, but only in unimportant backstory): William Gibson.

Some of those stories I still like, and some I read and cringe hard enough to break bones. Nonetheless,

The most hilarious thing, though. If you go back to that website and just type, "lolololololol" over and over again, guess what it tells you?

William Shakespeare.

Perhaps there is more to internet trolling than we think.

Literacy is important

2010-Mar-03, Wednesday 21:53
dorchadas: (In America)
So I was talking with one of the other teachers today and said that I had bought a bunch of bad English T-shirts for people as Christmas presents. She said that you could find equivalently-bad Japanese T-shirts in Hong Kong, and I mentioned the practice of getting kanji tattoos. She said that when she was in Australia, she considered getting a tattoo but changed her mind, and then mentioned that she had met an American marine once who had a kanji tattoo that he had gotten because he thought it looked really awesome. It was 台所 (daidokoro). He liked the boxiness and sharp lines of the characters.

The problem is, that's Japanese for "kitchen."

She couldn't really take him seriously after that.
dorchadas: (Teh sex)
One of [personal profile] schoolpsychnerd's students came up to her and said "your husband." [personal profile] schoolpsychnerd told her my name, at which point the student nodded and then said, "Want." She later tried to grab [personal profile] schoolpsychnerd's boobs.

I have no idea what kind of statement she was trying to make.

WTF?

2008-Aug-23, Saturday 23:01
dorchadas: (Do Not Want)
Canteloups cost 1580円 each?

Screw teaching English. I'm going to be a melon smuggler.
dorchadas: (Zombies together!)
A warning--this entry is ridiculously long, since it has all the entries I would have made over the past three weeks. As such, I'm LJ-cutting it. I'd like to think it's neat and interesting, but...well, it's lengthly. Individual entries have been separated to prevent the "Wall of Text crits you for 9999, you die" problem.

Long entry is looooooooooooooooooooooooooooong )
Footnotes )
dorchadas: (Dreams are older)
Does God approve of your threesome?

You can find the weirdest stuff on the internet, if you're willing to look through all the tubes for it. ^^

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