Reddit Reddit reviews The Gorilla Did It (Gorilla Did It Nrf)

We found 1 Reddit comments about The Gorilla Did It (Gorilla Did It Nrf). Here are the top ones, ranked by their Reddit score.

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The Gorilla Did It (Gorilla Did It Nrf)
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1 Reddit comment about The Gorilla Did It (Gorilla Did It Nrf):

u/LWMR · 3 pointsr/SocialJusticeInAction

Followup: "It’s time to consider a curfew for men".

> There are solutions: a feminist revolution; real consequences for men who rape, harass, and abuse women; ensuring women are financially independent and that they are able to leave abusers safely; a cultural shift that addresses male entitlement, porn culture, and the objectifying male gaze; an end to masculinity

> You’ve had your chance, bepenised ones. And you’ve blown it.

Ctrl-F "migr" (migrant, immigration): nothing. Ctrl-F "background", "origin", "africa", "arab", "muslim", "islam", any hint that it's any subset of the bepenised ones identifiable in any way - nope.

This is what happens when reporters gloss over the importation of an actual rape culture. I'm not even particularly angry at the idiotic feminist Meghan Murphy here; she's seeing what she wants to see from newspapers that print what she wants to see, each one distorting the truth a little more along the way. I'm mostly angry at the reporters, and at this point I'm wondering if some kind of truth-in-advertising law might be a good way to make them straighten up and fly right without infringing on freedom of speech. Something along the lines of requiring newspapers or individual articles to be marked with one of a few kinds of legal notices:

  1. "This article is for entertainment purposes only and should not be cited as a serious source"

  2. "This article is for locally focused subculture reporting only and should not be taken as representative of any general trend"

  3. "This article represents a serious, honest attempt at balanced reporting for which I am willing to be criminally liable."

    Then prosecute anyone who marks this sort of shit as type 3. This is closely related to the concept of skin in the game and the expression "put your money where your mouth is", but I think there's something more to it: in part, having to answer for your actions is one of the fundamental attributes of adulthood. Becoming mature involves being held accountable. Adults can make formal promises about what they'll do a year from now and we expect them to do it. Whereas four-year-olds enjoy the privilege of changing their minds on a whim, not being expected to stick to any promises other than perhaps showing up at a friend's birthday, nor are we surprised if they lie their asses off about how they totally didn't break into the cupboard and eat all the cookies in the cookie jar, the gorilla did it. And correspondingly, four-year-olds can hardly be the recipients of obligations either. We can promise them the moon and not expect to deliver. They're not full people. Well, it seems quite a lot of reporters and newspapers are collectively behaving like sub-people too.