It's the Day's Day of Days! Because Ultraman Blazar.
Muir regurgitating someone else's complaints about the latest Star Wars streaming series.
There's something so sad about this.
A day by day look at Chris Muir's Day By Day, punctuated by efforts to make the hurting stop.
It's the Day's Day of Days! Because Ultraman Blazar.
Muir regurgitating someone else's complaints about the latest Star Wars streaming series.
There's something so sad about this.
It's deeply, deeply sad.
ReplyDelete"I can't go out like I used to" -- what does that even mean? Who's forbidding her from going out? Does she mean she can't go out naked? Are all the bars festooned with scary Pride flags, and she's terrified? I'm sure there's something ridiculously simple that I'm missing here, but I don't even understand where this line is coming from. I mean, I'm sure she's not required to wear a mask in Guntucky, so I don't get it.
The other deeply sad part of this: the use of lesbian characters on a TV show is "force"? Is Muir acquainted with what force actually means? I mean, he likes to fantasize about violence all the time, so one would think he would know the difference. Nobody is forced to watch a Disney TV show. The lesbian characters will not reach through the screen and punch you (although perhaps they should). This is followed by a long parade of peanut gallery commenters who are terrified that they might have to see a gay, lesbian or trans character on their TV screen. Really, these are the manly men whose militias are going to fight for and build the new Constitutional American Republic? Sound like a bunch of snowflakes to me, but what do I know. It must be downright painful to live your life this frightened of seeing a TV character you don't like. I truly don't envy them.
They are convinced that their bigotries holding power is the natural state of things, instead of something they have forced on others. Thus any change must be malevolent force.
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