Comic Discussion > QUESTIONABLE CONTENT
Relationships You Wanna See More Of
pwhodges:
--- Quote from: Jeemy on 26 Jan 2018, 08:28 ---over here about 1/1000 relationships are non-heterosexual.
--- End quote ---
You're in the UK, like me, right?
Around 1.5% (as recorded several years ago), so you're well over an order of magnitude out.
pwhodges:
--- Quote from: Vaygr on 26 Jan 2018, 08:22 ---All the trans, gay, etc relationships are getting silly to me, though.
--- End quote ---
In fourteen years of the comic, we have one gay relationship in the main cast (Dora/Tai), plus two in peripheral characters (Marten's dad, Faye's sister); and of those, we see little of Dora and Tai at present. Plus one (just one) trans character/relationship. Not a lot to write home about, though the number of relationships in the comic as a whole is small enough to make them seem a high proportion. In any case, the acceptance and handling of such things happens to be a particular interest of the author; it's why he writes about them, and he does a remarkably good job of handling them.
So, a focus on certain types of people specifically, but not a silly amount; or if you're saying the relationships themselves are silly, you can expect people around here to try to educate you a bit.
Jeemy:
--- Quote from: pwhodges on 26 Jan 2018, 09:20 ---
--- Quote from: Jeemy on 26 Jan 2018, 08:28 ---over here about 1/1000 relationships are non-heterosexual.
--- End quote ---
You're in the UK, like me, right?
Around 1.5% (as recorded several years ago), so you're well over an order of magnitude out.
--- End quote ---
Indeed, I am in the UK. But all Uks are not same Uks. Lets put aside for a moment the hope (I do hope) that you took my comment as an approximation, maybe even a humorous exaggeration; and not an invitation to a fact-based debate.
Just an aside; I live in Scotland. Scotland is white/pale-blue, empty and racist. Not through choice, just ignorance (in the genuine meaning - we do not know many people from other cultures - and when you hit the highlands and islands, even fewer). We don't see black people here.
Let me retrospec (sic) those last 6 words. In my immediate community, I know zero (no): africans; african-americans; homosexuals; asians; indians; bisexuals; trans-sexuals or any LGBT contingents; none of the subcultures you guys discuss in these forums.
One could even argue that my exposure to the internet and this kind of stuff, has opened my eyes wider.
I'd just simply suggest; keep internet world-wide discussion separate from real-world experience. Use your judgement to handle the transition(?)
Over 25 years ago I remember vividly visiting my (white, middle-class) cousins down in the south of England, and going with them to festivals in towns such as Bedford. We were a very musical lot, I brought my guitar because I played it every day, and they would have found me surprising liar if I didn't. I would just be expected to 'jam'(rf1)
One of the immediate things I noted was the incredibly high percentage of black people. Now, I'm not saying Scotland is non-black - but at the risk of being obtuse, its mainly pakistani). But being the kind of person I am, and being in the music industry (thus, being chucked into a situation where you need to integrate (*properly, understandably and quickly*) with anybody - the first thing I noted was English (multicultural) musicians shout out very different instructions.
So, suddenly, I was surrounded by my cousins who were immersed in this culture (not by virtue of their upbringing, just, it would not have precluded it; dealing with a bundle of 'human beings who have different slang'. Tis was the biggest lesson I ever got in multi-culturalism. they chucked me into a bundle of guys who were (a) quite scary regardless of deliniature and (b) just quite scary. I suspect as my cousins are beautiful young women from the area this procedure was easier for them plus
1) I don't deal with African - or Jamaican- British - never met any. And I do business all over the world, but really that means Europe. So I never heard these words before.
2) Suddenly I am in a band of very earnest cunts who really hope I know what the next chord is. Here's a few of the things I got told:
- "small up yasel"; slow down playing, reduce my volume
-> obviously we've all heard "big up yasel" - time for mah guitar solo; obviously I never got this
- "speak like mouse" - shut the fuck up on your guitar
- "now dwan" "now minor" "now prime" "nwow LAAG" etc
Notably, in a recent British Council programme designed to prepare Jamaican educators to teach English to their country-man, the only country that refused to sign the papers (i.e. never even bothered reading it, fwiw) was Jamaica.
pwhodges:
--- Quote from: Jeemy on 26 Jan 2018, 11:09 ---I'd just simply suggest; keep internet world-wide discussion separate from real-world experience. Use your judgement to handle the transition(?)
--- End quote ---
The forum is part of the Internet; you have real-life experience (and so does every other member of the forum, but it's different from yours). I would respectfully suggest that the forum cannot separate itself from the individual experiences of every one of its members - it's the job of the individual to use their judgement and show respect when interacting with the forum.
A small perverse otter:
--- Quote from: pwhodges on 26 Jan 2018, 11:44 ---
--- Quote from: Jeemy on 26 Jan 2018, 11:09 ---I'd just simply suggest; keep internet world-wide discussion separate from real-world experience. Use your judgement to handle the transition(?)
--- End quote ---
The forum is part of the Internet; you have real-life experience (and so does every other member of the forum, but it's different from yours). I would respectfully suggest that the forum cannot separate itself from the individual experiences of every one of its members - it's the job of the individual to use their judgement and show respect when interacting with the forum.
--- End quote ---
This.
Indeed, the US is in no way homogeneous even on very small scales. My home county in the state of Washington is also bigger than Delaware -- and it is quite culturally diverse from west to east: west is urban and suburban Seattle; east is very rural. West is quite liberal; east quite conservative.
Even locally, we're pretty diverse: there are >20 language spoken by students in the nearby high school, all of whom live within ~2 mi of here.
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