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regrettably. i do like the aesthetics introduced with Radical Remix, though.
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(Background: My two closest friends and I often chat about which friend we are out of specific trios.)
Worms and Sonia: You're the dramatic androgynous vampire with daddy issues. Me: Wait, how am *I* Alucard? -after watching the first season of Castlevania- Me: Ah, yes, I am Alucard. |
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Okay, I got a plan. Bake more of it! Send them to all studio bosses, directors, writers - heck, send them to everyone! Perhaps this will lead to a greater selection of movies that don't include any to begin with. |
does espy is vampire????? only we will know the truth behind this.
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Eyyy, vampire-inspired avatar. Haven’t done gothic red/black in so long.
Also no, I’ve never been particularly vampire-y. |
The only reason aphobia exists at all is because of identity politics.
Asexuality used to be considered a virtue and even today there are religious groups that demand celibacy. People react to it the way they do now because it's gone from being a curious background fact about someone that wouldn't even matter (and would be considered noble if it DID come up) to being something that a small but vocal group has trumpeted as an oppressed population that needs recognition -- when, in fact, they weren't oppressed to begin with. Getting rolled into the queer community was probably the worst thing that could have happened to ace people, because it means that they're now one of the targets of queerphobic opinions. If someone were to call themselves "celibate" instead of "ace" then I bet people would react totally differently. |
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I think lots of directors already have some cake though, that made movies with either little to no romance/sexy parts in it. :] |
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Not really? At least, not in a historical context. Historically, having no sense of attraction to anyone would have still resulted in the label "celibate" being appropriate. (Unless of course you were in a sexual relationship with someone you weren't attracted to, but that's neither here nor there.) It's only in the context of modern views on sexuality and the social shift surrounding religion that the term has picked up the current connotations.
And the same is true of "ace." It doesn't say why, only what. For that matter, probing into the underlying "why" of ace would probably be pretty darn offensive to most people, I would imagine. |
-shrug- All I know is, whereas most people are sexually attracted to any number of genders, I'm not. Whether that's been exacerbated by meds is irrelevant. And ace/aro are queer.
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Just give me the number of your dealer/bakery then. And a list of movies, because right now all I can think of is war films. I'd love a good vampire flick that's not cheesy romance, and I haven't yet watched a historical costume drama without romance either.
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sad, feel like i don't belong anywhere again.
also my right hand (which is conveniently my dominant hand) had a spike of numb. got an ache in my elbow. sucks. |
Coda, while I appreciate the point you're trying to make here with your historical pulls... you're being hurtful towards people like myself that have dealt with the struggle that people under the ace umbrella have.
It's not all about being lumped in with the queer community and being hated on because of that. It's also being pressured into relationships and sex that you don't have any real interest in, or even being raped as a way of 'correcting' matters. Aphobia is a thing that stretches far beyond simple identity politics. It's something that happens whether there's a label for it or not. For whatever extra issues come up with being lumped into the community, at least it can be talked about now, which is a hell of a lot more than we had. |
ngl, i'm fairly certain coda's got good intentions, just a bit misguided.
the whole issue with being in the LGBT+ / queer community is that there's people that don't believe ace or aro people belong in the community. and because we don't belong in the straight / heterosexual community either as a result of not having sexual or romantic attraction, we're practically ostracised from people with the same experiences. plus a lot of the arguments are rehashed biphobia, which opens up a whole new can of worms. |
thanks.
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