Weismart
Weismart
@weismart

Double buns themselves arent poor

Even if it is really disrespectful and Animal Crossing Bells distasteful... Many folks overexaggerate the harm being done to a ridiculous extent. Having a discourse about components of certain cultures being inappropriate to mimic (Americans dressing up as native Americans for Halloween springs to mind) is completely fine with me, but attempting to ruin someone's life over it is far beyond my comprehension.In China, wearing double buns is a standard hairstyle for little girls, the equal of pigtails from the west. I wouldn't be shocked if it was the same situation in Japan.

Double buns themselves arent poor. I believe that the issue is really that the hairstyle in acnh is much more specifically textured to look like afro puffs instead of space buns. A distance buns hair style in the game would more match how the other buns in the game look.i see where you're coming from, but imo the design doesn't belong to black people. Whites may have afro-textured hair, or hair curled sufficient to have that kind of feel when attached back.

Originally, cultural appropriation was about carrying part of somebody else's culture and profiting from it, like selling"native" Halloween costumes or rebranding music done by black artists and accepting the credit for it. It wasn't assumed to mean that the Twitter authorities will come after you if your video game avatar uses a hairstyle reserved for another race.Being non-Black I Don't want to take a stance against individuals having an issue with it but the poster becoming doxxed within this catapults this into'what the fuck is wrong with you' territory anyway

Even in the height of a pandemic, they nevertheless have the energy to get cranked over exactly what one person does on their very own video game document. It simply ends up catering to Cheap Animal Crossing Items rage porn since thats what fosters"interaction" and retains people on the site.I believe we need to quit attributing sites for the actions of people. Absolutely click-driven algorithms can raise the visibility of angry posts, but it is nevertheless the individual peoples' choices to post their words.