IGN afraid of reviewing Hogwarts Legacy

She tried for a long time to respond respectfully to her critics and it accomplished nothing. The organized, relentless attacks and stalking continued and grew worse. If this had happened to you, the chances are very high that you would have reacted in the same way whether you want to admit it or not.
Yeah I understand this that was the point I was making. It's really challenging to hold onto that initial empathy when you're being harangued by people who don't want to repay it.

I think being able to do that is the thing that shows strength and integrity rather than being a pushover and apologizing for something you meant sincerely or a stubborn ox who doubles down out of oppositional defiance.
 
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was watching a livestream of the game and thought the voice acting was glitched for this character.
Honestly, for me it sort of breaks the immersion. All I can think of when I see this character, is that an openly trans person in the late 1800s in Scotland would have been completely ostracized from society. In those days, it would've been treated the same as a mental illness.

I know, I know... it's a game about fantasy and magic, there is nothing realistic about it. But still, it's odd. While I get why they did it, it just seems like pandering to me.
 
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Honestly, for me it sort of breaks the immersion. All I can think of when I see this character, is than an openly trans person in the late 1800s in Scotland would have been completely ostracized from society. In those days, it would've been treated the same as a mental illness.
It would have been treated as mental illness in 2015.

The Big Bang Theory, the most mainstream of mainstream shows, has a joke about in an early season. I bet that's been scrubbed.

GTA had jokes about it in 2013. They have been scrubbed.

Men dressing as women is plainly ridiculous. We are all being gaslit.
 
How can anyone who believes in postmodern relativism (i.e., self-defined narratives, morality, and ethics) claim the moral high ground when their views are nothing but subjective opinions that vary from person to person?



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Because their opinions are completely incoherent and not grounded in anything true or real, as that "ethicist" you quote ably demonstrates. If you believe there is some line that demarcates where you stop accepting objective truths and reality (e.g. in "the sciences") then the reality is that you can put that line anywhere you want "if it feels true."
 
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How can anyone who believes in postmodern relativism (i.e., self-defined narratives, morality, and ethics) claim the moral high ground when their views are nothing but subjective opinions that vary from person to person?
There's a difference between having self-defined ethics (as opposed to prescriptive or dogmatic beliefs) and believing that ethics are meaningless/non-existent. Most secular humanists believe in the idea that there is an objective right and wrong, they just think it's something we have to figure out with our minds, rather than by reading 2000 year old forgeries cobbled together from other forgeries.
Because their opinions are completely incoherent and not grounded in anything true or real, as that "ethicist" you quote ably demonstrates. If you believe there is some line that demarcates where you stop accepting objective truths and reality (e.g. in "the sciences") then the reality is that you can put that line anywhere you want "if it feels true."
This is the opposite of what the quote says, which is that postmodernists tend to embrace areas where objective truth can be agreed upon, like science. It's the more abstract and philosophical areas where they recognize that objectivity is harder and there's room to disagree, since we're all just doing our best to grasp these concepts rationally. And Thacker argues that, given that wiggle room, people will rationalize to themselves things that make them feel good.

When it comes to science denialism, I think it's pretty clear that the more dogmatic worldviews struggle the most.
 
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then the reality is that you can put that line anywhere you want "if it feels true."
Funny note here: people that say "I feel" instead of "I think" have a tendency to dismiss objective metrics or empirical results going with their "gut feeling", even if that contradicts the data. Typical "it's just your opinion" stance.
 
Funny note here: people that say "I feel" instead of "I think" have a tendency to dismiss objective metrics or empirical results going with their "gut feeling", even if that contradicts the data. Typical "it's just your opinion" stance.
I feel you are correct.
 
It would have been treated as mental illness in 2015.

The Big Bang Theory, the most mainstream of mainstream shows, has a joke about in an early season. I bet that's been scrubbed.

GTA had jokes about it in 2013. They have been scrubbed.

Men dressing as women is plainly ridiculous. We are all being gaslit.

RDJ makes a joke about it in the first Iron Man.
 
We are all being gaslit.
Steve Bannon Bingo GIF
 
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There's a difference between having self-defined ethics (as opposed to prescriptive or dogmatic beliefs) and believing that ethics are meaningless/non-existent. Most secular humanists believe in the idea that there is an objective right and wrong, they just think it's something we have to figure out with our minds, rather than by reading 2000 year old forgeries cobbled together from other forgeries.

This is the opposite of what the quote says, which is that postmodernists tend to embrace areas where objective truth can be agreed upon, like science. It's the more abstract and philosophical areas where they recognize that objectivity is harder and there's room to disagree, since we're all just doing our best to grasp these concepts rationally. And Thacker argues that, given that wiggle room, people will rationalize to themselves things that make them feel good.

When it comes to science denialism, I think it's pretty clear that the more dogmatic worldviews struggle the most.
I don't really see this "recognition that objectivity is harder and there's room to disagree re: abstract and philosophical areas" attitude in many people who are "secular humanists". And Im technically one of them. In fact this is my major issue with super left spaces currently - I see statistics being overused and manipulated to try to bend science to someone's philosophical or abstract belief so they can claim it's scientific often. To me, who has been an atheist my entire life, a lot of the spaces feel full of people who behave effectively identical to the Christian's when I was younger except with a different set of morals/dogma.
 
Over the last few years, we have seen Rowling tiptoe forward from reasonable (if strawmanny) "I love and support trans right but I think their experience is different than transwomen" to straight up "I think trans women are sexual predators invading women's spaces" over the course of a few years, and even writing a book about a cross dressing serial killer and kind of making the whole thing core to her identity.

But the question that I think critics need to ask themselves is how did she get there? Was this a gradual mask slip, or was she radicalized by the extremely toxic backlash to her initial comments, the waves of death threats and dehumanizing characterizations that followed?


I think the criticism is fair but the hysteria is just so counterproductive. The discourse itself is making things worse for trans people.
This is well thought out coz I was thinking the same thing. The more you get attacked over something the more likely you are to dig your heels in if the attacks are personal.
 
I was a Wizard101 kid growing up, so I don't have any kind of nostalgia for Harry Potter and can just sit back and watch the fireworks

I just think it's really funny how J.K. Rowling saying transphobic stuff was the personal 9/11 for grown adults with their Hogwarts house in their bio
 
Great to see so many game sites review the game. Good score or bad score doesn't matter. At least they did it. You'd think reviewing a video game wouldn't be a life or death kind of situation.

It's Harry Potter. Not some kind of oddball School Shooting Sim.

A franchise meant for fun for all ages, but literally started out as kids books.

Yet you got some big name sites hesitant to review the game, and some like Gamespot who are avoiding it completely so far. In its place a giant trans article.

Who knew a book about kids and wizardry written by a middle aged woman 20 years ago who has an opinion on biology would lead to this. I dont think they would put up this big of a fight if someone knocked on their door to repossess their car or home.

They should be absolutely embarrassed with themselves. And any gamer reading sites like that or using their forums should be ashamed too that their game editors and mods act more childish than a 5 year old dressing up as Harry for Halloween.

Amazing that grown ass adults can act this way against a Harry Potter video game.
 
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Great to see so many game sites review the game. Good score or bad score doesn't matter. At least they did it. You'd think reviewing a video game wouldn't be a life or death kind of situation.

It's Harry Potter. Not some kind of oddball School Shooting Sim.

A franchise meant for fun for all ages, but literally started out as kids books.

Yet you got some big name sites hesitant to review the game, and some like Gamespot who are avoiding it completely so far. In its place a giant trans article.

Who knew a book about kids and wizardry written by a middle aged woman 20 years ago who has an opinion on biology would lead to this. I dont think they would put up this big of a fight if someone knocked on their door to repossess their car or home.

They should absolutely embarrassed. And any gamer reading sites like that or using their forums should be ashamed too that their game editors and mods act more childish than a 5 year old dressing up as Harry for Halloween.

Amazing that grown ass adults can act this way against a Harry Potter video game.
Remember when Harry Potter was banned for witchcraft by hardcore christians? It's like the same shit all over again lol
 
Remember when Harry Potter was banned for witchcraft by hardcore christians? It's like the same shit all over again lol
I'm not a HP fan so I don't know about any other dumbassery related to the book, but if there's one good thing about social media is that it proved what all of us believed, but couldn't prove before the internet….. the world has shitloads more dumbasses than imagined.

Isn't the avg IQ of a human 100? I think scientists overinflated their estimates. The typical IQ is probably more like 82 going by all the idiots you see on the net! Lol
 
Who would have guessed this would have turned out to be the most hilariously ineffective boycott ever? It's almost as if 99% of people don't care.
 
Who would have guessed this would have turned out to be the most hilariously ineffective boycott ever? It's almost as if 99% of people don't care.
It's also worth mentioning that the outrage over JK Rowling almost exclusively takes place in the Anglosphere, whereas the popularity of the books and the franchise reach far beyond that.
 
Who would have guessed this would have turned out to be the most hilariously ineffective boycott ever? It's almost as if 99% of people don't care.
Even more funny is that they helped give the game more exposure to people probably only knew about it and checked it out because of this ridiculous boycott call out.
 
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