this post was submitted on 14 Mar 2024
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It only takes a few "wild outliers."
Also, there should not be a "culture" devoted to an inanimate object.
Instead of a "culture," think of it as a "fandom."
He's the equivalent of a person wearing a ton of anime stuff in public. Or a Trekkie wearing a uniform.
Nerd!
Until a gun is able to shoot waifu body pillows at me I'm not taking this as a valid argument.
Appropriate regulations would allow the responsible carrying of weapons while stripping people like this of the ability to, well...do that. It would also probably help to normalize the culture in the eyes of the people who speak up against it.
That'd be stupid easy to make, just scale up a t-shirt gun. You'll have to make it, since companies will likely deem that not commercially viable enough to mass produce outside Japan, but nothing is stopping you from doing it.
I legit love this idea and am going to start equating these guys with the guys that have those ahegao faces all over their car.
"P...p...pull my trigger, senpai?"
Exactly. It's a fandom. I love Star Trek, which actually has a moral code attached to it. I wouldn't call Trekkies a culture.
Until a Trekkie walks into a school or supermarket and kills a bunch of folks with his cosplay tricorder, it's not fandom. It's violent insecurity and idiocy masquerading as bravery.
"drinking" culture, "bicycle" culture, "car" culture. It's just a way to express society's attitude towards those in animate object, and how our lives are impacted as a result.
Drinking culture in the US determines that you shouldn't drive while intoxicated. Car culture makes it impossible to get out of the bar withot driving, so it means that the most common way to get your drunk friend home is to call them an Uber.