I still can't wrap my head around why people still are of the belief that they just can't disagree with another's beliefs or statements without having to run off an unionize with people merely because they disagree with one person.
Seems like Alt-Furry started out as a white nationalist movement and then to expand made it a "I hate Deo/DogPatch" club. Which I suppose is easier than selling white nationalism, but just as a reminder to the people who joined it as a hate Deo/DogPatch club, its leadership is still very much of the mind that he's recruiting for white nationalism in the long run. Being pissed off at Deo or Dogpatch is merely the lure they've found effective.
Also it should be noted that Mr. Gilbert, alt-furry's leader, thought "Undertale" was degenerate innuendo when seen on a convention program and "somebody thing of the children". Instead of, you know, a Ursa Major winning video game about player agency and morality in their choices of interaction with people, which gained a very large fanbase in 2015.
I mean if that's not someone who's taking themselves a bit to seriously, I don't know what is. I don't know if I'd want to follow someone like that as the bastion of fandom culture, even if I loathed Patch I think that would be folly.
I still can't wrap my head around why people still are of the belief that they just can't disagree with another's beliefs or statements without having to run off an unionize with people merely because they disagree with one person.
Seems like Alt-Furry started out as a white nationalist movement and then to expand made it a "I hate Deo/DogPatch" club. Which I suppose is easier than selling white nationalism, but just as a reminder to the people who joined it as a hate Deo/DogPatch club, its leadership is still very much of the mind that he's recruiting for white nationalism in the long run. Being pissed off at Deo or Dogpatch is merely the lure they've found effective.
Also it should be noted that Mr. Gilbert, alt-furry's leader, thought "Undertale" was degenerate innuendo when seen on a convention program and "somebody thing of the children". Instead of, you know, a Ursa Major winning video game about player agency and morality in their choices of interaction with people, which gained a very large fanbase in 2015.
I mean if that's not someone who's taking themselves a bit to seriously, I don't know what is. I don't know if I'd want to follow someone like that as the bastion of fandom culture, even if I loathed Patch I think that would be folly.