I’m pretty sure it’s a play on the whole, “eat your dinner! there’s starving children in Africa!” bit parents in the 80s and 90s guilt-tripped their children with.
but that’s OK, you be offended by this comic. after all, something something first-world problems.
That’s certainly the inspiration, but it’s not particularly good or insightful. It’s really just trying to use a bleak made up stereotype to say something others have said without it. It should add to the conversation, but I don’t think this does that. It doesn’t give me any insight I didn’t already possess, and at best it perpetuates an idea that is wrong, if not outright racist.
Just because you aren’t offended by it and don’t care doesn’t mean critique isn’t valid.
How childish. I’m a white man in the US. It doesn’t offend me. I can understand how it can be offensive though. My critique isn’t valid because I’m offended or not, it’s because I used reasoning. Reasoning is valid, not your feelings about it.
What do you think it added to the conversation? Do you not think perpetuating negative tropes is something that should be avoided?
What do you think being offended means, dude? Because this person you’re replying to is not offended. You ignoring the content of the comments and just hammering on really sounds like you’re offended, though. Because that’s what being offended sounds like.
Nah man. You’re reading a lot into this. I was adding to the other comment asking what it adds? Does it add anything? Can you actually construct a reason?
I know it’s easier to insult people and pretend like they’re the ones who are being ridiculous rather than doing the hard work of thinking, but it’s childish.
what message am i supposed to take away from this?
other than that OP takes an offensively bleak view of what life in africa is like?
I think it’s the equivalent of “clean your plate, there are starving children in. -country-”
I.e. you can’t be bothered by bothersome things because other people have it worst.
It’s a bad take
I’m pretty sure it’s a play on the whole, “eat your dinner! there’s starving children in Africa!” bit parents in the 80s and 90s guilt-tripped their children with.
but that’s OK, you be offended by this comic. after all, something something first-world problems.
That’s certainly the inspiration, but it’s not particularly good or insightful. It’s really just trying to use a bleak made up stereotype to say something others have said without it. It should add to the conversation, but I don’t think this does that. It doesn’t give me any insight I didn’t already possess, and at best it perpetuates an idea that is wrong, if not outright racist.
Just because you aren’t offended by it and don’t care doesn’t mean critique isn’t valid.
just because you’re offended doesn’t mean your critique is valid.
How childish. I’m a white man in the US. It doesn’t offend me. I can understand how it can be offensive though. My critique isn’t valid because I’m offended or not, it’s because I used reasoning. Reasoning is valid, not your feelings about it.
What do you think it added to the conversation? Do you not think perpetuating negative tropes is something that should be avoided?
so let me get this straight.
you’re a white American male that’s not directly offended by, but offended in-place of Africans that may or may not see this comic?
Jesus Christ, you’re the epitome of sheltered American with a white savior complex.
it’s a fucking comic strip.
the irony of it all is that you’re in the joke in the comic and you don’t even realize it.
u/GreenKnight23 , that is the best comment in the entire thread
What do you think being offended means, dude? Because this person you’re replying to is not offended. You ignoring the content of the comments and just hammering on really sounds like you’re offended, though. Because that’s what being offended sounds like.
Nah man. You’re reading a lot into this. I was adding to the other comment asking what it adds? Does it add anything? Can you actually construct a reason?
I know it’s easier to insult people and pretend like they’re the ones who are being ridiculous rather than doing the hard work of thinking, but it’s childish.