💰 Grifter "Mad at the Internet" - a/k/a My Psychotherapy Sessions

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I think I am going to sneed
 
For Null, saying no one responded to his offer for creating merch (putting stickers on a spreadsheet), I assumed that someone else already did it.
Maybe many other people assumed, that someone else already offered to help? Kinda like (not) submitting bug reports.
 
@Null Since you mentioned the Palworld lawsuit and japs being especially retarded with regards to copyright, here is another one that happened a little while ago that I found quite revolting:
In the left corner: The Japan Times - publisher of Genki, an integrated course to study Japanese.
In the right corner: The Genki study resources website project by Seth Clydesdale (see: https://sethclydesdale.github.io/genki-study-resources/).
From what I gather, the goal of the study resource page was to provided an interactive version of vocabulary and other exercise s.t. people who would self study could have some feedback on the exercises and their progress. After having been approached by the Japan Times, Seth removed most of the exercises referencing the specific course material, but tried to keep basic vocabulary exercises, which resulted in the following post form October 3rd, quote:
Hello again.

The Japan Times got back to me once again about my request in regards to preserving the Kana, Vocab, and Kanji exercises. Their answer? Even offering simple flashcard-like exercises for Kana, Vocab, or Kanji is supposedly "copyright infringement."

Personally, this frustrates me very much as I wanted to keep basic content like Kana, Vocab, and Kanji to help students studying with these textbooks. I was more than open to working with them, however, I personally believe they're starting to overstep their bounds and are being extremely unfair.

Regardless, I won't let this stop me from creating Japanese language learning software, and I will instead be focusing on my own original content moving forward, rather than textbooks.

Sorry once again for the inconvenience brought about by this situation. If you have any complaints, do direct them here.
(see: https://ko-fi.com/post/All-Exercises-for-GenkiQuartet-Study-Resources-Wi-R6R81M8LLN)

Copyright is gayniggeraids, but being this insistent about open source resources for self studying a language, and basically claiming to have a copyright on a language, is beyond that. What a bunch of niggercattle.
 
Complaining is how the left, trannies and jews got what they wanted, unironically Karenmaxxing and becoming an annoying faggot works when dealing with corporations and the goverment, always chimp out.
 
Jin-Roh is beautifully animated, but it is a romantic-tragedy. The source material (Kerberos Panzer Cop) is not very cohesive and spread out through lots of different media. The director of Jin-Roh said to make it a love story to motivate sales with the general public. It worked, because normies know about Jin-Roh, but did not give a shit about the rest of KPC.
 
I have been successfully baited and will speak of my knowledge of Japanese cartoons, thinking Jin-Roh sucks while having actually seen it is what they call a plebeian opinion, thinking the non-action parts aren't critical to making the action matter at all is such a brainlet opinion that it's a scientifically reliable indicator of microencephaly. I'm afraid that having that opinion literally means you are unable to judge the quality of stories, and that you're only to be trusted in evaluating Transformers movies. Thinking otherwise is to admit to not understanding a movie with thematic imagery so heavy that you could crush a submarine with it.

I'm not going to explain the movie because despite what some people think this isn't the anime recommendation thread, I'm just using it for the more approved activity of calling somebody stupid.
 
heal turn in about 2 months by snoop dog
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Snoop Dogg has partnered with GLAAD to support Spirit Day, the LGBTQ+ youth anti-bullying initiative. As part of the campaign, the rapper sat down with “The Voice” alum Jeremy Beloate — a member of the LGBTQ+ community who was part of Team Snoop on the NBC reality series — for a special Spirit Day conversation. The two discussed their recent collaboration on a new song titled “Love Is Love,” which is featured in Snoop’s animated children’s YouTube series, “Doggyland.”
“It’s a beautiful thing that kids can have parents of all walks and be shown love, to be taught what love is…being able to have parents from all walks of life, whether it be two fathers, two mothers, whatever it is, love is the key,” Snoop said in the conversation.

In the children’s show, Beloate voices a puppy named Zippy, who joins the Doggyland pups to sing “Love Is Love,” a song that celebrates the love shared among families. Snoop, meanwhile, voices Bow Wizzle, one of the show’s main characters.

“Our parents are different / No two are the same / But the one thing that’s for certain is the love won’t change,” the pups sing, as several same-sex couples appear on screen. “Families are special / They are so unique / Everybody’s got a purpose, more than what you see / We love you, parents / We love you so.”

Snoop said in a statement: “At the end of the day, it’s all about love — that’s what we’re teachin’ the kids with ‘Love Is Love.’ Partnering with GLAAD for Spirit Day just felt right, because spreading love and respect for everybody is what real gangstas do. We’re showin’ the next generation that kindness is cool, inclusion is powerful, and love always wins.”
Snoop’s partnership with GLAAD, along with his new song “Love Is Love,” comes months after the rapper made controversial comments about the Pixar film “Lightyear.”

On an August episode of the “It’s Giving” podcast, Snoop Dogg said he felt “scared” to bring his grandchildren to the movies after watching “Lightyear,” the 2022 “Toy Story” spinoff that includes a scene featuring two women raising a child — along with Disney and Pixar’s first same-sex kiss.

“They’re like, ‘She had a baby — with another woman,'” Snoop recalled. “Well, my grandson, in the middle of the movie is like, ‘Papa Snoop? How she have a baby with a woman? She’s a woman!’”

Snoop remembered thinking, “Oh shit, I didn’t come in for this shit. I just came to watch the goddamn movie.’”

“‘They just said, she and she had a baby — they’re both women. How does she have a baby?'” he recalled his grandson pressing.

“It fucked me up. I’m like, scared to go to the movies,” Snoop added at the time. “Y’all throwing me in the middle of shit that I don’t have an answer for… It threw me for a loop. I’m like, ‘What part of the movie was this?’ These are kids. We have to show that at this age? They’re going to ask questions. I don’t have the answer.”

During his recent conversation with Beloate, Snoop explained that “Love Is Love” is “teaching parenthood, it’s teaching the situation that kids and the world is going through right now in a beautiful way — through song, dance, melody — and just trying to get more understanding, clarity, on how we live and the way we live. And I felt like this music is a beautiful bridge to bring an understanding.”

He continued, “This is a program that we’ve been doing for years, where we involve kids, and these are things that kids have questions about. So now, hopefully, we can help answer these questions and help them to live a happy life and understand that love is love.”

Watch Snoop and Beloate’s full conversation below:
 
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