Pixar vs. Jewish Continuity - "What will Pixar come up with next? Assimilating Nemo? Shiksas Inc? Goy Story?"

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It’s the last week of summer vacation, my wife said. Let’s do movie night with the younger kids, she said.

I had heard that Pixar/Disney came out with a new movie. Pixar have made some of the best animated films - Finding Nemo, Toy Story, Monsters Inc, A Bug’s Life, Up, Wall-E, Onward, Inside Out, and more. They are all fantastic stories, with great messages, perfectly executed. Innocent stuff, suitable for a young Jewish audience. And so deciding to watch their new movie, Elemental, was a no-brainer. I’d heard that it was set in a world inhabited by anthropomorphized personifications of the four elements - Earth, Air, Fire and Water. The Fire characters are literally made of fire and can set things on fire; the Water characters can change form at will; the Earth characters grow things on their bodies; the Air characters waft through the air. I didn’t know anything more than that, but it sounded great!

Goodness, did I get a shock.

The entire movie was a promotion for intermarriage.

No, I’m not exaggerating. It began with a married Fire couple of a Fire religion, who speak a foreign language, fleeing suffering in their country by taking a ship to a gleaming new metropolis, Element City. They change their names at immigration to names that are pronounceable in English, but still suffer from anti-Fireism by the other elements. Their daughter, Ember, grows up Americanized, but still loyal to her parent’s fiery tradition and determined to continue their family fire business.

Then Ember meets a Water guy named Wade and starts to fall in love with him. At first, she thinks that it’s a relationship that can never get anywhere - after all, she is Fire and he is Water. Ember is afraid that touching him will result in her death. And her parents are furious at the mere idea of it. They say that their flame will be physically and conceptually extinguished. But finally, they all realize that love conquers all, that Ember intends to keep the family fire burning even though she’s abandoning the family business, and she is united with him forever (and miraculously isn’t extinguished by physical contact). It ends with the daughter and father exchanging a rite of religious respect, showing that her father understood that she wasn’t betraying their religion.

I was rather taken aback that a film’s entire message would be to promote intermarriage. (I subsequently discovered that the director is Korean and intended it to be about Asian immigrants, but it’s equally applicable to Jews.) And it neatly avoided discussing the challenges and problems with it. For example, what elements would their kids be? A dilution of Fire and Water wouldn’t have the strengths of either!

And if intermarriage between Earth, Air, Fire and Water becomes acceptable, how long does it take before the divisions disappear entirely? Sure, if your goal is a melting pot then it doesn’t matter so much, and it’s better to have everyone be the same. But the premise of the film was that the unique characteristics of the elements were actually valuable. How would these characteristics remain, if they are blended out of existence?

What will Pixar come up with next? Assimilating Nemo? Shiksas Inc? Goy Story?
 
Miscegenation for thee, but not for me, goy!
That remind me of this old meme I saw on Twitter. https://twitter.com/RaceRealismUSA/status/1132971402104115202
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Oh, that was done already.

It was called "Santa Inc" and mocked Christmas.

Sorry, Hebewitz, you aren't allowed to get upset. "It's just children's entertainment".

No, no, you don't get to protest. You made the rules, you have to live by them.
Nah, those were made by self hating secular Jews who would freak out at the message this rabbi is giving.

Intermarriage is a concern because Judaism is handed down through the mother and also because it kills any Judaism in the child. I know it's a meme about something being worse than da shoah but intermarriage has caused more damage to Judaism thanks to fake Jews like the people who made that Santa inc movie. The Holocaust killed Jews but in the end the damage stopped, the damage goes on for generations with intermarriage
 
I was rather taken aback that a film’s entire message would be to promote intermarriage. (I subsequently discovered that the director is Korean and intended it to be about Asian immigrants, but it’s equally applicable to Jews.)

...

What will Pixar come up with next? Assimilating Nemo? Shiksas Inc? Goy Story?
You ever read about another's experience and concoct a plan to make it all about yourself? No wonder jews pass their lineage through the women, their men are whiny and histrionic. Maybe a tale about a Chinese girl living in Canada and having her period is more up his alley; I'm sure he can identify with an overbearing mother figure and being obsessed with children's bodily functions.
 
WHY DO YOU CARE THEN??!?
Jewish Author: I'm going to write an article about a shitty movie nobody wants to see because everything has to be about me, only me, and nobody else but me.

Random Reader: Lol this is the most Jewish thing I've read all month.

Jewish Author: Oy vey! They're literally trying to Shoah me! The only thing that's going to save me is all your beautiful shekels. Come on, give them here. I can smell them right now!
 
Nah, those were made by self hating secular Jews who would freak out at the message this rabbi is giving.

Intermarriage is a concern because Judaism is handed down through the mother and also because it kills any Judaism in the child. I know it's a meme about something being worse than da shoah but intermarriage has caused more damage to Judaism thanks to fake Jews like the people who made that Santa inc movie. The Holocaust killed Jews but in the end the damage stopped, the damage goes on for generations with intermarriage
Bro what? Judaism is a religion my guy, same as any other. That's what conversion is for. I know, spooky scary stuff, but if you want your population to actually have real believers in it instead of a rotting old guard, you need fresh blood. Intermarriage isn't the issue, brain rot is, which leads to these purity spiral articles.
 
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