What Really Makes Me Mad About Cancel Culture Is How People Assume They Know Everything About A Certain

what really makes me mad about cancel culture is how people assume they know everything about a certain celebrity based on their activity in social media. It is how they strongly believe they can determinate if someone is a good/bad person based on which picture they like, who they follow on Instagram, which tweets they retweet...

Firstly, no one is either good or bad. This rethoric is so problematic I could actually write an essay about it.

Secondly, I see this as a consequence of stan culture. We stan celebrities and act as if they were perfect, but they are just as humans as we are. I don't like to judge people based on what I see on Instagram. And also a few things are sooo exaggerated!!

"Omgg he liked a tweet, I'm so sad I feel sick whenever I see anything about him!!"

"If you are still following her, please let me know, so I can block you."

Whenever I enter twitter and I see some celebrity being canceled, I only see people that are trying to feel morally superior to others. I don't see anyone who cares about society and actually does something to improve the world, only SJW who bash on everyone who disagrees with them.

Of course some people deserve to be held accountable for what they do or say. Being transphobic, racist, sexist, homophobic is not okay. But we also can't assume anyone's characters based on likes and follows and retweets and not speaking out about something. We don't know actually know them. We admire their work but we don't live with them.

More Posts from Agirlfromsampa and Others

4 years ago

Hello everyone, I’m Yazan 23 years old from Syria.

And this is my short story:

I left Syria since the war started in 2011, I had a great life there but I lost my house there and my father who passed away with a heart failure accident.

We moved to Lebanon and we lived at Beirut, I studied in an institute electronics then I stopped studying because I started working to help my family, I worked as security guard, then I worked at an NGO that help Syrians in refugees.

After the big explosion that happened in the 4th of August 2020 I lost my job in Beirut where I was working in a clothing store near to down town.

I created this blog for business goal to work online and I am aiming to reach my dreams by helping my family to live then focus on my own dreams.

You might think that I am a spam or someone fake or liar, but please continue reading and believe in me as I believe in Allah!

What I can offer to you is online courses in Arabic language with a real cheap price and you can trust me and trust my work, my mother is an Arabic teacher but she’s not working anymore but I am really good in Arabic literature and I write a lot of poems and quotes so I can share with you some to trust my work. So if you are really interested in helping me by offering me a job in my house and sending me the payment with the trusted office “Western Union” please direct me and I won’t ask you for a lot of money, I can teach you Arabic with 20$-50$ only. You have no idea how is this important to me especially that in Lebanon we are passing through a real hard situation in politics and in financial, we asked for back to Syria but I still have to attend the required years in the Army.

About the cancer, I had cancer in my blood since I was 8 years old, the cancer is leukemia type and I am fighting it with high cost medicine that is not totally covered by the ministry in Lebanon

I am really sorry because I shared this personal story but I really need to work in freelancing to save my family and continue to achieve my dreams because these days are so hard in the earth and especially Lebanon.

Thank you all and I hope that you could help me😊

3 years ago
Mans Coming For That Oscar & Making Y’all MAD At The Same Time 💅🏼 Booked & Busy

mans coming for that Oscar & making y’all MAD at the same time 💅🏼 booked & busy

7 years ago

Last week I slept at 7 am. No kidding.

me: *has to get up early*

me at 1am:

Me: *has To Get Up Early*
1 month ago

“What really knocks me out is a book that, when you're all done reading it, you wish the author that wrote it was a terrific friend of yours and you could call him up on the phone whenever you felt like it. That doesn't happen much, though."

J.D. Salinger "The Catcher in the Rye”

4 years ago

Settling the Aladdin discourse

Can all the misinformed Americans and Brits pipe down for a second? I’m rolling out the historical carpet from the perspective of someone who’s actually grown up in the Middle East and why none of this matters.

I heard Aladdin or as I knew it, as ‘The Magic Lamp of Alaa el-Din’. It is one of the most popular tales from the region, next to Sindbad, Ali Baba and the Forty Thieves and but guess what?

It’s a trainwreck of a tale, so is Disney’s adaptation. Why? Because it makes no sense, culturally or historically. Why? It’s not authentic. It’s not actually a real part of the stories Schehrezade/Shahrazad told to King Shahrayar in One Thousand and One Nights.

It was added in by a European translator, Antoine Galland, then later accepted as part of canon.

BRIEF HISTORY LESSON:

One Thousand and One Nights is a collection of folktales presented in a story-within-a-story context. King Shahrayar of Persia’s wife cheated on him, he then had her and her lover put to death, but her infidelity drove him mad with paranoia. He decided to marry every virgin in the kingdom them put her to death come morning so she wouldn’t have the chance to cheat on him.

Alas, he ran out of virgins, all except for his grand-vizier’s daughter Shahrazad. She agreed to marry the king, assuring her father she had a plan. After their wedding night, Shahrazad began the distraction plot to end all plots. She asked the king if he wanted to hear a story and spent the whole night entertaining him with it, making sure to end with the start of another tale. Once he’s ask “What happened?” she’d tell him, “Wait for tomorrow,” and restart the same process.

She kept him on the episodic hook for a thousand and one nights, spinning so many tales and retelling many until she finally ran out. But, by the time she did, they had developed a good relationship, had children, and he no longer cared about his kill-come-sunrise rule, and they lived happily ever after.

So, why is Aladdin a trainwreck? For starters, it’s set in CHINA. And China is for some reason ruled by a sultan. Sultans are the titles of Ottoman kings, as in Turks. Aladdin is recruited by a sorcerer/Jafar from the Maghreb, which is typically used to refer to Morocco (literally called El Maghreb in Arabic) or all of NA sans Egypt. The Princess is called Badroulbadour not Jasmine, and while she has an Old Arabic name ‘badr al badour / full moon of full moons’, she is described as being from the FAR EAST. She was never an Arab, neither was Aladdin!

Can you tell this was made up by a confused foreigner?

So, we have a Turkish king in China, Aladdin is Chinese, Jafar is Moroccan and Jasmine is Japanese. It’s the same in the Disney movie. The style of the characters and background in Disney’s Aladdin is unmistakably an Persian-Indian fusion with some Ottoman sprinkled in. The concept of a genie/djinni is literally the only Arab part of the tale.

1. Jasmine’s headpiece/tiara, appearance, and pet tiger point to Indian. But she wears harem pants/şalvar, which are Turkish (Indian version shalwar).

Actually, she’s a toned-down version of a belly-dancer. Belly dancing is practiced from Egypt to Lebanon to Persia and India, it was spread by the Ottomans.

image

2. The Sultan is styled like a merge between a Sikh maharajah (Indian) and a sultan (Turkish).

image

3. The magic carpet is also an Indian concept (Prince Husain, son of the Sultan of the Indies in OTaON retrieves a magic carpet from India.)

4. The sultan’s palace is based on the Taj Mahal

image

5. The Genie/djinni is the lone Arabic concept.

image

Here’s what lots of Westerners don’t get. All of these cultures have bled on one another. From the Maghreb to Egypt, to the Levant, to Turkey, to the Arabian Peninsula, to Iraq, to Persia and India we all share so many traits because of trade, history or, you guessed it, invasion. Cultural exchange is pretty common, I grew up with a lot of Persian stories, Indian products and Bollywood movies in theatres, leftover Turkish culture and food from Ottomans, Arab culture from prior invasions, interaction and language, and so, so many Lebanese pop stars.

It’s actually pretty smart to amass a cast from different parts of the Near, Middle and South East, so to include everyone who likely grew up with Shahrazad and her many, many tales.

If there’s anyone you should have a problem with, it’s Will Smith as the genie. It’s pretty transparent how you all ignored how this is the second time a black man plays the genie (first on Once Upon A Time) but sling hate at Naomi Scott for being Indian.

Oh, and Disney fucked up by blaring Arabian Nights at the start and end of the movie, because One Thousand and One Nights is NOT called Arabian Nights. It’s called Alf Leyla w Leyla - literally ‘A Thousand Nights and One’.

It’s a collection of Persian, Indian, Egyptian, Arabic, Mesopotamian and Jewish folklore that was compiled in Arabic.

Aladdin is being played by the Egyptian Mena Massoud, Jasmine is by the Indian Naomi Scott and the rest of the cultures involved should be cast.

Oh, and to all people saying Naomi is ‘too light’ and ‘half-whitewashing’. Take your racial purity and stick it up your nose. Middle Eastern, Indian and North African girls come in all shades, even if both sets of grandparents are native to the region.

PS. Avan Jogia is seriously out there saying him playing Aladdin would have ‘been wrong’ because ‘he should be Middle Eastern’ but he had no problem playing King Tut, who is EGYPTIAN? As in Middle Eastern??

Quit your virtue-signaling, Rami Malek is still the only Egyptian to ever play one in Western media.

Anyway, POINT MADE.

Settling The Aladdin Discourse
7 years ago

from me to tom holland

From Me To Tom Holland
3 years ago

This is fine

(x)

4 months ago

🌿 Help Us Find Peace Amid the Chaos 🌿

My mother, Heba, a pregnant mother of five, was forced to leave Gaza for medical care just before the war erupted, separating her from her one-year-old baby and four stepchildren.😭

We as a family, already burdened by loss after the death of our biological mother four years ago, now faces unimaginable hardship without both of them.💔

🌿 Help Us Find Peace Amid The Chaos 🌿

We are trapped in Gaza with our father, struggling to survive amid constant shelling, displacement, and the devastation of losing our home 😔. My mother’s heart breaks every day, knowing her family is suffering while she is unable to reach them.😭

This is a life-or-death situation. Your support can help us to reunite with our mum and support us at this challenging time. Together, we can bring hope and healing to a family devastated by conflict.

please note this campaign is vetted by @dlxxv-vetted-donations Check Here ✅

Donate to Help Reunite a Family Torn A part by the War, organized by Jumana Elmadhoun
gofundme.com
My name is Jumana Elmadhoun I am writing on behalf of… Jumana Elmadhoun needs your support for Help Reunite a Family Torn
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she/her. qualquer coisa me bota no paredawn

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