nobodyworthwhile
Remarkable Onion
		Sorry for the doublepost.
What Once Was Normal Is Now Woke
To be honest you could make a variation of this for a lot of groups and political leanings, but this is the Kiwi Tropes thread, so I'll give the Kiwi slant.
Essentially, things have gotten so polarized that things which were once innocuous, or which read very differently in their own time, would be accused of being "woke" if they happened today... or sometimes are even seen as proto-woke.
My favorite way of phrasing this is "Valis would be considered woke if it came out today." Valis, for those who don't know, is a series of video games about a schoolgirl named Yuko who is given a magic sword and told its her job to fight monsters and demons. It's basically Devil Hunter Yohko or Sailor Moon, but as a video game.
Obviously, what I'm getting at with this comparison is that these days, the mere concept of a girl who beats up monsters with a magic sword would be seen as "woke girlboss" regardless of their actual content.
It's not just about past media either: it also highlights that Kiwis tend to have a knee-jerk reaction to modern stuff.
To be fair: when a game has a character asking "what are your pronouns?" I understand the reaction.
But a lot of times you probably won't even understand what they're bitching about without asking, and when you do ask it really is something as petty as "games that star women are woke."
Fractured Logical Fallacies
We all know what logical fallacies are--those arguments people often think prove something, but really don't. Argument to Popularity, Moving the Goalposts, etc.
This topic has spoken about ways Kiwis are often just like Redditors. Yet another way (one even Kiwis have pointed out) is liking to misuse Logical Fallacies, often to mean the exact opposite of what they really mean.
"Moving the Goalpost" is supposed to mean that you've changed the standard for success, but I've seen it used for when you reinforce an existing standard rather than adopt a new, weaker standard that a Kiwi was hoping you'd accept. In essence, on KF "Moving the Goalpost" means that you won't let them pass with a failing grade (unlike Daddy Bush* )
"Strawman" is supposed to mean you put words in someone's mouth (essentially), but I've seen Kiwis accuse you of strawmanning when you're quoting exactly what they said.
One thing I find funny is Kiwis lately love lazy "get out of jail free" arguments. You use a certain word, you're automatically wrong. So of course, it makes sense they would love fallacies, and probably have a twisted understanding of them.
* this was me making a jab at George W. Bush's insane "no child left behind act," which was one of the things that ruined modern education.
				
			What Once Was Normal Is Now Woke
To be honest you could make a variation of this for a lot of groups and political leanings, but this is the Kiwi Tropes thread, so I'll give the Kiwi slant.
Essentially, things have gotten so polarized that things which were once innocuous, or which read very differently in their own time, would be accused of being "woke" if they happened today... or sometimes are even seen as proto-woke.
My favorite way of phrasing this is "Valis would be considered woke if it came out today." Valis, for those who don't know, is a series of video games about a schoolgirl named Yuko who is given a magic sword and told its her job to fight monsters and demons. It's basically Devil Hunter Yohko or Sailor Moon, but as a video game.
Obviously, what I'm getting at with this comparison is that these days, the mere concept of a girl who beats up monsters with a magic sword would be seen as "woke girlboss" regardless of their actual content.
It's not just about past media either: it also highlights that Kiwis tend to have a knee-jerk reaction to modern stuff.
To be fair: when a game has a character asking "what are your pronouns?" I understand the reaction.
But a lot of times you probably won't even understand what they're bitching about without asking, and when you do ask it really is something as petty as "games that star women are woke."
Fractured Logical Fallacies
We all know what logical fallacies are--those arguments people often think prove something, but really don't. Argument to Popularity, Moving the Goalposts, etc.
This topic has spoken about ways Kiwis are often just like Redditors. Yet another way (one even Kiwis have pointed out) is liking to misuse Logical Fallacies, often to mean the exact opposite of what they really mean.
"Moving the Goalpost" is supposed to mean that you've changed the standard for success, but I've seen it used for when you reinforce an existing standard rather than adopt a new, weaker standard that a Kiwi was hoping you'd accept. In essence, on KF "Moving the Goalpost" means that you won't let them pass with a failing grade (unlike Daddy Bush* )
"Strawman" is supposed to mean you put words in someone's mouth (essentially), but I've seen Kiwis accuse you of strawmanning when you're quoting exactly what they said.
One thing I find funny is Kiwis lately love lazy "get out of jail free" arguments. You use a certain word, you're automatically wrong. So of course, it makes sense they would love fallacies, and probably have a twisted understanding of them.
* this was me making a jab at George W. Bush's insane "no child left behind act," which was one of the things that ruined modern education.
 
	 
 
		 
 
		 
 
		 
 
		 
 
		 
 
		