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Anonymous commented at 2011-05-29 02:08:48 » #752079

Come on sweetie, make me feel just like you're sending me to heaven

3 Points Flag
devilgod commented at 2011-10-29 11:17:02 » #913122

anon1 you know that's a trap, right?

0 Points Flag
IchigoRadiance commented at 2013-12-13 14:02:58 » #1452575

@Devilgod

1. What if Anon1 is a girl? Perhaps Anon1 was a girl who liked beautiful "girls". Even if Anon1 was a boy, he may still like beautiful "Girls"
2. What does it matter that the character above has a penis? It certainly doesn't change my perception of the character.

Why would liking a character that has a penis matter? I no longer equate sex with gender, and I no longer equate it with looks either. The Juliet attraction (that is first impression where the only clues you have are visual) says this character is cute. That's all that matters in regards to if a character is attractive or not to me. Knowing that said character has a penis doesn't change that any bit. My perception of them has not changed.

I can't speak for Anon1, but others and myself do know this is a trap, we do know the character has a penis. I'd still fuck him/her(whatever they consider themselves.) In the past, I equated biological sex with gender and would only consider someone's gender by their sex organ. I'd say things like "until they get a sex change, their a boy". I thought that there was a good reason to think that way, that for our own sakes, it was best to determine somebody's gender based on their biological sex. But over time, I learned that except for very rare occasions, biological sex is irrelevant. Behavior and looks aren't determined by having a penis or not. I was heavily reminded of the enforced gender roles my classmates and I had to endure. Growing up, I was a male (that hasn't changed), and there was a negative stereotype that men were aggressive. So I was stereotyped as an aggressive person by default. Even worse than following that stereotype, is when you break them. Since I wasn't aggressive like my stereotype, I was treated substandard by girls. And yet because of the stereotype, I was treated that way for two very inconsistent reasons. I was to be feared, because I was male, but to be mocked, because I wasn't aggressive. Ironically though, I fought the stereotype for so long, that by the end of highschool, people gave up and I had quite a few friends, most of them girls. The stereotype didn't just go to me and other men, it happened the other way too towards girls. Our society is becoming more tribal and people are constantly trying to find differences to fight over. But growing up, I found boys and girls had far more in common than differences and that most of our perceived differences are taught to us by the very people that want us to hate each other.

0 Points Flag