MeatSuki
kiwifarms.net
- Joined
- May 2, 2024
I’ve seen people argue that nonbinary pronouns are older than what we think and that they are not a product of the 2010’s. What do you all think?
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I don't doubt that they existed prior to the 2010s – I don't think anyone is denying that. I think the key takeaway is that prior to the [current year] timeline, non-binary pronouns were contained to a small niche of mental patients whose insanity didn't quite spill out into the real world yet. If someone in the '90s tried to force everyone to refer to themselves as "them", they would have duly been derided and bullied back into reality. Hell, I've known of the existence of trannies since as far back as the 1990s when I was young, and the total amount I knew of were in the lower single digits – and were heavily mocked among every sane person who knew of them as well.I’ve seen people argue that nonbinary pronouns are older than what we think and that they are not a product of the 2010’s. What do you all think?
So was I, and I remember that the opinion was pretty divided. Saying "I don't agree with homosexuality" today is an automatic ban from everywhere beside places like this site, but back then it was just an opinion people had and was up for debate. It wasn't a popular one, on par with defending Bush and the Iraq War, but it was one people could have and not be considered Super-Hitlers that must be silenced ASAP. Funnily enough, the same people who'd call you a retard for thinking there was something wrong with being gay were also the ones who'd call people gay or fags all the time.I recall being on a fairly "normie" (or at least not one-sided politically) messageboard in the '00s, and it could've been seen as "bigoted" to even question homosexuality.
I don't think I ever saw the pronouns in the bio thing before Trump was campaigning in late 2015, and even then it was limited to only the craziest people on Tumblr for another year or two.It was definitely a thing on the Internet by the Gamergate era, though every person sending you an email was not signing off with their pronouns by that point. It just became more widespread later in the decade.
"Non-binary" literally did not exist prior to 2013 or so. Before then, it was literally either just schizos (like that one 19th century allegedly "non-binary" person you might read about sometimes) or people doing performance art shit with androgyny. "They" as a singular gender neutral pronoun isn't new but seems to have taken off in the 90s once the original wave of political correctness told everyone that you must say "he or she" instead of just "he" as was the convention. But I always ignored that rule and used singular they anyway because it sounded better to me than using "he."I’ve seen people argue that nonbinary pronouns are older than what we think and that they are not a product of the 2010’s. What do you all think?
Yep. The morality of homosexuality was up for debate, and merely being critical of it didn't mean a ban (at least on the site I was on). Now it is an endless Current Year.So was I, and I remember that the opinion was pretty divided. Saying "I don't agree with homosexuality" today is an automatic ban from everywhere beside places like this site, but back then it was just an opinion people had and was up for debate.
I’ve seen people argue that nonbinary pronouns are older than what we think and that they are not a product of the 2010’s. What do you all think?
Even if they weren't invented in the 2010 using pronous online or in real life in the 2000's would get people calling you a fag.
With that said, I do believe that if anyone tried to seriously promote that retarded they/them bullshit pre-2010, it's most likely they were just some terminally-online outcast with no social interaction
Funnily enough, the same people who'd call you a retard for thinking there was something wrong with being gay were also the ones who'd call people gay or fags all the time
The word is degeneracy, not in some chud alt-right sense but in the sense of something having decayed from a better form to something worse. It involves a hatred of beauty and embrace of ugliness.Also they still made comic books and video games where they didn't purposely screw up the design of the female characters to make them uglier.
Plenty of bad ideas has been tried before, dangerhairs are fucking with biologists now and there's a horrible precedent, you sure you want that again?I’ve seen people argue that nonbinary pronouns are older than what we think and that they are not a product of the 2010’s. What do you all think?
So-called "progressives" think history is supposed to be ever-ascending "progress" to "utopia", but an ancient view is that this world is decaying from a bygone Golden Age.The word is degeneracy, not in some chud alt-right sense but in the sense of something having decayed from a better form to something worse.
It was the Vulgar Wave and it was AMAZING. Looking back what really blew my mind about it was that female empowerment ("Girl Power") was basically "Be Hot and Confident". Not that girls/women were better then men in everything but the highest ideal was to fun, happy, and thin.The thing that pops up off the top of my head that I miss most about the 2000s is that chicks being hot wasn't considered a bad thing yet.
I'm not talking about the fuddy duddies who have always disapproved. Segments of pop culture itself now considers women being hot to be bad thing, especially from the angle of men finding something physically attractive, and celebrates chicks being fat and ugly inside and out and make you want to throw up.
Combined with the proliferation of tats. Girls in the 2000s were definitely much hotter than girls today.
Also they still made comic books and video games where they didn't purposely screw up the design of the female characters to make them uglier.
I think it’s possible but it’d likely be in some obscure academic classes or papers, maybe some weird cultural thing unrelated to modern day gender theory.I’ve seen people argue that nonbinary pronouns are older than what we think and that they are not a product of the 2010’s. What do you all think?
Why they go with "vulgar"? I would say that the current era with its public celebration of morbid obesity and all kinds of fetishes is far more vulgar than an era when movies like coyote ugly were peak vulgarity for mostIt was the Vulgar Wave and it was AMAZING. Looking back what really blew my mind about it was that female empowerment ("Girl Power") was basically "Be Hot and Confident". Not that girls/women were better then men in everything but the highest ideal was to fun, happy, and thin.
That and video games were made for, and buy, white/asian nerds.
Banks and payment processors didn't care as much about what you spent money on back then.it was not the vulgar era, it was the freedom era, real freedom
That's another thing I miss about the time before Current Year: appealing to straight male sexuality wasn't considered inherently "male gaze", "misogyny", "objectification", "sexist", nor otherwise rape-y. Or at least it wasn't anywhere near as much as after Current Year began. That's changed in America, since around the time of that "GamerGate" circus, and Anita Sarkeesian peddling that "Tropes vs. Women" propaganda BS. Also back in the '00s, the term "sexualize" (or "sexualized" or "sexualizing" or "sexualization") -- to make straight male sexuality seem like a medical condition -- wasn't thrown around much, if at all. Not as much "heterophobia".media in general was made mostly for men back then
sex
sexual
sexualize
sexualized
sexualization
it's literally the same as:
who
whom
whomst
whomst'd
I really never saw any of that kind of shit until the mid 2010s. Closest I can remember is that whole "sexuality is a spectrum, everyone's at least 1% gay" thing around the mid-late 2000s, but I probably read that from like, one fringe lunatic on Something Awful.Were there ever any instances of people putting their pronouns in their bio in the late 90s/00s (early internet)? Or was this just something that came up in the 2010s?
I was a kid in the 00’s, so I didn’t really used sites like MySpace or anything like that.
>acknowledge realityhere we are two decades later, and they've gone all out with permabans for anyone that says anything the least bit transphobic
Wasn't that in a South Park episode like 20 years ago?I really never saw any of that kind of shit until the mid 2010s. Closest I can remember is that whole "sexuality is a spectrum, everyone's at least 1% gay" thing around the mid-late 2000s, but I probably read that from like, one fringe lunatic on Something Awful.
That's because you couldn't say anything on GameFAQs back then, not because it was ahead of his time. Like IIRC "sucks" was banned from topic titles (or maybe it got you auto-flagged) and you couldn't say other insults like "asshole" either.You could call things gay and say "faggot" pretty much anywhere in the early 2000s. Though I remember GameFAQs banning that kind of language. Even as far back as the early 2000s, saying "gay" for any reason would automatically mark your post for review from a moderator, and "faggot" was treated as a strong curse word. That seemed ludicrous and unprecedented at the time, but here we are two decades later, and they've gone all out with permabans for anyone that says anything the least bit transphobic.