- Joined
- May 29, 2020
Will that 41% rate see an uptick after this book becomes a best-seller?
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And use a TIG welder to make sure they can't get out?You ever had that urge to shove someone in a locker?
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Wtf, why is this story 900 pages? The fuck? This is the problem with success. She doesn't have an editor anymore.
No joke, the first thing I thought of when I saw the title was "Why is it ok for JK Rowling to straight up steal the plot to Dressed to Kill? De Palma should sue!
Friday the 13th did it even better and it was gender-flipped.Psycho did it better
Oh, so not even a transvestite, just someone from /b/.Instead, he is a man who had “camouflaged himself behind an apparently fey and gentle facade”. Having been abused as a child, Creed begins watching women undressing in secret at the age of 12, stealing women’s underwear and wearing it while masturbating. On one work night out, he puts on the coat of a female colleague and sings a song. He has “a convivial, sexually ambiguous persona that worked well with the drunk and lonely”; when a stash of jewellery is found hidden below his floorboards, “he said he’d bought it because he liked to cross-dress”. In reality, this was a lie to cover that these were trophies taken from his victims.
Creed is described as a “genius of misdirection in his neat little white van, dressed in the pink coat he’d stolen from [his landlady] Vi Cooper, and sometimes wearing a wig that, from a distance, to a drunk victim, gave his hazy form a feminine appearance just long enough for his large hands to close over a gasping mouth”.
To follow up on this a bitAs Robbie Coltrane, who played Hagrid in the iconic Harry Potter movies responded to prior outrage targeting Rowling, "I don’t think what she said was offensive really. I don't know why but there's a whole Twitter generation of people who hang around waiting to be offended."
The young ones. The adults agree with her because they know they're right.Unfortunately all the other actors from HP threw her to the wolves, from Radcliffe to Emma to Rupert.
The young ones. The adults agree with her because they know they're right.
Might as well call her the God(ess) of Ruse.It's 900 pages because she's a masterful troll. The trans brigade, desperate for victim points, are going to read every single fucking page to obsessively tweet and vlog about.
Wow those little shits.Unfortunately all the other actors from HP threw her to the wolves, from Radcliffe to Emma to Rupert to the black Hermione that Rowling bent over backwards to try to justify. Fuck, even the chink actress felt it necessary to along with working in a BLM virtue signal.
Radcliffe - Daniel Radcliffe, who rose to fame playing Harry Potter, was one of the first to address the issue with a lengthy statement he released via The Trevor Project. "Transgender women are women. Any statement to the contrary erases the identity and dignity of transgender people and goes against all advice given by professional health care associations who have far more expertise on this subject matter than either Jo or I," he wrote, before speaking directly to fans of the series impacted by Rowling's remarks. "If you found anything in these stories that resonated with you and helped you at any time in your life — then that is between you and the book that you read, and it is sacred."
Emma Watson, another member of the core cast from a young age as witch Hermione Granger, turned to Twitter to express her support for the trans community. "Trans people are who they say they are and deserve to live their lives without being constantly questioned or told they aren’t who they say they are," Watson tweeted, before adding a second tweet reading, "I want my trans followers to know that I and so many other people around the world see you, respect you and love you for who you are."
Rupert Grint, who played Ron Weasley in the Potter films, also responded to Rowling's remarks, becoming the last of the three central cast members to do so. On Friday, Grint issued a statement to the UK's The Times, saying, “I firmly stand with the trans community and echo the sentiments expressed by many of my peers. Trans women are women. Trans men are men. We should all be entitled to live with love and without judgment."
Noma Dumezweni, who played Hermione Granger in the first run of both the West End and Broadway productions of Harry Potter and the Cursed Child, responded to Rowling's initial tweets on Sunday with a list of names of transgender activists and individuals. "1. Dear Jo - Marsha P. Johnson. Sylvia Rivera. Indya Moore. Angelica Ross. Tamara Adrián. Rebecca Root. Isis King. Laverne Cox. Caitlyn Jenner. Lily and Lana Wachowski. Trace Lysette. Andreja Pejic. Tracey Norman. Janet Mock. APRIL ASHLEY... etc, etc, Wikipedia..," she wrote, before adding. "2. As I honour mine, and the trans friends in my life. I’ll defer to THEIR LIVED EXPERIENCES, not their erasure. And these are just the WOMEN! There is Magic in listening. This has stories for millennia. I know You Know All this...with love. Nx #TransRightsAreHumanRights."
Bonnie Wright, the actress who portrayed Ginny Weasley, also spoke out on Wednesday via Twitter. "If Harry Potter was a source of love and belonging for you, that love is infinite and there to take without judgment or question. Transwomen are Women. I see and love you, Bonnie x," she wrote.
On Wednesday, Eddie Redmayne, who stars in the Fantastic Beasts films as Newt Scamander, released his own statement on the situation. "Respect for transgender people remains a cultural imperative, and over the years I have been trying to constantly educate myself,” Redmayne said in the statement provided to EW (and first reported by Variety). “This is an ongoing process. As someone who has worked with both J.K. Rowling and members of the trans community, I wanted to make it absolutely clear where I stand. I disagree with Jo’s comments. Trans women are women, trans men are men and non-binary identities are valid."
Another cast member, Katie Leung, who played Cho Chang, put the spotlight on organizations that support Black trans women. "So, you want my thoughts on Cho Chang? Okay, here goes...(thread)," she began, before posting a thread to various funds supporting black trans people and the Black Lives Matter movement."
Wtf, why is this story 900 pages? The fuck? This is the problem with success. She doesn't have an editor anymore.
In both the book and the film, the FBI ends up IDing Jame Gumb as Buffalo Bill in part by searching the records of hospitals offering sex-change operations for applicants who had been denied because of psychiatric disturbance and who had a history of violence. Jame Gumb's aping of the female appearance and manner is superficial and exaggerated: he wants to possess the power of the female, but doesn't really understand women or see them as fellow humans.Is it not part of the whole plot that he is not transgender and instead mentally deranged? I remember them specifically differentiating between the two but I have not read the book or watched the movie in years at this point.
Well, it's an given on how lazy they are. But for all their talk of being oppressed, they certainly aren't setting a great example for the next generation of trannies.It's easier to bitch on Twitter than to actually create something worthwhile.
I mean how else do you think they got where they are? Preying on the empathy of others instead of trying to fix their own lives is what got them here.