"In Touch" Discussion & Review - Podcast Launched by Monica Rial and Jamie Marchi to Share "THEIR TRUTH"

Called it. Another brain dead simp who can't hear or read just easily rolling over for their whale overlords. No surprise he also looks like someone you need to keep kids away from.
To paraphrase Alex Jones whenever he talks about Brian Stelter:

"I am not saying he's a pedophile, I'm saying if I was casting someone to play a pedophile in a movie you'd hire that guy."
 
According to the podcast, they are always in "constant fear" cause of endless harassment and death threats.
If only they were always in constant fear. They wouldn't know fear if it honked in their faces.

EDIT: Also lol, they legit whine about being called lizard people online, even though I have no idea where this came from. These aren't women who are fearing for their livelihoods.
 
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Well, according to PushingUpRoses, that's just how they "deal with trauma"
Dumbass.

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https://archive.fo/us4hX

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These are the kinds of people who are still defending Jamie and Monica, always remember that.
I recalled seeing this guy before and I just remembered where:

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https://archive.is/xI0QK

He claims to be a researcher yet couldn't figure out why people who actually seek out information thought what Rittenhouse did was self-defense.

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He has a podcast about anime dubs (That I've never heard of) and he's into trains aside just from anime/manga.
 
There's nothing more sad and pathetic than being ~30 and single going through premature balding, yet have no good looks or charisma to keep from looking like a creep. Many such cases.
This is the reason why all of the people accusing Vic of being a sex pest have no room to talk and are full of shit. The claims of him being sexually attracted to teenage girls aren't from other teenage girls at all, they're online rumors propagated by mentally ill women in their 20s and 30s who still have the mentality of stereotypical high school mean girls.

Only other women like that believed these rumors for the longest time but why people outside of that began to believe it has to do more with the anime/manga fandom itself. There is no nice way to say this so I'll just be blunt: Most anime fans are virgins and more often highly devoid of certain social skills. The idea that people like that would have an actual understanding of sexual behavior if at all is very unlikely. This is how someone could claim Vic kissing a fan on the cheek/hugging a fan was somehow sexual and KickVic would take it at face value. I honestly feel this is something unique to the anime/manga fandom specifically.

The furry fandom for example, despite being fucked up in a number of different ways understands on a basic level that kissing someone on the cheek/someone hugging someone is not automatically sexual because they do have an actual sex life regardless of how degenerate it is. They have a basic understanding of sex and know how to get it. The only reason they would be KickVic at all is because of how far-left they are and nothing else although that does apply to some of the anime/manga fandom to an extent.
 
I wasn't aware that victims of rape and sexual assault deal with their trauma by doing a public podcast talking about it with giddy fucking smiles on their stupid faces whilst giggling like grade school kids and stuffing their mouths with food like it's some kind of celebration.

While it's not unheard of for victims to have their own ways to deal with the trauma, making it a public spectacle for all to see isn't one of them. Being raped or molested isn't something to parade around like it's a fucking medal or competition, It's a serious fucking trauma that drives some people to fucking kill themselves because they can't bring themselves to reconcile with what happened to them and if they don't outright kill themselves, they engage in destructive behavior in a desperate attempt to forget about it as vain as it is. Anybody that waves around their mental illness like it's a flag should be made fun of and their purpose for doing so is for attention and having a flock of people at their beck and call to give them pats on the back and reassure them they aren't as terrible as they actually are.

I've worked at a mental health facility for 6 years and every weekday and every other saturday I would watch people come in to be mentally dissected to find the root of their substance abuse addictions. Unsurprisingly, 9 times out of 10, the women who would come in all had some history of being sexually abused or beaten. They would deny that it impacted them at first but almost 100% of the time they walked out, they were in tears for having to think and look and reflect back on what happened to them and while not all of them made changes for the better, the fact of the matter is that the events that happened to them were so traumatic that they absolutely hated revisiting it for whatever reason, even if it was for their own good. Even the women made of sterner stuff were unnerved and uncomfortable with having to face those memories in their past that they'd very much rather forget happened. It's always a horrible experience having that singular moment between the seconds where you sit there and think to yourself "that actually happened to me. i can't believe that happened to me. it wasn't a dream. why? why did it have to happen to me? what did i do to deserve this?"

I don't agree with making your personal traumas public knowledge unless you have absolutely no other course of action. It's a sensitive topic that should only be discussed with close confidants or the right professionals. Talking about general sexual assault and it's lasting traumatic effects on an individual is one thing, but having a round table discussion about a personal trauma that's happened to you out in the open isn't anything other than a cry for attention, not a cry for help.

This podcast and everything it supposedly stands for is a joke and an insulting mockery towards actual victims of sexual assault. Our trauma isn't a spectacle to be watched like some two bit TV drama.
 
This is one premature victory lap. You got a ruling in your favor by demonstrably one of the most incompetent judges in Texas, who misapplied the law, and hasn't been ruled on by Appeals yet. Doing a podcast about how you beat the final boss of sexism in voice acting (leering-chris-sabbat-face.jpg) before all the cows come home is some kinda hubris.

What's Proverbs say about pride? It goes before something, I can't quite remember what it is.
 
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I've worked at a mental health facility for 6 years and every weekday and every other saturday I would watch people come in to be mentally dissected to find the root of their substance abuse addictions. Unsurprisingly, 9 times out of 10, the women who would come in all had some history of being sexually abused or beaten. They would deny that it impacted them at first but almost 100% of the time they walked out, they were in tears for having to think and look and reflect back on what happened to them and while not all of them made changes for the better, the fact of the matter is that the events that happened to them were so traumatic that they absolutely hated revisiting it for whatever reason, even if it was for their own good. Even the women made of sterner stuff were unnerved and uncomfortable with having to face those memories in their past that they'd very much rather forget happened. It's always a horrible experience having that singular moment between the seconds where you sit there and think to yourself "that actually happened to me. i can't believe that happened to me. it wasn't a dream. why? why did it have to happen to me? what did i do to deserve this?"
As someone who's endured trauma like this, let me try and phrase it in an (admittedly simplistic) way.

Picture the mind as a bridge. Points of extreme trauma are places where the bridge has collapsed or otherwise suffered structural damage. To prevent further trauma, your mind sets up a roadblock far enough away from where the damage took place that you literally are unable to perceive it.

What trauma work does is moving the roadblock closer and closer to the point of trauma, so the mind can (hopefully) integrate the event back into itself, and thusly repair the bridge. It's long, grueling work - you're literally fighting against an inbuilt survival mechanism. Still, it can be done.
 
As someone who's endured trauma like this, let me try and phrase it in an (admittedly simplistic) way.

Picture the mind as a bridge. Points of extreme trauma are places where the bridge has collapsed or otherwise suffered structural damage. To prevent further trauma, your mind sets up a roadblock far enough away from where the damage took place that you literally are unable to perceive it.

What trauma work does is moving the roadblock closer and closer to the point of trauma, so the mind can (hopefully) integrate the event back into itself, and thusly repair the bridge. It's long, grueling work - you're literally fighting against an inbuilt survival mechanism. Still, it can be done.
Except they would be too heavy for their own mental bridge.
 
I'm just waiting for Rekieta to listen to more of the podcast. I don't think he got to the part where Jamie and Monica admitted their February 6th tweets were coordinated yet.
 
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