I remember when it went down, wasn't even racist per-say but more rude regarding the atrocities of war or perhaps making light of it. Japan and China still have a lot of grudges to this day, so it was extremely ignorant of foreigners to bandwagon onto this movement to harass the author, especially over a fantasy of a story (Nidome no Jinsei o Isekai de). There are worse works out there that are blatantly racist or delve into extremely degenerate situations, that these sorts of no-life people can chase but they went for this author because he was an easy target.For those who don't know, you can read about the controversy on the mangadex autor's page:
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And what made him an "easy target"? Could it be something about being an unapologetic dumbass on Twitter? That he linked to his brand and career? Yeah, I can see how that makes it easy to sink your own ship. The criticism of his work could have been easily handled as well - make the issue a part of the character's development and it doesn't even need to be about atonement or anything like that, not every story has to be a morality lesson. Of course, to pull that off, actual writing chops are needed and it's all the harder if one insists on being a dissmisive asshole about it.I remember when it went down, wasn't even racist per-say but more rude regarding the atrocities of war or perhaps making light of it. Japan and China still have a lot of grudges to this day, so it was extremely ignorant of foreigners to bandwagon onto this movement to harass the author, especially over a fantasy of a story (Nidome no Jinsei o Isekai de). There are worse works out there that are blatantly racist or delve into extremely degenerate situations, that these sorts of no-life people can chase but they went for this author because he was an easy target.
Seems likely that the oddities of the author's works would have been mostly glossed over by everyone if he had only just kept his figurative mouth shut. I won't excuse his worldview (because I don't claim to know it just from a few translated social media posts out of context), but I think the moral of this story is that you can lose far more than you stand to gain from "participating" in social media. Social media is actually dangerous. The posts you make today or the ones you made 5 years ago can potentially deprive you of your relationships, livelihood, and even your freedom. People don't take this seriously, even when they see it happen to others (deserving or not).I remember when it went down, wasn't even racist per-say but more rude regarding the atrocities of war or perhaps making light of it. Japan and China still have a lot of grudges to this day, so it was extremely ignorant of foreigners to bandwagon onto this movement to harass the author, especially over a fantasy of a story (Nidome no Jinsei o Isekai de). There are worse works out there that are blatantly racist or delve into extremely degenerate situations, that these sorts of no-life people can chase but they went for this author because he was an easy target.
We live in such a dystopia.One tweet is all it takes to destroy a career
To be fair to the dystopia, in this case, it wasn't a single tweet that destroyed him. There had been questions about the character history he had chosen for a while. But after the anime was announced, the complaints caused people to go over his other statements. And the guy said a bunch of stuff that wasn't going to fly in the international market.We live in such a dystopia.