@olopoi:
Hm. I realize you're being combative and a civil discussion will probably be difficult, but I'm going to try. (Especially difficult, because I've got a bulleted list in front of me and I'm the sort who then feels compelled to respond every bullet >_>; )
1. Fiction has a real impact on how we frame and perceive things in real life. It does not exist in a void. The author and readers are
precisely the people whose reasons for producing/receiving a work in a certain way, matter. That is
not to say that fiction shouldn't have bad things happening, but how things are portrayed (and consumed), and the reasons for it, ultimately
do matter, in little ways that add up over time. As does how we talk about it. (Mind, if you think this is hogwash—which seems to be the gist of what you're saying, I'm not sure?—I doubt I can convince you otherwise. We can have that discussion if you want, though.)
2. Who said the girl's behaviour was unreasonable? I
would say that the author creates circumstances in which she is
indeed overly-dependent and desperate for even basic human treatment, and the protagonist is kind of a dipshit to her, and that the story portrays this as roughly okay. Bring slavery into it, and that becomes truly morally problematic. A mix of slave-fantasies and rescue-fantasies reducing her to a nice convenient girl-toy, with heart-strings attached!
3. I mean, yeah, of course? But "don't read it if you don't like it" is one thing; "don't talk about it if you didn't like it", on the other hand, would be a bit more controversial as a take. And, frankly, yes, there's a lot of isekai I read that is indeed shittily-written wish-fulfillment.
Some of it is that without being especially morally problematic.
A lot of it is indeed so offensive that commenting on it is somewhat pointless beyond the conversational aspect of it. This one is somewhere in the middle, incidentally, but I am known to comment on all of them—as one does.
4. (I'm not sure what you mean, when you claim I claim "everything is political"...?) But it is true that everything we read is indeed understood through the prism of what we know, which, conversely, is indeed why talking about it is important...?
Finally:
Your "know it all from my moral high ground" rant makes me puke and you should probably use all that energy you're directing at ranting to fictional pieces to real world problems that need solving. Like real slavery. Over consumption. Food industry being the nastiest shit on earth. Or even things at a smaller scale that you could see in your everyday life if you actually were concerned about these and not trying to boost your ego.
Gee, thanks.
Ad hominem attacks. How lovely.
I'll concede I'm a smart-alec, but I'm not quite sure why I'd want to take anything
other than the moral high ground.
Well—I assume you're saying you don't agree that I
have the moral high ground, mind; arguing that taking
any moral high ground is sickening would seem rather foolish. In which case I would have thought one should stick to pointing out
why my moral stance is found not to be to one's liking? Unless you do find morals in general to be sickening, I suppose. That sort of thing would be on oneself.
(Also, as an aside, "You should be working on a bigger problem instead of this little one," is pretty much always a questionable argument. We can get in to that topic if you want.)
P.S.
I havent even read that manga but you pissed me off.
Er, what manga? ...You don't mean the Wikipedia page I linked, do you? If so, well, I can also infer by now you're probably not the sort of person who likes having random terms linked, but if so, 'tis merely a cultural difference.