First off (and as mentioned mostly on my other blogs), I’ve been off most social media (my original accounts are mostly deactivated) for years. The only exceptions are a recreated Twitter (which I did to make that initial sarcastic posting to Gameforge) and a new Instagram account (mainly to follow Twitch and YouTube content creators + as an alternative contact method).
I didn’t sign up for Threads when it initially became available since one of the main reasons for why I deactivated my original Twitter account (which gets automatically deleted if it isn’t reactivated after 30 days), was the way it would make you just scroll endlessly (the algorithm is designed to just keep feeding whatever it can pull into your feed). Twitters purchase by Elon Musk (whom I have never been a fan of) resulted in a scramble for an alternative. That is when Meta themselves threw together Threads (basing it off of Instagram). I’m also no fan of Mark Zuckerberg (Meta, Facebook, Instagram, Whatsapp, Threads). I’ve written about that on my old blog (I was an early investor in Facebook).
Recently though, I decided to activate Threads. The algorithm there is wickedly good (unsurprising since it was that way on Facebook) with eventually giving you exactly what you want based on whatever (post, follows, likes, etc) you’ve engaged with. The end result is that I came across a few interesting posts that were perfect subject matter for me to delve into.
The first one is the following (I didn’t screenshot the replies) which I see a lot of along with this view that Japan is this perfect country (having been knee deep in Twitch Japan IRL streams since January). Yes, “yellow fever” is real while Japan is like any place else; it has its own issues and is not even 80% like anime/J-dorama.
The term I used before when it comes to this is “objectifying”. This same objectifying of East Asian women also ties into this misguided notion that living in Japan is better than their own country where many don’t realize maybe it is something they need to fix with themselves first.


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