

 
			
			
				There exists a lot of common use terms that some religion/country/subset of population in their own region will found offensive because they are in their dialet or were in their past history.
Not everyone that write English in forum is an American that knows how American army people called the Japanese army in their history of WW2.
Then, as long as history were called, the term were not offensive at all, and later became so because the war between the U.S. and Japan.
I think the guy that called for "racism" and so on, overreacted and did not taken account this is an international forum.
And, nailing to the topic, this is also an example of how difficult is making text for international purpose. You will found a number of hilarious (and not) names given by innocent companies to their products, but resulted in high embarassment when exported
Last edited by LalaRu; 01-23-2017 at 09:58 PM.


 
			
			
				It's no different to saying, brit or aussie.
Take it to tumblr.
Hey, me too! before I learned Japanese, lots of fans of anime did that if they wanted to watch new releases or just wanted to watch the original source material without having to hear the only three dub anime voice actors Yuri Lowenthal, Christna Vee and her "Noel Vermillion voice" or Steven Blum.
 
			
			
				It is very different and just by doing a little research you would see why. I don't think someone calling me the N word is offensive but then I am not black. Use your brain just because you don't find it offensive doesn't mean others don't. BTW before you say they are completely different they are not they are both ethnic slurs. If you want a better example of how it's not OK to shorten names by where they are from try Pakistan.
As for the topic I would like to see more voice acting but in other areas too i.e Job/class quests and beast tribe quests.
Last edited by Masekase_Hurricane; 01-26-2017 at 01:31 PM.
 
			
			
				British and Australian people did not get put into internment camps on American soil like Japanese Americans did all while being derogatorily referred to by a term they did not use for themselves. Brit and Aussie are terms largely accepted by the people of those nationalities even to the point of being used to describe themselves in mamy, many cases, whereas the term for Japanese people is not.
If someone is not aware of the history of forced internment of American Japanese people amd uses the term, educating them is the best route. If someone continues to use the term or defends its use once made aware or despite being aware of why it is derogatory then it is more than reasonable to call them out on the bigotry being displayed. Fortunately the situation with the person who used it appears to be the former, and the person just wasn't aware of the negative connotation of the abbreviation he used, it was explained, and he no longer posted using the term. Hopefully the subsequent posters defending the term can take a moment to reflect on why the term should not be used or defended, even if only from the simple position of empathy for others
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			 Originally Posted by Arutan
 Originally Posted by Arutan
					
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