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I really think everyone needs to truly internalize this:
Fictional characters are objects.
They are not people. You cannot “objectify” them, because they have no personhood to be deprived of. They have no humanity to be erased. You cannot “disrespect” them, because they are not real.
I know this has good intentions, so I will just add the “how you treat them, even as objects of fiction, can speak about your own character, be careful out there”
Your addition is actually completely antithetical to my message. It is literally the opposite of what I am conveying.
Stop telling people to encourage the cop inside their head.
How you treat fictional characters, given they are entirely objects of fiction, does NOT necessarily speak to your own character, and you do not need to be “careful”.
It is not dangerous to imagine dark things happening to fictional characters. It does not mean you are secretly a bad person. It does not mean you unconsciously want to hurt people in real life. It is not a “slippery slope” to doing bad things to people in real life. You cannot damage your brain or turn yourself into a bad person by consuming “dark” fanfic.
I can write tentacle noncon of my favorite character all day long and be a fierce anti-sexual assault advocate in real life because what I do in my head is not the same thing as what I do in real life.
Hey, so you know how in The Sims you sometimes decide to run fucked up little experiments to see what will happen to the little fictional people in your game?
Maybe you take away stairs. Or intentionally don’t put in a smoke alarm. Or, like I did once: put fireworks in a house then paused the game, removed the door, and then had the Sim light the fireworks.
The Sim died. I laughed for a solid five minutes.
Why did I do it? Because it wasn’t real. Because it hurt no one. Because I thought it’d be funny to watch the little Sim-flail, and oh boy, it was.
If you think I’m a bad person who wants to harm people because I did something dark and fucked-up to a fake thing, you have brainrot and need to desperately work on why you feel the need to be morally superior to others by trying to police what they do or don’t do to fictional characters.
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