On facebook, I'm in a group for people who like 50s/60s era of television, and recently the admin banned someone who was trying to discuss lack of diversity in tv shows of that era and racial politics. People were saying it was unfair, but the admin said this group is for a specific topic. Years back I would've seen that as harsh, but now I'm all for it. If only we done that with our hobbies once the usual suspects infiltrated.
The larger point being is that there is always some idiot who feels the need to bring in politics or some other issue into a completely unrelated hobby, and can't just let people have an escape. Recently I saw that the Twister movie was attacked for not addressing climate change, and I remember that Far Cry game got bad reviews for not addressing white supremacy.
Of course, the usual thing we hear is that "(fill in the blank) has always been political" or "it is too important". One of the reasons I rarely use reddit now is because of what happened during the "summer of love". I collect sports cards (baseball/football/hockey) and on a hockey card subreddit you had people who felt the need to have long posts about covid or vaccine misinformation along with the usual racial reckoning nonsense. Then of course they jumped all over me for asking what that has to do with hockey cards and I was told "some things are too important". I had to completely get off the Dallas Cowboys subreddit because they went off the deep end at that time.
Anyway, the mindset of these people who just can't let people enjoy something or feel that their point of view has to be brought into anything and everything even if it is some babies playing with blocks will never cease to annoy me.
If someone goes up on stage waving a swastika flag in the modern day and age, asking to be their country's leader, there's a statistically high chance they're actually Indian, and it's an "innocent" flag representing their religion and spirituality.
That's not going to stop you from noting your own inherent knowledge and stereotypes about such a flag flying behind a political candidate. If I were to use a clear political symbol (and it IS a clear political signal, nowadays), I shouldn't expect the general audience to NOT see it as a clear political signal. They MADE this DEI shit into a political symbol, not us, they made their bed, now... "get fucked in it", I believe is the term that game journo used about GG?
Why wouldn't it? I understand context perfectly fine, and the Nazi flag has a very specific scheme to it (red background, white circle, swastika at 45 degree angle). It's also worth knowing what the candidate stands for.
Don't know what this has to do with characters on TV though...