Someone missed the point of her cleaning up as a way of Earning Her Way into the dwarves' house. She didn't just traipse into someone else's house, demanding she be helped because she's a damn princess. We were shown she doesn't consider herself too good for manual labour; her evil stepmom meant it to be punishment, but she found joy in simple labour, and had company while she did it because she's a nice person.
Oh, and she thought CHILDREN lived there. Everything was child-sized. And yeah, all kinds of discarded people lived in the forest in medieval times.
The original is a classic, and fuck everyone who made the remake for shitting on Walt's LITERAL master-piece.
The lesson the reboot is showing is that you have the right to barge into other people's houses, order them around, do nothing for your self, and they should be grateful for it because they're stupid savages who need to learn how important you are.
We are ruled by people with Cluster B personality disorders, and this is trying to institutionalize narcissism in children.
Oh, that started at least as far back as the 70s, when it was "You're special! Just because you're you!" bullshit they used to show in between cartoons and Schoolhouse Rock. I find it related to "You're special because of your species membership" mentality.
It's individualism taken to it's unhealthy logical extreme. It's not really a lie, but it's not the whole truth either, which is what makes it such an insidious mindset. You ARE unique and special in your own way, but everyone else is too, so don't go thinking that you're above others because of it.
Really, the modern left seems to be taking the absolute worst aspects of both individualism and collectivism and mashing them together into an unholy, contradictory mess of an ideology.
That's why the whole tranny thing looks like it's pushed by an accellerationist out to mock the very idea of individualism. "See? This is what American Individualist thinking leads to!" while at the same time eradicating the childhood bullying that used to keep individualists more or less within societal bounds.
Someone missed the point of her cleaning up as a way of Earning Her Way into the dwarves' house. She didn't just traipse into someone else's house, demanding she be helped because she's a damn princess. We were shown she doesn't consider herself too good for manual labour; her evil stepmom meant it to be punishment, but she found joy in simple labour, and had company while she did it because she's a nice person.
Oh, and she thought CHILDREN lived there. Everything was child-sized. And yeah, all kinds of discarded people lived in the forest in medieval times.
The original is a classic, and fuck everyone who made the remake for shitting on Walt's LITERAL master-piece.
The lesson the reboot is showing is that you have the right to barge into other people's houses, order them around, do nothing for your self, and they should be grateful for it because they're stupid savages who need to learn how important you are.
We are ruled by people with Cluster B personality disorders, and this is trying to institutionalize narcissism in children.
Oh, that started at least as far back as the 70s, when it was "You're special! Just because you're you!" bullshit they used to show in between cartoons and Schoolhouse Rock. I find it related to "You're special because of your species membership" mentality.
It's individualism taken to it's unhealthy logical extreme. It's not really a lie, but it's not the whole truth either, which is what makes it such an insidious mindset. You ARE unique and special in your own way, but everyone else is too, so don't go thinking that you're above others because of it.
Really, the modern left seems to be taking the absolute worst aspects of both individualism and collectivism and mashing them together into an unholy, contradictory mess of an ideology.
That's why the whole tranny thing looks like it's pushed by an accellerationist out to mock the very idea of individualism. "See? This is what American Individualist thinking leads to!" while at the same time eradicating the childhood bullying that used to keep individualists more or less within societal bounds.