Then again, it should have just been a man as the main character. If they want to add a 'strong woman' element, they could have the wife of a samurai defending her household with a polearm after her husband died in battle, as would actually have happened in that time period.
That's the bit that really bugs me about all this crap. If feminists actually cared about making strong female characters, there are actually lots of ways that can be accomplished well, but instead of attempting that they invariably reach for derisive tropes because their true intention is to hurt the world that hurt them.
It’s because depicting an ACTUAL strong woman would entail the main character having to marry a man, push out a few kids, show care and devotion and self sacrifice in service of her family, stand by her man when the chips are down. Basically all the things actual women did for thousands of years, but all the things that are in direct opposition to the modern feminist cunt.
That's the bit that really bugs me about all this crap. If feminists actually cared about making strong female characters, there are actually lots of ways that can be accomplished well, but instead of attempting that they invariably reach for derisive tropes because their true intention is to hurt the world that hurt them.
It’s because depicting an ACTUAL strong woman would entail the main character having to marry a man, push out a few kids, show care and devotion and self sacrifice in service of her family, stand by her man when the chips are down. Basically all the things actual women did for thousands of years, but all the things that are in direct opposition to the modern feminist cunt.
Paranoia Agent is worth a watch entirely on it's own, but the climax includes one of the best representations of a strong woman I've ever seen.