This is an esports account and once the new season starts for the league I follow a lot of these followers will quietly mute/leave (or rather, they should, because I scream about esports in all caps and it is a LOT)
So headsup to everyone: I tweet about whatever I want but generally speaking it’s a lot of game stuff, memes, total breakdowns over the players I love, and an extremely unhealthy relationship with an industry that is notorious for exploitative labor
Yes this was my secret ploy to get people to watch Overwatch League Jon Spector needs to pay me for this shit
Tfw you have sex with a woman’s husband because her twitter thread about historical atrocities in Korea got a bunch of retweets and now you’re here bouncing on his dick
For the way I translate on here, see pinned tweet.
TTL;DR sometimes I get paid to translate for a news article. Sometimes I do it for free for a friend.
Every single translation I’ve posted on twitter has been for free.
Oh yeah there’s a LOT of BDSM fanfic in Korea, like more than I was aware of
Every single one of you, stop mentioning my friend in your replies and apologize in the comments here, on your main accounts. Their life is their own, they do not need to be dragged into this.
“World Citizens” (세계시민선언), a youth nonprofit that works to support citizens around the world resisting government violence, has warned they will file an injunction in court against Snowdrop.
They describe the drama as a clear insult against the efforts of those who fought dictatorship, and argue that it could signal to other dictatorships that state violence can be glorified.
The org continued, “The broadcasting of Snowdrop on major distribution platforms gives a mistaken view of history to generations who have not experienced it. It can also cause them to justify glorification of state violence in order to defend their celebrity.”
The family of Park Jong-cheol, who was the student who died after brutal water torture by the NSA, has spoken out about how #Snowdrop is causing harm to victims of the NSA.
Park’s family point out that there are still-living families of those who were accused of being North Korean spies and tortured, and the drama recreates the narrative that was used against victims
Essentially, it justifies why the NSA did what they did.