am i gonna have to be the nasty dyke that makes posts to challenge ~uwu soft sapphic culture~ that are like “all i want is a life with a girl… pound her til she comes 12 times & is covered in sweat….. wake up to the smell of her pussy waiting 3 inches above my face…….. god i just wanna hold her hips while we 69 at 4 in the morning, before the world is awake… little lesbian daydreams….”
“If a boy loves princesses and a girl loves baseball, that’s not indicative of their sexuality,“ Fox says. “It’s indicative of their communication and creative expression. We can’t limit children by telling them how they should play.”
Like god I can’t get over this!! The intelligence the perceptiveness the eloquence!!!!!!!!!! She’s incredible we shall stan until the end of time
Because heavens forbids if a female character isn’t feminine
I don’t know who the other picture is of, but I want to say something about Haruhi quickly. She’s not feminine at school, but outside of school she does sometimes dress in a more “female” way. But this doesn’t have anything to do with her gender. She has specifically said that she doesn’t care much about gender (gender roles, really) and doesn’t mind that people think she’s a boy. Because gender isn’t something that she gets bothered by.
I wanna preface this by saying that I’m japanese, so please forgive my grammar mistakes. I’m so tired of seeing western tumblrites using Haruhi or Haruka (Sailor Uranus) as poster children of their western micro-identities.
Neither Haruhi or Haruka was written as a social commentary.
It’s pretty western-centric to think that Haruhi, Haruka, Bisco Hatori or Naoko Takeuchi ever heard of those so called tumblr-genders. What makes them think that those micro-identities are even a thing in Japan? What makes Haruka and Haruhi different from the other girls/women? The fact they are GNC? It’s pretty sexist to say that GNC girls and women aren’t ‘’real girls/women’’ and they should be considered something else. Let me tell you something something about Japan, gender roles here are pretty rigid (maybe that’s the reason why Haruhi said she doesn’t care being seen as a boy. Let’s have some cultural nuance here, folks, so it’s pretty refreshing to see a gnc female character.