• potoooooooo ☑️@lemmy.world
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    7 hours ago

    I wish I was a little bit taller

    I wish I was a baller

    I wish I had a girl who looked good, I would call her

    I wish I had a rabbit in a hat with a bat

    And a six-four Impala

  • Hoimo@ani.social
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    9 hours ago

    I wish I was anime
    I wish I looked anime
    I wish I had an anime name
    I wish I could go to an anime school

  • ragebutt@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    1 day ago

    Wishes to be Asian
    Post picture of anime girl, an art style that is highly stylized but somewhat generic in terms of ethnic identity markers

    • Fluffy Kitty Cat@slrpnk.net
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      24 hours ago

      You’re right. Anime characters don’t really look too much Like any specific ethnicity most of the time. I wonder if that’s part of the appeal

      • ragebutt@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        19 hours ago

        I think it’s just a byproduct of animation. The simpsons don’t necessarily look like any specific ethnicity either

      • ZkhqrD5o@lemmy.world
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        22 hours ago

        There are some animes which have very clear and distinct racial markers. Perfect blue or Akira for example.

        Edit: But now that I think about it, I agree with you, most of them are actually very nondescript.

  • rumschlumpel@feddit.org
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    23 hours ago

    Even just a standard family in South Korea sounds pretty horrible. Very stressful, very little free time. Japan is better, but still not great. Now imagine what happens if the country turns full authoritarian again from that starting point, as is the general tendency in most countries nowadays.

    • UnderpantsWeevil@lemmy.world
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      22 hours ago

      Everything boils down to your economic cohort. Being upper class in Korea and Japan is fantastic. Being upper class in the Philippines is pretty great, all things considered. Just be born rich. Anywhere, really. Even being a rich Ukrainian or Syrian gets you a lot of extra mileage, globally. And the spread between rich and poor in a country like Dubai or South Africa, right now? Astronomical.

      • TranscendentalEmpire@lemmy.today
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        21 hours ago

        Eh… My little cousins live in Korea and come from money, it still sounds kinda crappy. 8 hours of school then instrument practice, dance class, and after school academy… the little dudes get home at like 9-10pm every night. One of them calls all the time and begs us to host him when he’s ready for college, the little guy just wants to play football.

        • shawn1122@sh.itjust.works
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          4 hours ago

          This sounds like a consequence of coming from money. Some rich parents are slave drivers and others are just happy having their kids live off the trust fund. Wealth makes being a good parent more challenging.

          That being said, most kids want to vet away from their parents and establish themselves at that age.

          • TranscendentalEmpire@lemmy.today
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            55 seconds ago

            Nah, it’s pretty normal in South Korea. School and the expectations of success are just brutal over there. It’s not unusual to see groups of kids coming home from school/after school programs after dark.

        • UnderpantsWeevil@lemmy.world
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          7 hours ago

          Anime tends to parody that high intensity life, though.

          Naruto is an anime about little kids being overworked and forced to grow up too fast. Love Is War is about two hyper competitive students who can’t come to terms with their love for one another. Madoka Magica is about your childhood dreams maturing into soul crushing nightmares for the profit of some alien force.

      • rumschlumpel@feddit.org
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        22 hours ago

        It really doesn’t sound like the original OP wants to be rich, though. As far as I can tell, their fantasy is to be a regular school kid (obviously Japan being the baseline, on account of including that anime pic and no one in the west (consciously) watching Korean or Chinese anime). I suppose an upper middle class kid in Philippines, Indonesia etc. is probably similar enough to satisfy anon’s fantasy. But I think especially in Korea and China, you would actually still be expected to work your ass off in school even if you’re rich.

  • AllNewTypeFace@leminal.space
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    24 hours ago

    And then there were all the kids wishing they were in America rather than their boring first-world suburb/provincial town. They didn’t get any more specific, and I imagine they were probably thinking of New York/LA/somewhere glamorous, and would have been bitterly disappointed if the maliciously-helpful wishing genie had whisked them away to a rustbelt town in Ohio or some unincorporated community in Alabama or wherever.

    • shalafi@lemmy.world
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      20 hours ago

      Just about anywhere in America is an improvement on the Philippines. My wife’s from there and all her friends married white American guys. They have all told me the same thing; The poverty is staggering.

      My wife doesn’t say anything about it, but I gather she grew up solidly middle class. I don’t think she has a clue how the poors live.

      • shawn1122@sh.itjust.works
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        3 hours ago

        Spain and then briefly America exploited the Philippines for centuries. Spain made indentured servants of the local population and turned their economy into a cash crop resource extraction machine.

        America took over around 1900 and continued that legacy, extracting sugar, coconut and hemp while stalling land reform laws for locals.

        It makes sense to move to the nation where the fruits of your and your ancestors labor has been stolen to.

        When the United States took over, it enacted the 1902 Public Land Act and the 1935 Commonwealth Agrarian Reform Act, but both were deliberately slowed and limited—public lands were sold only to wealthy buyers, and tenant‑farmers received scant compensation. Had those reforms been fully implemented, they would have ended Spain’s haciendas legacy, transferring titles to the actual cultivators, reduced tenancy obligations, and created a more equitable, productive agricultural sector—laying groundwork for broader rural development and lessening the chronic poverty that still haunts the Philippines today.

        Spain’s most blatant exploitation was the hacienda system, which concentrated vast tracts of fertile land in the hands of a few Spanish friars and colonial elites. This was essentially modernized version of medieval fiefdom where Filipinos had no claim to the land they worked on or to the surplus value their labor produced.

        Polo y Servicio (forced labor) was a corvée system requiring able‑bodied men to render a set number of days (typically 40–60 per year) of unpaid labor on public works, hacienda fields, or military projects. Non‑compliance could lead to corporal punishment or imprisonment.

        Tributo was cash or in‑kind levy imposed on every male household head (and sometimes on whole families). It was meant to fund the colonial administration, the church, and the military. Failure to pay could result in fines, confiscation of property, or forced labor.

        America brought an end to the some of the Spanish exploitation but land ownership concentration among the wealthy persisted and the exploitative relationship continued, though in a less formalized framework.

        This is the devastating legacy of European and American colonialism.

        Finally, there were 4 years of Japanese occupation during WW2 that resulted in significant infrastructure loss.

        Tl;Dr: Fuck imperialism.

      • Toes♀@ani.social
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        24 hours ago

        She has the power to teleport anything she touches up to a couple kilometers I believe.

        • Lost_My_Mind@lemmy.world
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          24 hours ago

          Me with that superpower:

          My boss: “Where the hell is he??? He can teleport instantly! HOW is he still late to work every day???”

          20 minutes later

          Me: “Sorry I’m late, but traffic was a bitch!”

          Boss: “You have the ability to instantly teleport, and you DRIVE to work?”

          Me: “Oh…no. No no no no no. I didn’t drive. Public transportation actually.”

          Boss: “YOU TOOK THE BUS???”

          Me: “Well, yeah. If I don’t support our cities public transportation infrastructure, who will? You know they they keep getting their funding cut, right?”