#like tagging things properly
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You can hurt blorbos. It is always morally neutral. They don't exist.
Equally, love and acceptance for blorbos doesn't automatically make you a good person. They don't exist. If you don't love and accept real people then your acceptance of blorbos weighs nothing.
And especially if you harm or harass real people over what they've "done" to fake people, you need to log off and re-evaluate your choices.
Periodic rent-lowering-gunshots:
Fiction is not reality.
You can enjoy things in fiction that would be awful in the real world. Like playing a murderhobo in a game! In the real world, being or supporting a murderer-thief would be pretty damn awful, while in the game it's just good fun. Same with anything else you choose to do with the pixels on the screen, like kinks that don't affect anyone real, so they're okay in fiction, but would be pretty damn bad in real life.
No one else is responsible for your online experience. They are required not to harass you, but they are not and never will be obligated to not post about ships, kinks, or tropes you dislike just to avoid you seeing them. It's up to you to blacklist words or phrases, block tags, or even block users as needed to avoid seeing content that upsets you.
No one can force you to read anything against your consent. Any content you don't like seeing can be instantly avoided by closing out of the offending post/fic.
You are not owed an online experience free of discomfort.
Nothing that happens in your imagination can ever make you a bad person. Words you write or read about fictional characters will never make you a bad person.
The claim that media consumption influences real-life behavior is intellectually dishonest and serves only to excuse the behavior of real offenders.
Fiction is a safe way to explore horrifying or confusing concepts. Therapists agree that fiction, even (or especially) about taboo topics is a good coping mechanism, especially, but not exclusively, for trauma survivors. Fiction is to adults what play therapy is to children. This doesn't stop being true if the work in question is of a sexual nature.
Sex isn't an inherently worse or better motivation than anything else. A work written to create feelings of arousal isn't dirty, shameful, or in any way less pure than works written to entertain, provoke moral questions, or for other reasons. And worth noting is that multiple purposes can exist in the same story, especially fanfiction.
You aren't entitled to an explanation for why someone reads, writes, or otherwise enjoys certain works, kinks, tropes, ships, etc.
#social issues#saving this for future reference#fandom#fan fiction#I do think it's okay to ask for a reasonable amount of care to avoid exposing involuntary participants to your kinks#like tagging things properly#but at the end of the day each user has to accept that the internet is a free-for-all and you'll probably see things you don't like#the reasonable response is to avoid the content you don't like#the unreasonable response is to decide that since you don't like these fake things that aren't happening then nobody should#fandom is playing with dolls#and it's okay to say “I don't play that way with my dolls so I don't wanna play with you”#but it's not okay to say “I don't play that way with my dolls so everyone who does should lose their job and their friends and go to jail”
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