Indeed it is.That the show says something about the sad state of affairs in this country is free speech in itself.
Indeed it is.That the show says something about the sad state of affairs in this country is free speech in itself.
I don't recall Alex hearing the version of being left on the side of the road. That was what Maggie reminded her dad that he had done. And it was road, not street. When was it Maggie told Alex she had just been left on the side of the road?
Thank you, I'll keep an eye out for it, if I ever get to rewatching that, but I honestly don't recall right now. In this week's episode, Alex's mother was hearing about it for the first time, because she was asking for information.I believe it was last season when Maggie told her the truth about her coming-out story.
Unfortunately, they make very thinly veiled attacks on conservatives all the time. And yes, it's very offensive to conservatives. They attack Trump all the time as well. This is not what I want in a superhero show. I only stick around because of stories like the Mars plot last night. That's why I watch it.
This is not supposed to be a show about Supergirl's gay adopted sister. If that's the kind of show someone wants to make, make it, but it's not a comic book genre story. No politics are. And it's one thing to do this storyline, but to have the storyline take up so much time that they actually write half an episode that has nothing to do with anything in the genre, that's a lot.
No, a lesbian agenda is not a left wing ideal. There are gay people on both sides of the aisle. But this show attacks conservatives all the time. From having the aliens in the season finale mocking Trump's slogan to this week with the wall, it's getting very old. It goes WAY beyond the "Alex is gay" storyline that has now been shoved at the viewer for a year.
If you want debate on refugees and Trump's policies, that's what news channels are for. There are plenty of places for politics. A superhero show shouldn't be one of them.
It's like when the NFL can't just play football.
You're right that racism, homophobia and xenophobia are not Republican values. 100 percent right. But Supergirl uses thinly veiled attacks to make that exact impression.
It's horrible.
I think you're misinterpreting my intention, I'm not advocating he should have been written more simplistically, I do agree that it is way better that the show doesn't shy away from all the complexities and it is absolutely vital to understand where prejudice comes from and why it doesn't go away. That all absolutely stands.
I'm just saying that within this discussion which has dominated the thread the emotional context of what Maggie is going through has been lost, and as you can see by some of the other posters dismissive attitudes towards Maggie, I think that is the more important takeaway that needs to be brought to the front because it's completely lost on some.
Since the showrunners saw fit to have Maggie argue that the eternal curse of racism is on the same level of discrimination as homophobia
I'm just saying that within this discussion which has dominated the thread the emotional context of what Maggie is going through has been lost, and as you can see by some of the other posters dismissive attitudes towards Maggie, I think that is the more important takeaway that needs to be brought to the front because it's completely lost on some.
This is like the fifth time you've gone on about this.
a) the show doesn't argue that
b) nobody here is so crass to rank various forms of discrimination... well, almost nobody.
Pardon my ignorance, but in the U.S.A. can you turn your 14-year-old sons out onto the streets? And he was a sheriff at the time, a semi-public figure, so I suppose his actions didn't go unnoticed.
What am I missing?
they will ignore clear examples of less than liberal treatment and/or ideology presented on the show--immoral as that is.
For everybody's info, the Arrowverse wiki says she was just left by the side of the road and cites "Mr. & Mrs. Mxyzptlk" from the second season, presumable the episode @DigificWriter was talking about. It does not say that she was left in front of her aunt's house.Maggie was dropped on the street, outside her aunts house.
And I just stared out the window looking at the icicles on the trees, and I was terrified to say anything, but finally I said I said, "Papi, what did I do?" And then he just looked at me with such contempt and said, um "You shamed me." And then he pulled up to my aunt's house, and left me with my suitcase. That was the last thing that my father said to me.
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