u arw white, even if you seem yourself "progressive", that you still need to listen to another's insight.
But that is the problem: innumerable white liberals' default position is that "I have judged it, therefore it is" despite having no personal, reasoned insight into whatever they're talking about, as seen in the quote (below) I will respond to, and the inapplicable psychobabble employed by dodge and another member. Again, toxic masculinity is the
agenda du jour for those seeking to target any male behavior as negative in their politically myopic world.
Regarding Spot261, that member insists on arguing:
Societal issues in reality do not exist in isolation, they are intertwined and inseperable. By extension people's interpretations of a piece of art need to be considered in that light. Accepting a racial narrative within a show need not mean excluding the perspective of a female or her insights into male behaviour. Just the opposite in fact.
...which is nonsensical at best in this case. All situations are not equally open to several interpretations, demonstrated earlier, and in--
Morpheus 02, as you pointed out,
Black Lightning is accessible to any viewer, but its creators are addressing issues so unique to the black community/identity/experience (arguably as an informative session for those who are not black and/or did not grow up in those environments), which are not born of whatever creates certain social issues in others. If
dodge is a white female, then she is
still white, and that already places her in a position/viewpoint of exclusivity in the dominant class/race--
with white males--which has no foundational association or understanding of the situation / experiences of black males. That's why I referred to dodge's charge of toxic masculinity as offensive, as she--as is the order of the day for
some white liberals--are determined to force that aforementioned agenda on everyone no matter the undeniable experiences which do separate motivators for behavior. If you notice, dodge's original judgment of Khalil (in responding to Christopher) was only--
The show is pretty uncompromising in highlighting not just issues of the black community, but all kinds of issues that plague society today, so it shouldn't really be surprising in the current climate that one of those things is just how damaging toxic masculinity is.
Where is this evidence for that judgement specific to the black male experience? An assumption that the judgment covers
all males, no matter the origin point or unique experience / development? Christopher referring to Khalil as a jerk? Its not in the actual episode, but the opposite is in plain dialogue. Dodge created her judgement based on a "current climate" informing her way of viewing & labeling males, even when there's no justification for doing so.
"Current climate one of those things is just how damaging toxic masculinity is...." is such a politically loaded, broad, fact-free concept, that it in no way speaks to the specific issues of any character on
Black Lightning--not just Khalil. The irony is that this kind of aggressive charge (toxic masculinity) is just as sweeping and offensive to black identity/experience as Republican Paul Ryan's idiotic
"tailspin of culture" condemnation of
"inner city" people (code for black people) in reference to desire to work / poverty. The point is that it is as sweeping, and free of even a grain of experience / insight to know anything about one--or all of a group of people, and both judgements come from white individuals with feet firmly planted in ideology far removed from the reality of the people they are criticizing.
Finally, even if/when a black male expresses any feelings tied to a male personality, goal or desire, it--like all other elements covered here--are not tied to the white liberal's (politicized)idea of masculinity at all, nor can it be stereotyped as such, since the root--the foundational motives are as distinct from the male behavior of other groups as one fingerprint from another, based on aforementioned differences back males face (covered time and again in this thread) right out of the cradle.
It would help matters of race to a great degree if those from the dominant class/race would--at least--
try to learn from those actually
living that unique experience to gain some---even a bit of understanding, instead of posting the kind of insulting things seen in this thread.