• Re: Dungeons & Dragons Has To Solve Its Controversial Drow Problem Befo

    From Zaghadka@21:1/5 to spallshurgenson@gmail.com on Wed Dec 4 16:06:08 2024
    On Wed, 04 Dec 2024 14:43:21 -0500, Spalls Hurgenson <spallshurgenson@gmail.com> wrote:

    Despite their black skin, the drow have never been representative of
    black people. Other than their skin tone,

    Drow skin tone is *literally* black. As in Crayola black. The only
    objection I could respect is with the word "black." I would accept
    suggestions as to what you objectively call the actual color.

    This is a whole other can of worms where brown skin was associated with
    the words "dark" and "black" (and paler skin with "white") for political reasons. The denigration is calling a group of brown people pejorative
    names that don't make sense. "Black people" are not actually black, and
    are no more "colored" or "of color" than anyone else with a skin color.

    People need to find a sense of tolerance here. Tolerance means not
    looking for things to be offended at because it's pleasurable. If people
    are going to look around for these things, there's going to be a whole
    lot of unnecessary hand-wringing and pearl clutching. Everything will
    become bland in response, as 5.24 D&D already has.

    Call him "night" skinned (or something) and be done with it. Or, you
    know, maybe people just get over their intolerant sensitivities?

    Sensitive is fine. So sensitive as to not be able to tolerate dissonance
    and disagreement is offensive.

    --
    Zag

    This is csipg.rpg - reality is off topic. ...G. Quinn ('08)

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