A list of puns related to "Permission culture"
First let's look at Cisco. He's a capable tech expert so of course that's something argus would want. He enforced no killing which was of course team Barry's rule but he even chewed out Barry for saving his life by depowering king shark, and refused to depower orlin or even grace without their permission even when the stakes got to be genocide. He sabotaged Barry when he started lapsing in empathy and saw the loss of his new power source a win. Now let's look at ARGUS. They're big on doing whatever it takes. Even Oliver had a lot of discomfort with the way these guys operate. Lyla is no sociopath like her predecessor waller (basically the arrowverse's danzo) who would kill innocent people as a first resort or whoever successor backslides the group in zari's future, but Lyla is no black-and-white idealist either and ARGUS has no rules against killing or doing whatever they need to complete their mission. They even detained Cayden James on suspicion he could potentially be dangerous and took a toll on his sanity. If Lyla kills an enemy or her values clash with his, does Cisco chew her out and try to change her rules like he's done to Barry? Or in this new environment does he keep his head down?
First of all, let me explain that I'm an Indonesian of Chinese descent who live in Indonesia (orang lokal in yah), as a kid that lived with family that enforce strict cultural value never in my life was I taught that when I eat (or any of our family member eat) I need to make announcement to people around me, when I want to eat I simply eat. Fastforward years later and suddenly I noticed that my friends and people around me even those of Chinese descents have started to make announcement before they eat, much to my knowledge this is not a part of Chinese culture so I suspect the influence must have come from local Indonesian culture as I have seen my local indigenous friends tend to do it before they eat. As a consequence of this, everytime I eat or want to eat I'll have to sunconsciously wonder if I have to make an announcement to anyone (that I know) I meet during the chowing process, I said "subsconscious" because I dislike this idea and don't see any purpose for it even if it's for the sake of 'politeness'.
For those who might be confused about what I mean, typically here in Indonesia, when someone is eating or is about to eat he/she will typically make an announcement ("makan dulu ya") which could also sound like they're asking for permission if it's said in interrogative tone. What is it with the idea that anybody should/want to care about other people's eating activity? When someone says to me I'll just think "kalau mau makan ya makan aja. Peduli amat". Let me clarify this, people who said this didn't ask if you want to eat nor did they invite you to eat, they didn't say "mau makan?" And such, no, they didn't, they simply made an announcement and then proceed to eat regardless of your reaction and approval anyway. In typical Chinese culture if you want to eat then you simply just eat, you don't make an announment or asking for permission (if you own the food), and if you're willing to share or want other people to eat then you'll say "do you want to eat?/come, come, let's eat the food", which is a clear invitation. Perhaps next time when someone announce their munching activity to me I'll say "Gak boleh" as a joke, they'll still eat regardless anyway.
For motherβs day I visited my aunt with my mom and 13mo old son. On our way home today we stopped at a gas station to use the restroom/change my sonβs diaper. I was in the restroom while my mom allowed him to walk around the store for a minute.
When I came out my mom saw me and said βGo see mama.β My son let go of my momβs hand and suddenly a lady came out of a door leading to the back of the attached pizza place. She takes off her mask (Everyone does this with my babyπ), crouches down in his face to talk to him and then PICKS HIM UP. I immediately said no and grabbed him from her. She continued to talk to him and reach for him. I said no and walked away.
The whole time she was speaking a foreign language. Definitely not Spanish, Italian, or French. My only explanation is that she had some trauma related hallucination, or in her native culture this is acceptable. I live in the Midwest United States. I feel like this is not acceptable especially with Covid. What do you think? Has this ever happened to you and how do you handle the mask thing or strangers that touch your baby without asking?
I'm really looking for one specific game, given the last part of the description. But I'll take anything from this series as an answer since I used descriptions of the rest of the series as hints.
Hints:
Iβm writing a story involving fantastical creatures from different cultures and backgrounds, and I think it would be a good idea to include Native American culture in the mix as well (which tribe, Iβm not so sure yet). I plan to portray and do as much research as I could for all my characters tying with culture and history, but Iβm concerned if my iteration of a being from native culture without the go-ahead from actual members of said culture would become appropriation/unintentionally offensive. Iβd just like to know whatβs okay and what to steer clear from. (For the record, Iβm half Asian and half white, and Iβve checked and asked with others already for the other characters in the story.)
Just curious as to what happens.
Like a pulp fiction or a texas chainsaw massacre t-shirt? I see a lot of them on amazon, and I doubt all of them have some sort of licensing to sell them?
Nobody assumes you're trying to accuse a random stranger of taking your wallet because you're crazy and it's your time of the month. When you walk into a police station (an environment you are predisposed to being comfortable in) your every word and motion and choice of clothing, and poise, and grammar, and social status are not taken into consideration about why you would want to harm a man who you say mugged you. You are not going to be the woman who is out to destroy this mugger's life.
And if you whisper to your partner or friend about being mugged, they won't be trying to figure out what you did to warrant it. They won't defend the mugger. Their first words won't be "But you were carrying a wallet at the time?"
And when you're being looked over by a paramedic for getting pushed to the ground at the scene of the mugging, you are unlikely to be denied any treatment because you have a low cut shirt. Or you're wearing makeup.
We don't live in mugging culture
Title. I'm not muslim nor jewish, the topic is just important to be debated due to economic implications.
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