• The site has now migrated to Xenforo 2. If you see any issues with the forum operation, please post them in the feedback thread.
  • Due to issues with external spam filters, QQ is currently unable to send any mail to Microsoft E-mail addresses. This includes any account at live.com, hotmail.com or msn.com. Signing up to the forum with one of these addresses will result in your verification E-mail never arriving. For best results, please use a different E-mail provider for your QQ address.
  • For prospective new members, a word of warning: don't use common names like Dennis, Simon, or Kenny if you decide to create an account. Spammers have used them all before you and gotten those names flagged in the anti-spam databases. Your account registration will be rejected because of it.
  • Since it has happened MULTIPLE times now, I want to be very clear about this. You do not get to abandon an account and create a new one. You do not get to pass an account to someone else and create a new one. If you do so anyway, you will be banned for creating sockpuppets.
  • Due to the actions of particularly persistent spammers and trolls, we will be banning disposable email addresses from today onward.
  • The rules regarding NSFW links have been updated. See here for details.

General chat thread

England isn't relevant these days either so we might as well stop calling it English.
As for Asian countries not being relevant... LoL. Lmao, even. Two and a half of the three most important sea lanes in the world are situated in the Asian sphere of influence.


That would be based beyond belief, I won't lie...

And yes the great shrine in honolulu venerates George and Abe as Kami.
 
....you know we were talking about the American continent(s), right?
Well you didn't QUITE make it clear enough, especially when the post you were responding to DID create a context referencing Asia.
Even then, you have a lot of nerve talking national relevance when Canada by itself outstrips England in just about every measure except child abuse and knife crime.
 
Even then, you have a lot of nerve talking national relevance when Canada by itself outstrips England in just about every measure except child abuse and knife crime.
Untrue.

Canada has about 2/3rds the population of the UK.

In terms of GDP, wellbeing of citizens, suicide rates. UK's better off than Canada on just about every level.

And that's even before factoring in how Canada cheats and doesn't count state assisted suicide as suicide. The UK does, and it's a crime there.


Though, yes, the UK has a higher crime rate. But that's pretty much the norm for all densely populated areas regardless of where you look in the world. Even within the context of the same country, the big cities tend to be worse than the farmlands.

At least, where most violent crimes are concerned. The pattern doesn't really hold for sexual crimes, substance abuse, or the vast array of low level misdemeanors.
 
Last edited:
Canada is basically a US protectorate, and that's how I always think of it. A poor man's USA, only fit for being a sidekick.
 
Uh no it was called the Apotheosis of Washington and that was well before we get into like American Shinto.

Thinking about Shinto priests who kicked godly asses... hmm...

"The divine roots of the Liber-Tree must, from time to time, be watered by the blood of Tyrant-Gods."

Someone could use that metaphor do a fun spoof of American politics -- probably not on this forum, of course. Nobody try here.
 
Canada is basically a US protectorate, and that's how I always think of it. A poor man's USA, only fit for being a sidekick.
More like a mascot, or maybe a pet. America's psychotic little hat.

I believe for you guys, that role's filled by Scotland. Up to you to decide if they're any good at it.

Someone could use that metaphor do a fun spoof of American politics -- probably not on this forum, of course. Nobody try here.
*Looks over at all the CK2/3 fics here.*

*Looks over at the After The End mod*

Hmmmmmm....
 
Last edited:

And yes the great shrine in honolulu venerates George and Abe as Kami.

Strictly speaking, anyone or anything that is venerated or honored after death would be a kami.

Yes, this means Elvis would be a kami.

As is this dog:
_130184514_gettyimages-1485893156.jpg.webp

And this boat:
NJRIVenterprise_kathie1.jpg

There's a reason "shipgirls" are a thing.
 
the Apotheosis of Washington
One piece of art does not a religion make. Secular or otherwise.

Strictly speaking, anyone or anything that is venerated or honored after death would be a kami.
Strictly speaking, doesn't require death or veneration. The most accurate English translation for kami is "spirit", not "god".

Per Shinto, your laptop has/is a kami, as well as your pet dog. All objects, creatures, and even concepts do. Some are far more venerated than others. Some are feared and hated. But everything is a spirit, and therefor a kami.

Living people get a separate distinction because religions tend to take that attitude, but upon death you're as much a kami as any other.
 
Last edited:
Untrue.

Canada has about 2/3rds the population of the UK.
And that's even before factoring in how Canada cheats and doesn't count state assisted suicide as suicide. The UK does, and it's a crime there.

Speaking of suicide rates, gotta ask, is it the rate of higher development and/or higher standard of living or sheer population density?

China's still considered "developing" and I think it still has the family structure of living with your parents, or at least the husband's family….so not as "alone" as the more "nuclear" West

Yet it has a scarily high suicide rate to the point they have safety nets installed for people killing themselves off

Suicide from what I can tell, occurs more where a person feels more alone….as odd as it sounds, I think people can feel alone within a "community/family/group" but I am not sure

I dislike my college, but I do remember some lessons/theories, that suicide rates increase the better off the population, in part because better off populations have less of a sense of family
 
Last edited:
Speaking of suicide rates, gotta ask, is it the rate of higher development and/or higher standard of living or sheer population density?
There are more theories than I care to list, and most of them are probably a factor.

The only thing we can say with true confidence is that mental illness increases suicide rates. In particular, the chronic anxiety and depressive disorders. Most of which are neurochemical in nature and thus fundamentally random.

While women are more likely to contemplate suicide, men are more likely to attempt it and far more likely to succeed.

And Japan's numbers are complete BS. See, in Japan, the culture doesn't like the idea of unsolved crimes, especially murder. So if they can't find an obvious suspect, they label the death a suicide. To keep their numbers nice. Victim blaming at its finest.


Also- a lack of sunlight might exacerbate other underlying conditions, making you more likely to see suicides in colder climates and during the winter months. But even those are a minor impact.
 
There are more theories than I care to list, and most of them are probably a factor.

The only thing we can say with true confidence is that mental illness increases suicide rates. In particular, the chronic anxiety and depressive disorders. Most of which are neurochemical in nature and thus fundamentally random.

While women are more likely to contemplate suicide, men are more likely to attempt it and far more likely to succeed.

And Japan's numbers are complete BS. See, in Japan, the culture doesn't like the idea of unsolved crimes, especially murder. So if they can't find an obvious suspect, they label the death a suicide. To keep their numbers nice. Victim blaming at its finest.


Also- a lack of sunlight might exacerbate other underlying conditions, making you more likely to see suicides in colder climates and during the winter months. But even those are a minor impact.

I had an elder brother once….I have this feeling these days that even long before, he wasn't all that happy regardless of how much cash there was on hand and what friends and family he had

Frankly, kinda was contemplating suicide a LOT going back at least 6 years ago….stuck in what could be said to be an unintentionally psychologically abusive relationship….may have been growing before even that, safe to say I look on the root causes/people responsible and now think she's just a moronic bipolar bitch with loads of issues and a culture she uses to justify them

We Chinese(I'm Chinese-Filipino on both sides)are pretty fucked up

Religiosity may also play a role.

Suicide probably seems like a less appealing way of escaping from your problems if you believe it's gonna get you a one-way ticket to the infinite torture chamber.

Religion also kinda helps foster a community via the church/temple

Even that dies down as over time, a growing number of people are just going there with no real faith to begin with and just seeing it as a cultural obligation
 
If it makes you feel any better, the belief is apparently compatible with Buddhism and its wheel of incarnation. So, presumably, condoms are incarnated from people who deserve it.

Probably Nazis or something.
Nah, nazi souls most likely end up becoming the kamis of septic tanks and latrines.

Politicians, on the other hand ... ? I now believe it'd be deliciously ironic that they who fucked up over millions while discarding their wishes become the ones getting fucked then discarded.

...

Only for the cycle to repeat itself! ;)
 
I met a girl at a play party who let me test her claims that she could orgasm from scalp massages. Does that count?

Should have come up with an adorable and heartwarming show that makes an entire generation of American kids start using your accents and slang like the Aussies did.
Believe there was an entire kerfuffle about Peppa Pig and the "Peppa Effect" conditioning young children into developing British accents worldwide.

Media is a powerful thing.
Religiosity may also play a role.

Suicide probably seems like a less appealing way of escaping from your problems if you believe it's gonna get you a one-way ticket to the infinite torture chamber.
Holdover from the medieval times in my opinion, to deny the serfs and plebs the easy exit. Still rings as sadism to this very day, denying a person their right to choose for such a basic thing.

Everyone knows nobody will lift a finger anyway.
 
Believe there was an entire kerfuffle about Peppa Pig and the "Peppa Effect" conditioning young children into developing British accents worldwide.

Media is a powerful thing.

It's more that they learn English by mostly watching stuff in English, especially when there are no subtitles

From what I have heard, the reason guys from Nordic Countries speak with British and/or American Accents is that there is something called a "language regulator" and they prefer "British-Oxford", they also watch lots of American and British stuff. The results can be very weird or uncanny. Though, frankly I consider British-Oxford as just sounding like listening to an upper class British asshole.

My country, the Philippines, particularly for Private Schools requires English from before elementary, it gets to the point we barely even HAVE a native accent whilst speaking english
 
It's more that they learn English by mostly watching stuff in English, especially when there are no subtitles

From what I have heard, the reason guys from Nordic Countries speak with British and/or American Accents is that there is something called a "language regulator" and they prefer "British-Oxford", they also watch lots of American and British stuff. The results can be very weird or uncanny. Though, frankly I consider British-Oxford as just sounding like listening to an upper class British asshole.

My country, the Philippines, particularly for Private Schools requires English from before elementary, it gets to the point we barely even HAVE a native accent whilst speaking english
True. Posit sometime in the medium-far future all of humanity will homogenise into a singular "City/Metro" culture, with the only functional differences being geographical location and the local nation/corporation/union/guild presiding over the area.

Like giant football clubs, of a sort.
 
True. Posit sometime in the medium-far future all of humanity will homogenise into a singular "City/Metro" culture, with the only functional differences being geographical location and the local nation/corporation/union/guild presiding over the area.

Like giant football clubs, of a sort.

Even the other third world countries I have gone to and the ones I see pics and videos of, kinda have similar aesthetics as Western ones, clothing wise as well

Now there's a dystopian SciFi idea, enforced homogeneity, barely any differing architecture styles, make everything "modern" and/or a run down slum

Kinda reminds me, I was reading/listening to some Edgar Rice Burroughs books/audiobooks

Jungle Girl was set in a "lost world" hidden within Cambodia

Outside of names, clothing and titles and some cultural and religious differences and technology level. Felt very much like any other pre-modern civilization, the "exotic" stuff dies down quick when you just see all these "foreign cultures" in action…boringly mundane….but very easy to tell it's NOT the boring medieval European settings that pretty much all modern fantasy sticks to

Seriously, there was more to the pre-modern world than Europe. I have only read one book series set in an India-esque continent with India-esque castes and practices.
 
Last edited:
One piece of art does not a religion make. Secular or otherwise.


Strictly speaking, doesn't require death or veneration. The most accurate English translation for kami is "spirit", not "god".

Per Shinto, your laptop has/is a kami, as well as your pet dog. All objects, creatures, and even concepts do. Some are far more venerated than others. Some are feared and hated. But everything is a spirit, and therefor a kami.

Living people get a separate distinction because religions tend to take that attitude, but upon death you're as much a kami as any other.

If it's not venerated or honored then it would be a yokai, not a kami.
 
... You do know that, definitionally, yokai are kami, right? Granted, yokai tend to be more of the "harmful spirits", but an evil spirit is still a spirit.
Yokai aren't necessarily evil. They are the same type of spirit, but akin to, say, Pinus glabra and Pinus resionosa. Same genera, different species epithet (that yokai can turn into kami and vice versa is... eh, metaphysics stuff). Very similar plants to one another, can even cross breed them, but they are different enough to classify them differently.

Or, for a less physical example, it's similar to how an astronomer and a chemist are both scientists (aka spirits) but they don't exactly do the same stuff.
 
Yokai aren't necessarily evil

Dude. Right there in the very sentence you quoted.


Or, for a less physical example, it's similar to how an astronomer and a chemist are both scientists (aka spirits) but they don't exactly do the same stuff.

Except, again, kami is a broad term. It would be accurate to call them "scientists" and then yokai are one subset. Except kami isn't so narrow a term as 'scientist' and is more accurately as broad a classification as 'person'.

At most, you might make the argument that yokai are 'supernatural creatures' like ghosts and apparitions, rather than physical objects like most kami tend to be. Which is a very recent definition that doesn't apply to most of Japanese history. And sort of ignores all the 'haunted objects' yokai of history.

And also ignores how some kami have natures as broad and nonphysical as 'love' and 'trade'.


Kami are spirits. All spirits. Including human. Yokai are a specific subset of ghostly spirits that tend toward the destructive. Not that there aren't plenty of destructive kami overseeing everything from war to disease to death in childbirth to suicide.

Sometimes, the tradition acknowledges a particular yokai as a kami. Take the kappa, for example. A yokai that goes around pulling souls out through the butthole. And also a river/lake kami.

Or the Tengu- a yokai, also a forest and/or mountain kami.

Even wikipedia gets this right:


 
One of my pet tortoises died, apparently it ate a rock whilst it was doing the daily sun bathing in the yard, according to the veterinarian

It was a baby tortoise, it was with me for like two years

God
 
Strictly speaking, anyone or anything that is venerated or honored after death would be a kami.

Yes, this means Elvis would be a kami.
Strictly speaking, doesn't require death or veneration. The most accurate English translation for kami is "spirit", not "god".

Per Shinto, your laptop has/is a kami, as well as your pet dog. All objects, creatures, and even concepts do. Some are far more venerated than others. Some are feared and hated. But everything is a spirit, and therefor a kami.

Living people get a separate distinction because religions tend to take that attitude, but upon death you're as much a kami as any other.
Man, I now pity all those condom kami's that get born every second!
I believe it has been noted, in Shintoism and some fantasy settings that run off similar belief/magic systems, that while everything has a soul, not everything necessarily has a human-like, sentient, sapient mind. Experience, time, and external forces are what can make any given kami into an actual person. But the more "important" to the natural or human order something is, the more likely it is to have such a presence.

The first RPG that I ever GMed was in a setting that was heavily based on fantasy Japan, and the object spirit angle was a riot. There was a minor recurring character that was a defector from a race of spider-centaur people made of soulless nightmares who mostly lived by tormenting others and effectively owned an entire region of the setting. He was married to his hat. The PCs were at his wedding.
 
Thanks, I'm at the very least glad the vet said that the rest don't have problems that can lead to death

Just need to balance their diet a bit more to grass than just vegetables

I was really hoping to see them all grow big
Cherish them and be grateful for the time you've got. Losing a pet is always too hard.

Take care man.
 
Cherish them and be grateful for the time you've got. Losing a pet is always too hard.

Take care man.

I'm more worried now for the rest, they die easily, I remember similar occurring for my family's other pets

Simple stuff that we just didn't notice, heatstroke for my brother's dog, my sister's cat dying of something all of a sudden, my tiny iguana from many years ago dying to due to the sun and now my baby tortoise

Apparently, it had something to do with their diet, too much vegetables not enough grass, even though they're left in the grass as required a few hours in the morning with sunlight….may have started eating rocks for some reason related to their diet….now eating something else or more vegetables and medicine in the hopes they can just easily process it all
 

Users who are viewing this thread

Back
Top