I might be reading into the subtext a bit too much, but I got the impression that the human society shown in the background was ecofascist. Hear me out, starting with the large-scale rewilding. That is a process that would require the displacement of millions (perhaps billions) of people from their homes. Whether that was driven by climate change or forced migration we don't know, but the implications are fairly grim. In addition, the geodesic dome we see doesn't contain a biosphere, but a monoculture carefully maintained by robots complete with over-the-top security robots for dealing with "pests," and the helper robot commercial we see (which heavily implies a capitalist society) shows a city with well-mowed grass lawns and trimmed hedges. From this it seems that humans didn't engage in regenerative practices, but rather allowed nature to reclaim parts of the world on its' own. This shows a humanity that has not embraced nature, but rather fully separated themselves from it.
Schmoo
I don't even necessarily disagree that it's counterproductive, I just don't think it's fair to attack someone for using esoteric or unconventional language. Yes, it inconveniences the listener - or in this case the reader - but in this context no one is being forced to engage with OP. By using some Old English letters OP is just having some innocent fun at no one's expense, which doesn't warrant the harsh response they're receiving.
If you were talking to someone and they casually used xe/xey pronouns (or any neopronouns for that matter) to refer to a friend who isn't there, would you go out of your way to lecture them about what an inconvenience it is to you to have to learn something new?
That didn't really answer my question.
Thank you for explaining, I'm sorry for being insensitive. I already explained that I meant no disrespect towards AME. I disagree that the point I made has nothing to do with it. AME was at one time esoteric among the general US population, and that is the only way I'm saying that AME and OP's use of Old English letters are alike.
I vaguely recall you saying you were Jewish in an earlier comment, if you're actually black then I apologize. If not then perhaps you can try asking someone who is African American if they find what I said "highly offensive."
You see OP's use of Old English as worthy of derision, so you interpreted my comparison as belittling towards AME. I don't share your aversion to esoteric forms of expression, so my comparison is entirely without malice.
You don't get it, I find it annoying so you should cater to me. STOP HAVING FUN BECAUSE I FEEL EXCLUDED!!!1!1!1
/s
The conversation I had with drag before about drag's reasons for speaking this way shifted my perspective enough that Phlubbadubba's use of Old English doesn't bother me the way it probably would have before. I understood drag, but seeing how negatively people are responding to a tiny bit of Old English makes me appreciate drag. Keep it up.
Thornies is a pejorative I've never seen before, who does that refer to?
Because they see it as a competition. They want to be the ones to "inherit the earth," and see other ethnic groups "being fruitful and multiplying" as a threat to their own ethnicity. It's barely veiled white supremacy supported by warped Christian theology.