THE ROBERT W. WHITAKER ARCHIVE

AFFIRMATIVE ACTION BEAUTY 2 -- JAPANESE CARTOONS | 2008-03-14

For all this reciting of Mommy Professor's "beauty is just a matter of opinion" crap, Japan has a serious cartoon problem. It is easy enough for an Oriental to see the difference between one Oriental and another, but it is just too hard to DRAW that subtle difference in cartoons. So their cartoons are Caucasoid.

This has caused an outcry since it started decades ago, when cartoons were black and white but the difference in features were still too difficult and required Caucasoids. The solutions are interesting.

They have "black" characters who are pure Nordics with black coloring. But that's the least of it.

Today Japanese cartoons are still Caucasoid, but whereas they used to have a few Japanese writings and so forth in them, on a blackboard for instance, now the Japanese Caucasoid characters are in traditional Japanese clothes and every opportunity is used to show Japanese writing. The Caucasoid characters now have more epicanthic eye folds.

This is fascinating for me, but Mommy Professor doesn't let anti-whites think of it, much less talk about it.

Another device that affirmative action in Japanese cartooning is using is like Piers Anthony's Xanth novels. A lot of the characters are a mixture of Caucasoid and animal.

Traditional Japanese clothes which fewer Japanese wear every day. Cat moustaches. Slightly squinted eyes. You can FEEL the desperation.

It's a real yuck.

In the real world, looks are not subject to Mommy Professor's whims.