Risky, on 23 June 2012 - 07:56 PM, said:
Two fursuiters having public sex. However, it seems these charges may be trumped up trash, as the people claiming they have pictures o the event happening refuse to release the pictures, which would be wonderful: As if they were, the fursuiters could be identified and punished accordingly.
The event has caused a whole bunch of issues.
http://www.furaffini...ournal/3577649/ - Journal of one of the events leaders. Contains info on it.
Ah okay, my bad.
Basically what happened.
Huh.
Well if they actually did that they should be prosecuted, if they didn't they shouldn't, but yeah, innocent until proven guilty and all.
While I do think doing that sort of thing in public is inviting criticism accusing them of breaking the law is certainly a bit much.
Aresye, on 23 June 2012 - 08:14 PM, said:
I won't lie, the only time I've stumbled onto a furry website (Didn't realize it at first, and quickly found out), there were 2 furries talking about how furries were genetically superior, and that humans should be exterminated.
Now, I don't hate furries. I may find it a strange culture, but it really isn't anything out of the ordinary. After all, I look at wolves as a power animal, which I understand some would even consider to be a furry trait, but that's pretty much it. Not a fan of the art, cosplay, or anything else for that matter.
I really have to ask though. How did the PR of your fandom get to be so bad?
Hoo boy. Well, it's a long story. At least, this is how it went down how I remember it. Maybe someone else has a more accurate take on this, or maybe one more coherent, but this is hopefully the gist of it.
The basic version is when people first started to band together on the internet about liking anthropomorphic characters there was a general sentiment that this was kind of a weird thing to like, especially since the characters aren't human. Nowadays I think it's easy to justify it by saying so long as they're sapient/sentient/of human intelligence there shouldn't be a problem, but these were the days when this stuff was really rare, people just didn't know how... popular I guess the idea would get. Anyways, this gave an early rise to hugbox communities where people accepted everyone no matter what they did, because they were all freaks for liking such things right? Well, that was the sentiment I saw at least back in the day. Things were bad, and there were pockets of especially awful stuff out there, but as a whole it wasn't too bad just yet.
A couple of things happened in succession though that really sent the fandom into a dark age. First, multiple rather scathing parodies cropped up around the same time as some really, awful fetish-based stuff, from stuff like The Terrifying Look at the Furries to Incontinent Student Bodies, the latter of which pretty much became the face of the fandom for most people for years to come once Something Awful got a hold of it. People started trolling all furries on a wide scale, and given the nature of most furries back then (thinking they're freaks but indulging in both pornographic furry material while at the same time being socially immature and insecure) this resulted in a lot of people making really vocal cries of protest and despair over being made fun of on the internet, giving furries another stereotypical trait of being incredibly thin-skinned.
This repeated for years. Furries were easy targets for trolling and gave reactions that were really... Well, I'm not sure how I can continue to say this in a PC manner but really, when it gets down to brass tacks they were crybabies and gave into the bullying like children.
This caused the mentality of a lot of furry fans to get even worse. People that were already mentally or socially unstable just broke entirely, but given the hugboxing, accepting community remained as such people just fed this sort of behavior and let it continue. If you told anyone to man up, even nicely, you were a troll and not to be trusted. Like I said, a dark time.
Certain People who weren't mentally broken or just adults about the whole thing started hanging out on places like 4chan and something awful after a while, or just laid low a bit on other communities in general. Some might say there were good furry communities before FurAffinity, but honestly, I don't believe them, because FA is the first site I've seen where a lot of people, or really, a lot of artists seem to act at least somewhat rationally. Still, the old stigmas remain and the people who are more vocal about being a furry are usually the sort that reinforce old stereotypes and make sure they remain in place, rather than just being more chill and appreciating anthropomorphic characters in peace, because you can like anthro characters without making it your whole life, especially when something it's even a genre! It's just a style of characterization.
To this day the fandom as a whole is a very accepting and unquestioning one, which as I said, only feeds immature and irrational behavior among certain people, but it's also slowly matured over time... and as much as I can't say the fandom as a whole is good, even today, I can say that just in my opinion, it's now a healthier fandom and community as a whole than DeviantArt, Sonic, and a number of others. Oh, and the rise of anonymous furry boards has also helped, as thanks to anonymity certain people can't ostracize others for being "terrible trolls" for speaking their minds and people's thoughts and ideas can move much more freely than before.
And before anyone gets the wrong idea, I think the widespread bullying and trolling that occurred in the early 2000's helped the fandom as a whole in the long run, as I think it really whipped some people into shape, though it did drive others further down, as that bullying and trolling? A lot of it was based on some pretty valid points, all said and done.