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Jon Del Arroz #fundie fandompulse.substack.com

[Part of a post in which author Jon Del Arroz revounts an online argument with another author, Robert Kroese]

I posited something about the culture that the “Satanic Panic” of the 1980s was overblown by the media, and a tipping point made for the culture and media to turn on Christians and mock Christianity as an attempt to get Christians out of the cultural space. This was intentional, as if you look back at culture, most of the lasting works in Western Civilization are overtly Christian-oriented, and it began to change in the 1960s with the drugs, sex, and rock ‘n roll libertarianism. It’s easily traceable to the decline of our culture overall to wokeism, and this seemed to be a key cultural watershed.

I went viral with a tweet on this, which garnered millions of views, prompting Kroese to throw a fit, as he had done in the past. This was not one I bothered to respond to him over, but later, as I showed the irony that modern D&D actually has become Satanic, is when he really lost his mind.

[...]

It’s very clear as I show that woke D&D is encouraging “Pride,” a deadly sin, and yet Kroese seems to have some intentional misreading of the tweet to personally attack me on the topic. Modern D&D is Satanic and run by Satanic weirdos from the Pacific Northwest, who, ironically, would cancel Robert Kroese in an instant for not being pure-left enough for them.

Fandom Pulse #wingnut #forced-birth fandompulse.substack.com

Mary Robinette Kowal is known for her extreme leftism, over-influencing her fiction, and her new Lady Astronaut novel The Martian Contingency goes further, advocating for the murder of babies through her main character.

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The reviews reveal a plot mired in politics, where one reviewer says it heavily hits on “racial prejudice, religious prejudice and misogyny” as the lady astronaut lands on the red planet. Reviewer Jonathan Koan says the book also has an extremely cringy pro-abortion plot where it doesn’t delve into any arguments as to the morality of the situation but ignores it in favor of just having a woman get an abortion.

He said, “A major portion of the book, particularly the second half of the book, is dedicated to a plotpoint about a lady astronette getting pregnant, and trying to determine whether to have an abortion or to keep the baby. This plot point might have worked if handled differently. Unfortunately, not only does the character make the obviously wrong choice in the book, but the argument is heavily weighed in one direction, and there is no solid counter argument or major consequence for the characters' actions.”

Naturally, Kowal would advocate for child murder, given her past history of advocating for degenerate lifestyles and destructive feminism. The latest installment of The Lady Astronaut seems to be more thinly veiled political rants mixed with graphic sex scenes, which is about all her target audience reads.

What do you think of Mary Robinette Kowal advocating for child murder in her new Lady Astronaut book? Leave a comment and let us know.