StaticXD
10-04-2009, 02:13 AM
http://img24.imageshack.us/img24/373/rememberkidsbye1n11.jpg
This message is for my whole high school who recently found out who StaticXD is, and those who mock me there. My dumb principal actually had the nerve to announce to everyone (in detail) that I was Static on the announcement speakers. I don't care if I am now the talk of the year in my town but I've gotta say a few things for you school staffs. Although my town is incredibly small, my high school contains is about 1,348 students who are enrolled holding about 43 teachers and some staffs who don't know where to stop reporting everything they find. I can't fucking wait to go to the fucking prom and fucking graduate from my fucking school. Yes, principal. I'm talking to you. You suck as a principal. This Monday, you will see how much students are backing me up after reading my article.
Recently, it has become trendy and politically correct to discredit the horrors of "Manga Addiction". People proudly proclaim the error of their ways and then stop surfing the Web and reading their manga for reasons such as to, "get back to nature" or "become more in touch with their inner selves."
Well if you ask me, that is all a bunch of crap!
Using the Internet to read manga throughout your entire waking hours IS NOT an addiction; rather, it’s a tremendous benefit.
Reading Manga on the Internet makes us smarter by enabling us to easily access information on subjects we never even heard of a few years ago. It makes us more analytical, more knowledgeable, more aware, more social (you school-staffs know I'm very social, so don't start disagreeing with this) by enabling us to find or gain memories, ideas, and advice through interactions between one story to another. It is because of 'internet-manga' reading that many people (both old and young) around the world are actually able to form relationships on a particular group with anonymous strangers around the world! Go here (http://www.japantoday.com/category/shukan-post/view/is-reading-manga-really-so-bad) for more info.
The holier-than-thou former "manga-addicts" regularly moan about how the Internet increases their manga-anxiety level because they just can’t handle the releasing-demands resulting from so much data flooding their brains. Perhaps they should have patience for certain releases, or get lobotomies so they wouldn’t be burdened by all that pesky manga-information crowding their minds with "manga-thoughts."
Indeed, with the ability to quickly access almost any manga-information we want, accomplishing to read every chapter of a series (copyrighted and non-copyrighted), and interact with manga buddies and groups; the Internet reduces - not increases - our anxieties.
In my early years, still being a young (but influential) teenager, I often concluded that my Internet intake on Manga Reduction is usually statements related to:
"I felt connected to myself rather than connected to the manga."
"I had time to think, and distance from normal demands."
"I got to stop reading manga."
"I got to stop using the internet."
Well now that I look back on those statements, I could say that I was incredibly naive. What a pity I felt. I wrongly concluded that reducing time on reading manga corresponds to increasing time to think. I then came up wth a theory that, "reading manga through the Internet, increases your capacity to think."
In the future, humankind will have a direct bio-electrical interconnection to computers as well as familiarity to manga. Possibly, in the next 65 years human beings may actually grow too influenced with the internet that it will not be referred to as an addiction, but a complicated necessity of human life. This post is sure to make the reformed "cyber-manga addicts" to rethink the the term, "EVOLUTION". You manga fanatics need to know that your manga-addiction is not entirely bad, you are bettering yourself for the future of mankind society.
This article is just a small version of my printed copies for my school to read.
This thread is also locked. Here are some resources (http://answers.yahoo.com/question/index?qid=20080312171201AA6FKmn) to sympathize with.
This message is for my whole high school who recently found out who StaticXD is, and those who mock me there. My dumb principal actually had the nerve to announce to everyone (in detail) that I was Static on the announcement speakers. I don't care if I am now the talk of the year in my town but I've gotta say a few things for you school staffs. Although my town is incredibly small, my high school contains is about 1,348 students who are enrolled holding about 43 teachers and some staffs who don't know where to stop reporting everything they find. I can't fucking wait to go to the fucking prom and fucking graduate from my fucking school. Yes, principal. I'm talking to you. You suck as a principal. This Monday, you will see how much students are backing me up after reading my article.
Recently, it has become trendy and politically correct to discredit the horrors of "Manga Addiction". People proudly proclaim the error of their ways and then stop surfing the Web and reading their manga for reasons such as to, "get back to nature" or "become more in touch with their inner selves."
Well if you ask me, that is all a bunch of crap!
Using the Internet to read manga throughout your entire waking hours IS NOT an addiction; rather, it’s a tremendous benefit.
Reading Manga on the Internet makes us smarter by enabling us to easily access information on subjects we never even heard of a few years ago. It makes us more analytical, more knowledgeable, more aware, more social (you school-staffs know I'm very social, so don't start disagreeing with this) by enabling us to find or gain memories, ideas, and advice through interactions between one story to another. It is because of 'internet-manga' reading that many people (both old and young) around the world are actually able to form relationships on a particular group with anonymous strangers around the world! Go here (http://www.japantoday.com/category/shukan-post/view/is-reading-manga-really-so-bad) for more info.
The holier-than-thou former "manga-addicts" regularly moan about how the Internet increases their manga-anxiety level because they just can’t handle the releasing-demands resulting from so much data flooding their brains. Perhaps they should have patience for certain releases, or get lobotomies so they wouldn’t be burdened by all that pesky manga-information crowding their minds with "manga-thoughts."
Indeed, with the ability to quickly access almost any manga-information we want, accomplishing to read every chapter of a series (copyrighted and non-copyrighted), and interact with manga buddies and groups; the Internet reduces - not increases - our anxieties.
In my early years, still being a young (but influential) teenager, I often concluded that my Internet intake on Manga Reduction is usually statements related to:
"I felt connected to myself rather than connected to the manga."
"I had time to think, and distance from normal demands."
"I got to stop reading manga."
"I got to stop using the internet."
Well now that I look back on those statements, I could say that I was incredibly naive. What a pity I felt. I wrongly concluded that reducing time on reading manga corresponds to increasing time to think. I then came up wth a theory that, "reading manga through the Internet, increases your capacity to think."
In the future, humankind will have a direct bio-electrical interconnection to computers as well as familiarity to manga. Possibly, in the next 65 years human beings may actually grow too influenced with the internet that it will not be referred to as an addiction, but a complicated necessity of human life. This post is sure to make the reformed "cyber-manga addicts" to rethink the the term, "EVOLUTION". You manga fanatics need to know that your manga-addiction is not entirely bad, you are bettering yourself for the future of mankind society.
This article is just a small version of my printed copies for my school to read.
This thread is also locked. Here are some resources (http://answers.yahoo.com/question/index?qid=20080312171201AA6FKmn) to sympathize with.