I’m not going to watch any movies or dramas that Jisoo appears in, and I won’t listen to her music either. I’ll boycott her. But that just means I personally won’t spend money on her or give her attention. What I really don’t understand are the people who go out of their way to track her down, leave hateful comments, and insult her everywhere. That’s honestly the most incomprehensible behavior.
Celebrities live off public attention, so if you genuinely don’t want to see them, don’t go around increasing their visibility by making a fuss. Just block them whenever they show up and keep them out of your sight.
I feel like I wrote this pretty neutrally, but the stans are saying that boycotting a woman for something a man did is miso**ny, and the haters are like “why even write this if you don’t like it,” even when I point out that their behavior is basically unhinged. Both sides are r**arded
post response:
[+345][-169]
1. [+92, -55]
Even if it was her oppa who did it, if you lose affection for her just because she’s family, then I guess it can’t be helped. But chasing after his dongsaeng and hurling insults at her over a miso***stic crime committed by some Hannam is definitely idiotic behaviorㅋㅋ even the victim herself asked twice in official statements for people not to attack innocent family members
2. [+87, -7]
This isn’t just about controversial celebrities. It applies to the entertainment industry as a whole. If you want a celebrity to fail, the correct way is to completely cut off interest and stop consuming anything related to them. They say silence is scarier than hate comments, right? If you truly want them to flop, you should stop both stanning and hating. But usually, for popular celebrities, both fans and haters are way too active, so the buzz never really dies down…
3. [+73, -25]
But those people obsessively hating on Jisoo… what exactly do they expect her to have done? Was she supposed to follow her nearly 40y’o oppa around and monitor every detail of his life as his dongsaeng…?? ㅋㅋ Why is it that in Korea, even when a man commits wrongdoing, people default to blaming the mother, the nuna, or the female dongsaeng? What’s especially bizarre is that other women are doing this too. Attacking female relatives instead of criticizing the man who actually did it
4. [+62, -29]
Anyway, putting that aside, what’s the point of attacking a woman over a miso***istic crime committed by a man? That just puts them on the same level as the miso***istic guy they’re criticizing
5. [+61, -30]
Honestly, this is just the normal, reasonable line of thinking