This zombie is trans and there’s nothing you can do about it.

Not that it hasn’t stopped the troglodyte part of anime fandom from trying up to and including self styled Japanese speakers proclaiming Crunchyroll translators made it all up.

Zombieland Saga: sleeping Lily

Nu-uh.

Lily is a trans zombie girl. Not a crossdressing boy, not a fetish, not anything else. Zombieland Saga episode eight makes that very clear. It turns out Lily died in the middle of an argument with her father, when she had locked herself up in her room and discovered she was starting to grow facial hair and died of shock. She literally died of gender dysphoria. And when she explains this to the other girls, the episode takes great pains to establish that Lily is Lily, and while Saki does roll around laughing at Lily’s deadname — the most masculine of masculine names — they’re quick to accept her as she is, the voice of reason coming from their manager/ressurrector of all people. Hell, they’ve got Sakura, the main protagonist wearing pyamas in the colours of the trans flag. Subtle this is not.

Zombieland Saga: Sakura is a trans ally

I’m not sure what angers me the most about the attempts to deny all this, the casual transphobia and erasure or the even more casual racism that underscores it. There’s a particular kind of weeb who is attractive to anime and Japanese media because they believe all cliches about Japan being a conservative nation and how that measn there isn’t any SJW crap there, who refuse to accept that Japan has feminists and activists and LGBT people too, just like any other country. It’s this sort of person who believes that anything that contradicts this view is the result of meddling by activists translators at Crunchyroll or whatever. Even when the voice actor of Lily almost literally confirms Lily’s trans, she’s not believed. This is rather insulting to the original creators who set out to and succeeded in creating one of the better portrayals of a trans girl in anime, zombie or not. Anime has done a lot of flirting with genderqueer characters, but usually doesn’t go much farther than having cute boys crossdress without explicitly coming out as trans/genderqueer. That we get a wave of socalled “fans” throwing a tantrum the moment a genuinely trans character shows up is not surprising but still disappointed.

She-Ra is a magical girl

She-Ra and the Princesses of Power is a maho shoujo show. Discuss.



And no, it’s of course not just because of its transformation scene, though it is very much a magical girl transformation, but everything around it. It’s rooted in friendship and optimism and rock solid belief in the idea that nobody is wholly evil in the same way that Precure is. It centers female characters in the same way maho shoujo series do; there’s fighting and defeating the bad guys but there’s also balls and being jealous because your friend is hanging out with somebody else and other such traditionally feminine coded concerns. No wonder all the sad cat piss men and fanboy fascists hate it.



It’s not like they’re actual fans of the original series. The sort of crybaby fake fan who throws temper tantrums about “SJWs ruining animation” wouldn’t have been caught dead watching something so covered in girl cooties as the eighties She-Ra. Commercials don’t lie: this was always aimed at girls and Noelle Stevenson and her team just revamped it for 21st century girls. In other words: queering it the hell up, which a certain kind of narrowminded fanboy always has troubles with. To be honest, I can’t actually remember all that much about the original She-ra or He-man, but I certainly got the impression that especially the latter was never 100% straight anyway. It’s all so tedious and boring to whine about it now it’s a bit more explicit. Have to hand it to the crybabies though, without their tantrum I might have missed this and that would’ve been a shame.

Because the truth is that the new She-ra is really great, taking something that was meant to sell toys and lavishing the same care and attention on it that e.g. Toei does on Precure. The story sparkles and has genuine wit, the characters are great and it’s such a pleasure to see body types other than teenage supermodel: all the characters look like people you could see walking around town. Even Scorpio. What’s more, while the Horde is evil and the princesses are the force of good, all of the individual Horde members who have gotten screen time are more than just evil for the sake of evil. More than a few actually seem rather …nice? It helps of course that most of their evil is rather abstract after the first two episodes: it would be bad if they won but the status quo isn’t all that bad. It’s a kids show after all.

Why blame Corbyn for Brexit?

Because it’s easy and you don’t have to think about actually fixing Brexit or convincing Tory rebels to not vote Tory if you can just pin the blame on somebody you already dislike anyway. And boy does Continuity Remain hate Jeremy Corbyn. Unsurprisingly, as the most visible remainers tend to be the sort of people who think everything would be all right if the UK just got back to how it was on 22 June 2016. The crux of the matter is that Brexit is the result of internal Tory politics and can never be turned back or even done properly with them in power. Yet Continuity Remain remains fixated on Labour and Corbyn. Case in point:

Yawn. Nah sweetie, St Jeremy whipping his MPs to support the government means he shares the blameg

To be fair, Sunny Singh isn’t anywhere near as bad as Jo Maugham, who is basically a Tory who uses Brexit as an excuse to put the boot into Labour, but she comes closes. And I thought it would be interesting to look at how she uses Corbyn imposing a three line whip on the Article 50 notification vote to justify her focus on Labour/Corbyn. It’s the clearest Continuity Remain has come to articulating why Corbyn could’ve stopped Brexit, or is to blame for it. The idea that Corbyn, if only he opposed properly and had instructed his MPs to vote no on any Brexit vote would’ve prevented it is of course a fallacy, but it’s a good idea to investigate why this is. Other than that the Tories are in power and hence it’s on them, but that’s apparantly not enough for Sigh and other remainers.

So let’s go back to that vote, in January 2017 and what the context is when it tooks place. As you know, Bob, the EU membership referendum took place on 23 June 2016, with all major political parties campaigning for Remain, but various prominent Tories campaigning for Leave, which narrowly won. Prime minister Cameron immediately said “not it” and Theresa May won the subsequent leadership election. At the time of the referendum and the subsequent Article 50 vote in January 2017, the Tories had an absolute majority in Parliament. Jeremy Corbyn had to face a leadership challenge in September 2016 which he won handily, increasing his share of the vote even, but with a substantial part of the parliamentary Labour Party disloyal to his leadership. Both before and after the referendum, all political parties said they would accept the results of the referendum.

So could Labour have stopped the withdrawal from the EU?

No.

Even of Corbyn had whipped his party to vote against Brexit, everybody had followed the whip and the other opposition parties in Parliament had done the same –ignoring the fact that Sinn Féin doesn’t even sit– the Tories still would’ve won the vote because the Tories had an absolute majority in Parliament. No escape looking for Tory rebels either; in the actual vote only Kenneth Clarke voted against his party. So it wouldn’t have stopped Brexit, but what would be the consequences had Corbyn voted against?

So Corbyn had won re-election as Laboru leader, but was still in a weak position; perhaps there would be another challenge? Even without this, Theresa May was confident enough to call for a new election after the withdrawal notification had been sent to the EU. Polls looked good for the Tories, with Labour looking in disarray and the LibDems having been obliterated in the previous elections. In the end this proved to be a rare mistake on the part of Theresa May, as Labour bounced back thanks to Corbyn and Momentum, gained thirty seats and destroyed the Tory majority, leaving them dependent on the DUP. But you can imagine what would’ve happened if Labour had voted against Brexit.

Because of course a fair chunk of Labour voters were also Leave voters and had Labour “betrayed” them by rejecting the result of the referendum and voted against leaving the EU, they would not vote for them again. Consider also the hostile media environment for Labour and how much worse it would’ve been. Labour would lose the election, the Tories would’ve won an unassailable majority, Corbyn would be gone as leader and we would’ve had to depend on Owen bloody Smith to lead the opposition. That surely would’ve made everything better, regurgitated Blairism to inspire the kids.

Corbyn and Labour were right to respect the outcome of the referendum, just on basic democratic grounds. Nothing erodes trust in democracy more than calling and then ignoring a referendum. You can argue the wisdom of calling for one — and it’s clear this was something Cameron only did to placate Euroskeptic Tory MPs–, but once it’s there you need to respect the outcome.

But Corbyn also realises that the more important problem is to get the Tories out of power, because without doing so nothing can improve and you certainly can’t stop Brexit. Furthermore, just getting back to 22 June 2016 isn’t good enough: everything that Brexit is supposed to cause was already happening because the Tories are in power. Hollowing out of the NHS and social security to the tune of a 100,000 people with disabilities having died as a result, selling of the country to the Americans and dodgy Middle Eastern or Russian business men, all of this was going on before Brexit too.

But for those Remainers more worried about not being able to take the Eurostar to Paris anymore this sort of consideration is foreign. They want to stop Brexit but don’t want Labour in power either, hence the pretence that Corbyn alone is to blame for Brexit and the ritual condemnation of him everything something new and awful about Brexit is revealed. Because doing anything constructive might drive the Tories out of power and we can’t have that.

Sometimes anime can do subtle

Anima Yell is this season’s obligatory low calorie slice of moe series, but then it did this:



It’s not often you have a proper coming out scene in an anime series at all, let alone one not directly aimed at an LGBT audience. And though you could quibble over the fact that the high school girl coming out here is in love with a woman who’s a second year college student, this is still a step forward for LGBT representation in anime. Not treated as a joke, not done as subtext, no tittelation, just a girl gently correcting her classmates’ assumption that she’s in love with a boy. And slightly worried doing so. A nice moment of seriousness in a series that so far has been almost exclusively gag orientated, especially managing to do this without over dramatising it.