
“I am in a position to critique, so I am in an inviolable safe zone.”
Groundless perceptions that are multilayered are surprisingly not someone else’s problem.
I like the part where the cut character returns to pursue the one who cut them.
The fate of those who have lost the boundary between the internet and reality.
>>3
It feels more like a customer mentality that’s gotten twisted.
I am in a position to criticize the anonymous, so I am in an untouchable safe zone.
Isn’t it scary and impossible if you don’t believe in the goodness and common sense of the person you’re criticizing?
It is common to see such contradictory and harsh criticism and persecution, whether in fiction or reality.
>>5
Shut up! I don’t care! It feels good to accuse others! Ah… Aaaaaaaaaah!
You just slashed me, didn’t you!
There’s no escaping the truth!
>>6
🔪
The other day, a woman who thought she was safe after taking a large sum of money from a low-income man was stabbed and killed.
You just stabbed my heart! That’s a fatal wound!
You can’t make excuses! Right now k
Too surreal.
Well, there is a certain kind of reality to it…
>>12
I feel complicated emotions about how easily idiots in horror movies can get themselves into trouble right from the start.
>>12
Although it is exaggerated, it is an extension of those who really exist and are lacking in various ways…
Of course, any fool would run away first if they saw someone getting stabbed right in front of them…
>>14
It’s a bit hard to say yeah.
I don’t know everything about fools…
>>14
There are videos showing tsunamis arriving at a relatively close distance and fires breaking out nearby (provided by viewers), so it seems that those who continue to film will keep filming…
There are actually quite a few people who are likely to do things like this.
Why are you getting closer…?
Contact the police immediately…
>>16
It’s the decisive moment!
>>16
The desire for photos and videos that one wants to get closer to has widely existed since before the prevalence of mobile phones with cameras.
Don’t you still think that you won’t die?
I thought there might be several people who become invincible in spirit when they look through a camera.
Is it just someone who can calmly point a camera in the face of danger?
Videos captured on a smartphone of rivers overflowing due to flooding.
There were videos of explosions being filmed and people being blown away by the shockwaves.
There are videos of people continuing to film nonchalantly and getting attacked by bears.
Some people mistakenly believe that the camera is the absolute authority.
>>25
In other words, passing through the camera makes me lose a sense of reality.
I think YouTubers have become an incredibly convenient presence for creation.
>>26
No matter how dangerous the area I dive into, it doesn’t feel too out of place, which is laughable.
>>30
A life lighter and cheaper than that of a television station underling or a war correspondent has come into being.
>>26
A character who acts cool to justify stepping into dangerous places becomes a conveniently heartless presence, making it easy to turn them into a victim without feeling any pain.
It’s like a kind of defense mechanism to think that there’s no way someone like that exists.
I have a fleeting wish that I don’t want anyone like this in the world I live in.
It seems that reality loses its sense when viewed through a camera.
You just killed me, didn’t you!
You can’t make excuses!
>>33
🧂
Videos of aggressive driving often feature punks holding cameras, don’t they?
>>34
I wonder what that couple, who were the catalyst for the strict penalties on aggressive driving, is up to now.
It’s not a live broadcast, it’s a recording…
It was like this with the media regarding Mount Unzen Fugen.
Originally, a stupid person is also quite dangerous.
It’s scary because it’s common to become indecisive and act foolishly when the time comes.
The existence of streamers is like a creature that automatically leaves behind video recordings, serving as an introduction to horror.
They take a scoop right there and actually receive praise for it.
At the same time, you were criticized for casually aiming the camera.
There are photographers who commit suicide.
>>44
That makes sense.
Before the internet and such, it seems that when looking through a camera, people’s sense of involvement diminishes and they lose their sense of crisis.
It looks like the kind of person who stands there with their smartphone during a disaster and gets swallowed up.
If I hadn’t had the band to secure it in my hand, I would have dropped the camera.
Not just YouTubers, but also professional photographers, go to conflict zones in light clothing and can get abducted or shot.