@Soobsbaru I agree Season 1 should’ve given us more insight to Subaru’s mind of why he doesn’t seem to think much about his parents and what would they think when he’s gone. We know why he acts this way thanks to Season 2, but yeah.
@Lilyisfun@RailroadFeline I like this message even if it's depressing to think about. The group is people themselves. I don't think it's fair to expect them to "always be okay." They were overwhelmed and agitated ever since Caine tricked them about "leaving the circus." They rarely had time to breathe.
250,000 victims. 250,000 young British girls raped, trafficked, brutalized in the most inhumane, unthinkable ways by hordes of Muslim invaders brought in by the government for decades at over 149 local districts in the UK.
Utterly betrayed by their own government. This is one of the worst crimes in modern history at a scale unparalleled.
Yet there is deafening silence from the mainstream media and the left.
@SonicDramaDaily I think they just want to hear validation from people on the Internet. Tomboys doesn’t need any validation. If you say that you are trans, strangers congratulate you and say that you are brave for coming out even when it means affirming the gender stereotypes.
UK authorities failed to protect thousands of girls in scandals like Rotherham (1,400+ victims) and Rochdale due to documented institutional failures. Official inquiries, including the 2014 Jay Report, showed police, social services, and councils ignored evidence of grooming by predominantly British-Pakistani men. Fears of racism labels, "community cohesion" priorities, and political correctness overrode child safety. Similar patterns hit other towns. This was a clear policy and cultural breakdown, not lack of evidence.
1. The inquiry estimates AT LEAST 250,000 girls.
A QUARTER MILLION.
They are overwhelmingly white girls and they were raped, trafficked & tortured over decades.
The 250k number is the MINIMUM, the FLOOR... there are likely even more than this.
What the hell…
Normally I don’t ever wish death upon anyone. But for every single rapist that brutally rape and torture all of those innocent girls according to this report…
These demons deserve to go to hell.
@PCaldora I really enjoyed The Eternal Night, but it was a missed opportunity of how undertilized Cinder was. I heard she was meant to be playable, but due to budget and time constraints, she became a damsel in distress.
TL;DR: BPD does not make someone abusive, dangerous, manipulative, or incapable of accountability. BPD is a treatable mental health disorder often linked to trauma, abuse, neglect, genetics, and attachment issues. Judge people by their actions, not by a diagnosis.
As someone diagnosed with BPD, I find posts like this deeply frustrating because they're exactly the kind of stigma that prevents people from seeking help.
Borderline Personality Disorder is not a diagnosis of being abusive, manipulative, dangerous, or incapable of accountability. It's a complex mental health condition involving emotional dysregulation, unstable self-image, intense fear of abandonment, impulsivity, and difficulty managing overwhelming emotions.
Many of the symptoms people with BPD struggle with are directed inward, not outward: chronic feelings of emptiness, intense shame, self-hatred, guilt, suicidal thoughts, self-harm, and a constant fear of losing the people we care about.
What bothers me most is seeing someone's personal experiences with a family member or acquaintance treated as evidence for millions of people. If someone knew two people with depression who were abusive, we wouldn't conclude that all people with depression are dangerous. The same standard should apply here.
BPD is not something people choose. Research suggests it develops through a combination of genetic vulnerability and environmental factors, including trauma, neglect, chronic invalidation, attachment disruption, and abuse. In my own case, I experienced severe abuse and neglect growing up, and my mother also had BPD. Many people with BPD have similar histories. The disorder is often rooted in years of pain, not a desire to hurt others.
It's also important to stop confusing BPD with Narcissistic Personality Disorder. While both can involve relationship difficulties, they are not the same condition. People with BPD are often terrified of abandonment and struggle with emotional regulation. People with NPD often struggle with self-esteem regulation, grandiosity, and a need for admiration. Neither diagnosis automatically makes someone abusive.
The claim that people with BPD "never take accountability" is especially ironic because many of us spend our lives drowning in guilt, blaming ourselves for everything, and believing we're fundamentally broken.
And contrary to what was claimed, treatment is not hopeless. BPD is actually one of the most treatable personality disorders. Therapies like DBT have helped countless people build healthy relationships, regulate emotions, and create stable lives.
If you want to criticize someone's actions, criticize their actions. But telling people to "stay away from people with BPD" isn't mental health awareness. It's discrimination.
People with BPD are human beings. We are your friends, your family members, your coworkers, your partners, and your communities. We deserve to be judged by our individual actions, not reduced to the worst stereotypes associated with a diagnosis.
@Loonirium Thanks for making this post. Although I hear both sides of the story, I can't help but still sympathize with those who suffer from BPD. They never ask to have this disorder. I have a friend with BPD, and she's amazing to be with.
@CyrusScruffPup You: “u guys are incredibly insufferable”
Also you screaming: “IT’S IN THE DAMN EPISODE” “YOU ALL ARE RIDICULOUS”
It’s time for some self-reflection my dude 😂