captain_slinky: (Smile)
captain_slinky ([personal profile] captain_slinky) wrote2013-04-20 04:01 pm

Same Slam, Different Fandom

Further evidence that Religion is just another branch of Geekism/Nerdism/Fandom. Consider this "Exhibit A", Pat Robertson's recent comments regarding Dungeons & Dragons:



Contrast and compare to Carrie Fischer dissing Star Trek:



One of the great traditions of Fandom is NOT ONLY to sing the praises of your own Fandom, but to also mock/shame/"Diss" other similar fandoms. Christianity gets their rules from a book, D&D gets their rules from a book (but D&D is at least nice enough to put an edition number with each major revision of the rules).

I can remember when I was first exploring Fandom and i was warned against becoming some weirdo Star Wars Freak. It was TREK all the way, and those Star Wars fans? Well they were just awful, terrible people who weren't REALLY sci-fi fans. They were just jumping on the band wagon and going with whatever was popular at the moment! Stay away from them at all costs!

[identity profile] snarky-imp.livejournal.com 2013-04-21 06:37 pm (UTC)(link)
I always felt weird in each geek conversation where you had to make your allegiance known to one Star or the other. No one ever seemed to understand the notion of both being enjoyable for one person. So I'd get a condescending look from everyone and they'd turn around and mutter, "girls!" like I was deaf as well.

[identity profile] captain-slinky.livejournal.com 2013-04-21 07:33 pm (UTC)(link)
That's the further brilliance of my analogy - those folks who make you SWEAR ALLEGIANCE to one sub-set or another are the most vocal, the most visible and (thankfully) the most rare. If you make it past the nut-balls and fanatics, you find that they're all pretty awesome and accepting of each other despite the copy-n-paste recitation of the fanatic dogma :)