- Location
- secret base
- Pronouns
- She/Her
*Jedi Hand Thing*you didn't fix the title of the person though it still says vendigo
"You saw no such thing"
*Jedi Hand Thing*you didn't fix the title of the person though it still says vendigo
what thing? what are you talking about miss hand waving weirdo
Well, my proposed speech cover that in a way and we can build up our evaluation on them by their reaction so as to guide them to the 'good' path and be the best teacher possible for them.Why are we picking the boring teacher option? I want to be this guy:
You know, someone who gives genuine good advice, not someone who just looks at them for their potential uses.
Well, my proposed speech cover that in a way and we can build up our evaluation on them by their reaction so as to guide them to the 'good' path and be the best teacher possible for them.
No offense, but the entire hero speech just doesn't seem right. If we were in a society like the one in My Hero Academia? Sure. Here? It just doesn't work. They're aren't here to be heroes. This school is just for teaching students how to use their abilities. There is nothing about heroism, and I don't want to shove that concept down the student's windpipe. If we force our philosophy upon them, we will be no better than Endeavor.Siticking to Sean Carter's speech, Especially because we have some seriously fucked up girls who will probably try to kill the protagonists guys in the first week, and the latter will start looking up to us as the old wise and overpowered heroic sensei. So boosting the confidence of the protagonists, and make the psyco girls reconsider their next actions.
Well, I'm following the logical conclusion to what the government will do with powered teenagers: Make them like the government/country and 'protect' it and its people.No offense, but the entire hero speech just doesn't seem right. If we were in a society like the one in My Hero Academia? Sure. Here? It just doesn't work. They're aren't here to be heroes. This school is just for teaching students how to use their abilities. There is nothing about heroism, and I don't want to shove that concept down the student's windpipe. If we force our philosophy upon them, we will be no better than Endeavor.
Edit: I'm fine with teaching them so that they WANT to be heroes. I'm not fine with FORCING them to be heroes.
First off, I never said that we shouldn't help the mentally unstable. Second, I never twisted the words force them, I just stated how your speech appeared to me. Third, I'm not saying to not help the students, I was jus saying that we should do it in a way where it's more passive and not in a overtly blunt way. You stated that a teacher is supposed to guide, GUIDE the students to a good life, yet you're have a speech about how they should be heroes.A Teacher is supposed to guide a student to the right path and provide him knowledge so he can build a life and ideology, so basically, you are saying that if the student is a deranged psyco we shouldn't help him? you are twisting the word to 'force them' which is pejorative. QM condensed all stereotypical characters to a single classroom, so we are bound to have the psyco girl, emotionless ruthless student, 'I'm so bored of life' student and the list goes on... and we should just let them stay that way?
Well you twisted the purpose of the speech by saying that we are forcing them to be Heroes and can you quote the part in the speech where its saying that people are forced to be Heroes?First off, I never said that we shouldn't help the mentally unstable. Second, I never twisted the words force them, I just stated how your speech appeared to me. Third, I'm not saying to not help the students, I was jus saying that we should do it in a way where it's more passive and not in a overtly blunt way. You stated that a teacher is supposed to guide, GUIDE the students to a good life, yet you're have a speech about how they should be heroes.
Heroes don't need to fly or shoot lasers from their eyes to be the one who saves countless lives. They don't need super-strength or super-speed to be there, in someone's hour of need. They don't need a mask or villainous foe to save a family from certain woe. They just need to try to do what is right, to be the hero, shining in the night.
What I'm trying to say is that everyone can be a Hero, to look up to that ideal and reach out for it.
I'm Sigismund Sinclair, your new homeroom teacher, thank you"
I wasn't trying to. Also, why are you so insistent that I "twisted" your entire speech? Any writing, speech, media, etc. can be interpreted differently. I was just stating how the speech seems to me.Well you twisted the purpose of the speech by saying that we are forcing them to be Heroes and can you quote the part in the speech where its saying that people are forced to be Heroes?
The entire speech is about how Heroes are twisted from their original purpose in the modern day culture and how villains are not always who most people think they are, the only line which says that they can try to be a Hero and that it doesn't matter if they are superpowered or not. Here is the quote.
Helping people in need of help is a fancy way to say 'I'm forcing them to accept unwanted but necessary help', yes I agree but when you said 'forced' which is pejorative, it will give the wrong idea of what the speech is about so I had to correct it and twisted was the best word for that since they aren't anything in the speech that says we should force people to be a hero.I wasn't trying to. Also, why are you so insistent that I "twisted" your entire speech? Any writing, speech, media, etc. can be interpreted differently. I was just stating how the speech seems to me.
Oh, so that's what you meant. Ok. Listen I wasn't saying about the speech itself was bad (if it appeared I was, sorry for not clarifying). It's just that if you give that speech to a bunch of students, to me it feels like we're putting an expectation upon them, you know?Helping people in need of help is a fancy way to say 'I'm forcing them to accept unwanted but necessary help', yes I agree but when you said 'forced' which is pejorative, it will give the wrong idea of what the speech is about so I had to correct it and twisted was the best word for that since they aren't anything in the speech that says we should force people to be a hero.
No no no no, I didn't think you said anything bad about the speech, it's me that was clearing the possibly wrong impression that people may have because of that misunderstanding ^^Oh, so that's what you meant. Ok. Listen I wasn't saying about the speech itself was bad (if it appeared I was, sorry for not clarifying). It's just that if you give that speech to a bunch of students, to me it feels like we're putting an expectation upon them, you know?
Course not, I can definitely see what you mean by that. Expectations exist everywhere in our society. Being expected to help people is just one of them. As far as I can tell, you and I have different ways of how to teach that to the students. You prefer to actively encourage them to help people. I prefer to teach them little things here and there so that they will want to help people on their own.No no no no, I didn't think you said anything bad about the speech, it's me that was clearing the possibly wrong impression that people may have because of that misunderstanding ^^
As for expectations... That's an everyday part of life, you are expected by your parents to succeed in school, you are expected by the government to be a productive citizen, you are expected by the community to be a normal good person and if not then you are an outcast and we aren't teaching normal people anyway just look at their titles "True Ancestor Vampire" "Demon Hunter Hunter" "Alien Demon" "Slasher of Slashers"
So just expecting them to help the next person in need that they meet is not too much of a burden... is it?
That depends...Maybe we reserve this speech exclusively to the three main protagonists. Because other than them, we don't know anything about the other students. I mean, I'm pretty sure people labelled <Slashers of Slashers> or <Demon Hunter Hunter> aren't exactly the most heroic of people. In fact, their existence might go against the public "good" considering that one of them might be a serial killer and the other hunts people who hunt demons. Then we have the <True Ancestor Vampire>, who might be a tad disillusioned with so-called "heroes."That's an everyday part of life, you are expected by your parents to succeed in school, you are expected by the government to be a productive citizen, you are expected by the community to be a normal good person and if not then you are an outcast and we aren't teaching normal people anyway just look at their titles "True Ancestor Vampire" "Demon Hunter Hunter" "Alien Demon" "Slasher of Slashers"
So just expecting them to help the next person in need that they meet is not too much of a burden... is it?