Justice and Rule
Legend
I'm not claiming it's right or wrong that's what it was like. I lived through it iirc you're 19 or so you weren't there.
The reason no one cared that much was the cultural zeitgeist was different and the actual bad stuff happening back then was what people focused on. I posted some if the bad stuff but it's to graphic.
You can jump up and down going la la la as much as you want. Why do you think the nihilism of the 90's happened for example?
The 80's kids grew up and it was a collective F you to the olde generations and the 80's (greed is good).
Consider that the stuff I saw with my own eyes, observed and saw the consequences of up to an including people dying is to graphic for these forums.
Look at the movies from that era and what else was happening. That's why. Is Orcs of Thar offensive absolutely. Compared to what else was going on at the time it wasn't that bad.
And the 60's and 70's were worse than that going by my mother's stories along with my friends mother.
They weren't worried about things like that back then it was AIDs, gay rights (not marriage), legal protections for women, crack cocaine, just say no etc.
And a few of those things turned out to be disasters. You weren't even born yet. Orcs of Thar offensive in 88 I was more concerned that year with my parents divorce, the old man's boozing, getting clobbered at school and my sister getting kicked out of home such is a 10 year olds life. That was easy compared to others. That's the PG recap of 1988. Didn't have the privilege of a nice 2010's upbringing and social media.
lmao, the argument that "Things were so bad that we couldn't concentrate on this sort of stuff" is utterly hysterical and totally nonsense. We're in the midst of a global pandemic, supply shortages, probably the most unstable geopolitical situation since the fall of the Soviet Union, among a variety of incredibly dangerous domestic political situations. I grew up in the 80's and the 90's, and right now feels like the most dangerous time I've ever lived through and somehow we still manage to pay attention to this stuff.
And this is why people push back on the "it was a different time" argument: there is an argument to be made there, but it takes nuance that is definitely not being used here. Instead, it's basically being used as a heavy-handed bludgeon to try and end any sort of discussion on the manner. "It was a different time, so we don't talk about it" and let's add in some "If you weren't there, you wouldn't understand" in there because Argument from Authority/Personal Experience totally isn't a fallacy when it's about age.
In fact, you basically completely disarm your own argument by bringing up a great example of something no one cared about until they were forced to interact with it: AIDS. For a good portion of the 80's it was basically ignored until it became widespread enough that people actually had to start to interact with people infected with it, through family, friends, coworkers... what happens is that people are brought into contact with these things and suddenly they have a face put to it, so that they can no longer just ignore it and write it off as something that doesn't affect them. You can trace this through a bunch of issues: a good modern version would be police violence, where the proliferation of video cameras has basically brought about a real demand for police reform that wasn't there before because it was abstracted for many people.
And that's what we have here. No one noticed Orcs of Thar is not because of how much was going on, but because it was a niche product in a niche hobby in a time where things wouldn't widely get noticed because we simply weren't as interconnected as we are now. This is not an argument about "colonialist language" or more subtle things, but just blatant offensive racial stereotype stuff. It's the sort of stuff that would have been offensive enough that my grandmother probably would have taken notice and not bought me any more D&D products. It's not because the world of the 1980's were so utterly terrible that no one would possibly notice.