K-pop stans being uneducated

  • 13-year-old me would also have asked "what is a branch?" because of my poor English skills back then.

    I understand this, because we don't know anything about this person.


    But they could have checked online, it only takes a few seconds.


    I guess some people would rather ask others than look for explanation.



    But the way this other user explained that a branch of religion is like a subunit was really unexpected :sweat:

    Twice-The-Best-Thing-I-Ever-Did.png

    SNSD TWICE IVE Taeyeon aespa f(x) Red Velvet

  • Well the most effective way of teaching is to explain it in a way that makes it eaay for the person the understand.

  • Well the most effective way of teaching is to explain it in a way that makes it eaay for the person the understand.

    I agree, it's good as long as the person who asked understands. I just never would have thought of using a word subunit in this context. But it's just me and people approach things differently, after all.

    Twice-The-Best-Thing-I-Ever-Did.png

    SNSD TWICE IVE Taeyeon aespa f(x) Red Velvet

  • Hey, whatever works. It’s actually a clever and funny analogy given the context and environment, and teaching in a way that the person can relate to is an effective strategy.


    To be fair, the person asking might be a little kid, they don’t know much about religion, or English is not their primary language. That is all fine. At least they’re asking questions and being willing to learn. I think we underestimate how many little kids love K-pop.


    I actually think kids shouldn’t know a lot about religion. Let them be kids. Reading some things from the Bible could be trauma-inducing and mentally damaging if they’re not ready or able to process it. There’s something extremely cruel about forcing kids to learn about demons, murder, prostitution, and adultery. It makes me wonder if this is why so many people are messed up. ThePhantomThief and NmiXXSupremacist can vouch for me on this.

  • Hey, whatever works. It’s actually a clever and funny analogy given the context and environment, and teaching in a way that the person can relate to is an effective strategy.


    To be fair, the person asking might be a little kid, they don’t know much about religion, or English is not their primary language. That is all fine. At least they’re asking questions and being willing to learn. I think we underestimate how many little kids love K-pop.


    I actually think kids shouldn’t know a lot about religion. Let them be kids. Reading some things from the Bible could be trauma-inducing and mentally damaging if they’re not ready or able to process it. There’s something extremely cruel about forcing kids to learn about demons, murder, prostitution, and adultery. It makes me wonder if this is why so many people are messed up. ThePhantomThief and NmiXXSupremacist can vouch for me on this.

    Well, i said before I against any dogma and their indoctrination. Besides that, i believe The Biblie is not for children, is inmoral, boring, contradictory, cruel, etc etc. Should be read by people old enough to be full aware of what they are reading.

  • I actually think kids shouldn’t know a lot about religion. Let them be kids. Reading some things from the Bible could be trauma-inducing and mentally damaging if they’re not ready or able to process it. There’s something extremely cruel about forcing kids to learn about demons, murder, prostitution, and adultery. It makes me wonder if this is why so many people are messed up. ThePhantomThief and NmiXXSupremacist can vouch for me on this.

    Well... I went to Sunday school as a child and also read children's books with bible stories in them (I also read some of the actual bible, except for Song of Solomon because I had heard that I shouldn't read that one until the age of 18 or something), and I turned out fine.


    But of course, not everyone had the same experience as I did.

  • I think it's more uneducated to assume everyone’s first language is English, that all people in this world automatically know every word. Plus, Kpop has a lot of younger fans, so it makes sense if they don’t know many English words yet. This was just a cute, silly moment, and I’m glad people on TikTok were being chill and explaining it in the simplest way to make it easier to understand. Shaming people for trying to learn something new, no matter where, is just lame.

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