Tolkien: and then the Good King came and cast out the Evil Stewards who were corrupt because they ruled without the correct bloodline. Everything was peaceful after that and there was no more evil. There are two women in this story. Monarchy is good. The actual singular God who created everything wants you to be ruled by a 300 year old nobleman. The End.

GRRM: Feudalism is inherently destructive. Even the Noble Good Guys cause unimaginable suffering due to the structures of the system they operate within. Women are no more than brood mares under Feudalism. There is a Good King whose father was deposed. This Good King has spent his life living amongst the common people in order to become a good ruler. He is being manipulated by cynical actors and will bring devastation to the world when he begins his conquest. Thirty years ago the Hero of Prophecy acted to save the world from the Great Evil. He unleashed devastation on the land, died, and destroyed his own dynasty, possibly dooming the world. There are no gods, only powerful forces beyond our understanding that operate through the power of blood. Once upon a time there was a Good King who ruled justly. He brought peace to the land and improved the common folks' lot tremendously. Due the nature of Feudalism, the succession crisis that succeeded his reign led to the most bloodshed in 300 years. No one who wants war understands its cost.

People who dislike things because they're popular: Wow these are exactly the same!

  • UlyssesT [he/him]
    ·
    edit-2
    2 years ago

    “the more she drank the more she shat and the more she shat the thirstier she grew”

    I know that was a novelty in 1995 but how many decades of that remains a novelty with inherent value because peepee poopoo farty butt? May as well turn Jon Snow into a pickle and declare it's the funniest shit Westeros ever saw.

    Disclaimer: The Canterbury Tales had an amazing anti-dogmatic fart joke that stood the test of time. I'm not against all potty references.

      • UlyssesT [he/him]
        ·
        2 years ago

        There's a literal river of shit that's full of the author's political enemies, too. It's on the nose (and everywhere else) but still amusing.

    • AssortedBiscuits [they/them]
      ·
      2 years ago

      Disclaimer: The Canterbury Tales had an amazing anti-dogmatic fart joke that stood the test of time. I’m not against all potty references.

      That was also the first recorded instance of "tee-hee" in the English language.

      • UlyssesT [he/him]
        ·
        2 years ago

        That was also the first recorded instance of “tee-hee” in the English language.

        The real obscenity in that story. :disgost: