I'm pointing to his devout defense of the Chinese government, that's the point.
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Oh, I absolutely think it was genocide, and a shitty thing to do. The Nazis were much more blind to their own atrocities.
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And yet, you do agree with their attempts to... checking... commit genocide.
See the disconnect?
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What the fuck?
He hadn't actually claimed to be an American (and I still seriously doubt it, considering his posting history, and the very abrupt change in the account after a 3-year absence). Considering his utter defense of the Chinese government committing genocide, and it literally being the only thing the account had posted in almost 3 years, it was a reasonable assumption to make. I was basing it off of word choice, referencing the "west" as a foreign concept. Then, there's also the misuse of simple verb conjugations, based mainly on the singular versus plural, as well as the tenses. These are things that get picked up rather rapidly over time when living in a country, but a person with only a tenuous grasp of a language makes mistakes with... as you would probably know, since you speak more than one language. I certainly made those mistakes when learning a foreign language. There's also the sentence structure, length of sentences, and use of punctuation. People each type a bit differently, and their choices act as a bit of a fingerprint. For instance, one may notice that I use a lot of ellipses when I type, even when it is grammatically incorrect. One could go back through my post history, and see such things. Meanwhile, those things shift over time on that account, and not in a way that one would expect.
Now, as someone who has a hobby of tracking word usage, and how it impacts societal shifts, I'll gladly continue explaining it further, if you like. We could even discuss how that word usage has led to continued hatred towards Asians, both here, and abroad.