Kiwi Farms

You know how in movies, books, comics, video games etc. you relate more to the villains than the heroes?

I mean, between Grand Admiral Thrawn and Ezra Bridger, who would you rather be? And who would you rather side with?

A farmer posted how culture influences society: You make art like Star Trek where you're not political, don't make art for the sake of a political cause/message, where its so good it influences people to become left-leaning without you, the creators and audience, knowing it.

You got lolcows, socialists, rioters, politicians, priests, the whole cadre of cliches who think they're heroes because they said the right words like incantations, to "relate" to the crowd, because they offer offerings to their gods, to pet causes like environmentalism, according to Tucker Carlson, which gives them excuses to outsource jobs, cut down benefits, abuse fence-hoppers, h1b visas, citizens and foreigners. I mean if you boil down to it, these "heroes" do the things they do because of money, for power, out of fear, and their so self-deluded that the "ends justify the means" that they have the temerity to hide their greed behind a veneer of self righteousness, and have the gall to sic the mob after you if you call these politicians, rioters, etc. out on their crap.
They're like children; They're one-dimension villains; They're more shallow/less depth than fake-fictional characters.

So what makes a REAL hero? The kind you'd not only relate to, but wish him the best of luck and even slip a few donations to? And what makes a good villain that you'd find his cause understandable and not boring/delusional/disgusted like the social justice "heroes" above?
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