• Tigeroovy@lemmy.ca
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    6 hours ago

    He was a jock who grew up to be a cop.

    Just inexplicably within a nerd wrapper.

  • kryptonianCodeMonkey@lemmy.world
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    10 hours ago

    His becoming an Auror made no sense. McGonagall pressured him to think about what he wanted to do in the future in his 4th year to plan out the rest of his education. Auror was his very first idea, and he wasnt really even super into the idea then. It seemed to be mostly out of a sense of admiration for Mad-Eye Moody specifically. And then, despite finding out that Moody was in fact a Death Eater trying to kill him the whole time, somehow that didn’t taint his opinion on the Auror thing at all.

    Even though it was just the first thing to pop into his head, he never gives it any sort of critical thought or even comes up with any alternatives. He doesn’t even have an understanding of the greater wizarding world at that point to even know what kind of work exists outside of Hogwarts and Hogsmeade. He just shrugs and goes with his first idea anyway. But then he’s not even committed to that idea really. He is not even bummed when his grades would apparently prevent him from taking Advanced Potions, a required class to become an Auror. When he learns that Slugorn had less strict requirements and he can take the class after all, he’s just kind of like, oh okay… “guess I will keep following this path. I have no other ideas.”

    I agree with the Carlin Brothers that his career after Hogwarts should have been at Hogwarts. Whatever admiration he had for the fake Moody, the real Moody, or both, his truest admiration was for Dumbledore. And Hogwarts was his first real home. He excelled at Defense Against the Dark Arts from the beginning, and by his 5th year was even already teaching his classmates (including older students) skills that he had. And he was an incredibly effective teacher too, with his students using the skills he taught in the fight at the department of mysteries and the battle of hogwarts. He had more experience by then end of the 7th book fighting Dark Wizards than most Aurors at the ministry would have. That job would have been boring as hell after Voldemort and the Death Eaters were defeated. But he could use his experiences to enrich the next generations of witches and wizards, teach them to protect themselves, and be there to make sure Hogwarts remained the haven that is had been for him. It makes WAY more sense for him to have become the Defense Against the Dark Arts professor (especially since he broke the curse on the job with Voldemort’s defeat). But then count on JK to do some stupid shit.

    • zalgotext@sh.itjust.works
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      10 hours ago

      Auror was his very first idea

      Not to nitpick, but Auror was Rowling’s first idea, as you suggest in your last sentence there. Rowling’s narrow-minded world view wouldn’t let the hero become a teacher, or a politician, or an activist, or anything else. Her view of the world says cops are the real heroes, so the hero of her story must become a cop.

      • HCSOThrowaway@lemmy.world
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        7 hours ago

        I think we’re putting the cart before the horse here.

        Assuming Harry is virtuous and good and brave and excellent at fighting dark wizards and helping people, wouldn’t that be the perfect person to become a cop?

        • zalgotext@sh.itjust.works
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          2 hours ago

          Those things qualify you for a whole slew of jobs, and Harry has plenty of other interests besides fighting evil wizards. It seems like very shallow, hackneyed writing to have a 14-year-old latch on to becoming a cop in a community that he didn’t even know existed until he was 1, one which he literally isn’t permitted to participate in until he finishes boarding school.

          • HCSOThrowaway@lemmy.world
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            7 hours ago

            Again, cart before horse.

            You’re asserting that there are no helpful cops, therefore Harry being helpful means he should not be a cop.

            In reality, Harry being helpful should be a cop, because he could be in a position to help people.

            Dexter/Batman don’t do a lot of helping, they just crack skulls of people they perceive as bad. Ironically for your point, much like most IRL cops.

          • tetris11@feddit.uk
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            6 hours ago

            You’re putting the cart before the horse there.

            If cops could be helpful to Harry, then why wouldn’t he ride a time horse back in time to meet his grandaddy’s prize-winning steed, a racehorse name you’ve likely not heard of. I hope you’re happy with your assertions

    • Jax@sh.itjust.works
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      9 hours ago

      And then, despite finding out that Moody was in fact a Death Eater trying to kill him the whole time

      This is not at all what I remember happening

      Edit: you mean when Crouch is impersonating him?

      Edit 2: oh yeah, he did meet Crouch as Moody first

  • rustyfish@piefed.world
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    15 hours ago

    Fred and George did it best.

    They gave the biggest bitch in the history of bitches the middle finger.

    Literally exploded out of Hogwarts.

    Opened their own store which sold items that only had disturbance in mind.

    Returned to Hogwarts only to participate in civil war.

    • kryptonianCodeMonkey@lemmy.world
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      11 hours ago

      Dont forget that they voluntarily participated in the Battle of the Seven Potters, and George lost an ear in the battle.

      And they also established and operated a pirate radio station that undermined the wizard-nazi propaganda by delivering the truth to the masses, and brought levity and unity to those involved in the resistance.

      The twins were real ones.

      • HCSOThrowaway@lemmy.world
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        7 hours ago

        You can’t really have a resistance without support like Fred and George and fighters like Harry.

        A resistance with only supporters isn’t a resistance; it’s blogging.

        • kryptonianCodeMonkey@lemmy.world
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          7 hours ago

          TBF, Harry was on a secret recon mission for the majority of Book 7, which the twins more or less knew about and supported as best they could. They provided intelligence which is absolutely crucial to any resistance effort, and answered the call to fight as soon as they were needed.

          • HCSOThrowaway@lemmy.world
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            7 hours ago

            True, but if we’re assigning roles via broad strokes as a proportion of their contributions, Fred and George were propagandists/saboteurs/etc. and Harry ‘n’ Co. were direct action.

            Doing a quick propaganda as a trigger-puller doesn’t mean you’re now a propagandist, nor does doing a quick gunshot mean you’re now a fighter.

            Again, Fred and George were vital elements, but (90%) Support is not more important than Fighting.

            • kryptonianCodeMonkey@lemmy.world
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              7 hours ago

              Well yeah, sure. But only because they didnt have the information to act on that the trio did. Had they been looped in, they’d have been right there. I’m not saying that they didnt primarily act as support. I’m saying that had they been offered the opportunity to be on the front lines with an actual mission like Harry, Hermione and Ron had, they wouldnt have hesitated. I think that would have been to the detriment of the overall cause in the end though, given the role they did take up was pretty damn useful and about as vital a role as they could have served under the circumstances.

              Obviously none of that is to detract from the accomplishments and heroism of the Trio either.

              • HCSOThrowaway@lemmy.world
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                7 hours ago

                I really don’t know if what you state is accurate because I don’t recall from reading the books or watching the movies, so I can’t really comment on your prediction, and honestly we’re so far off-topic I’m barely interested in developing an opinion on it.

                I just generally disagree with “Fred and George were better contributors to the resistance than the Trio,” for reasons stated above.

                • kryptonianCodeMonkey@lemmy.world
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                  6 hours ago

                  I just generally disagree with “Fred and George were better contributors to the resistance than the Trio,”

                  Oh, that wasn’t my argument at all. Definitely agree.

  • LibertyLizard@slrpnk.net
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    18 hours ago

    My favorite part of Harry Potter is when Hermione tries to get everyone to oppose slavery and everyone’s just like why are you being so mouthy?

    JK Rowling has views that were regressive for the 1800s. It’s amazing we didn’t see it sooner.

    • squaresinger@lemmy.world
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      7 hours ago

      For all her bigotry, I don’t think Rowling is/was pro slavery. In the books that plot point is clearly meant as social critique against the imaginary wizarding society.

      But after a while I guess the plot point got boring and it doesn’t make sense for the world to change because of some random school girl’s protest, so the whole thing was dropped.

      Kinda like fridays for future. At first the reporting around it was like “Cool, the kids have something they getting political”, then it got boring and then society got hateful against it and then everyone just ignored them and nothing was changed by it.

      • LibertyLizard@slrpnk.net
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        7 hours ago

        I didn’t really interpret it that way. I took it as “look how annoying people who complain about social justice are”.

        I don’t think she literally supports slavery but it was clearly an allegory for what she views as annoying activist types.

        • squaresinger@lemmy.world
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          6 hours ago

          Rowling said on multiple occasions that Hermione is her “idealized self-insert”.

          So I don’t think she’d use her own self-insert to say “Look how stupid people like me are”. Doesn’t really make sense.

        • tetris11@feddit.uk
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          6 hours ago

          It was prevailing thought at the time though too (~2000s), I remember my mates and I looking at activists with some measurable annoyance and disdain. I don’t think her attitude was so far out of whack with the general vibe

    • NannerBanner@literature.cafe
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      9 hours ago

      I thought that was the most realistic part of the books. How many hundreds of years of people crying out against slavery did it take for chattel slavery to be abolished? Sure, it would also have been realistic for there to have been more people opposing slavery, but as an initial reaction? Society would absolutely shit on her out of inertia.

    • Bad@jlai.lu
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      15 hours ago

      She also randomly changes her mind at some point and agrees slavery is ok because the slaves said they don’t mind.

      I did not enjoy the books back in the day and was not shocked when JKR was revealed to be a bigot.

  • fonix232@fedia.io
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    1 day ago

    Well no surprise there, Harry was essentially a jock who only excelled in two things:

    • magical self defence
    • sports

    And he was good enough in magical self defence that he took down the biggest baddest wizard with just the disarming spell. Literally a magical “put yer gun down”.

    He could’ve gone into sports but hey, he just finished off the “big bad” shortly after he turned 18, so of course he’d chase that high. Especially when his girlfriend went into sports and they could hardly both play, that would be constant tension.

    So yup, he went on to be a cop. And I see a lot of people claiming that ooh, the wizarding world is different, the police aren’t sent after innocent people, their justice system isn’t rigged, there’s no discrimination, yada yada… Hello??? Magical SAPIENT creatures are routinely enslaved, Dumbledore, someone people thought to be above reproach, was constantly accosted by the very same cops, Harry himself was accused and dragged into a kangaroo court over DEFENDING himself, the aurors have proven time after time that most of them are just as ineffective as the typical Murican doughnut-muncher mall cop, and about discrimination… “mudbloods” need a reminder? Or how Filch is treated?

    The wizarding world is the last living remnant of the elitism of the British monarchy/nobility, and if you don’t see this, you lack practically all comprehensive reading skills. Put down those rose tinted glasses and read Harry Potter while paying attention to the social narrarive. It will open your eyes.

    • HCSOThrowaway@lemmy.world
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      7 hours ago

      One concern seemingly nobody is discussing here is:

      Is Harry a good person?

      If so, and he’s good at the things you state (and especially if he’s only good at the things you state), why should he not be a cop?

    • azertyfun@sh.itjust.works
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      17 hours ago

      What pisses me off is that you’re 100 % correct but most of it is unintentional on Rowling’s part. She’s a fascist reactionary and she just, for the most part, enthusiastically described her perfect little ideal society.

      Everyone is in their place, the good guys work very hard to maintain the existing social order, and the people at the bottom are there because that is in their very nature and really they just like it that way and attempting to elevate them is futile. Textbook fascism and all of it is presented completely deadpan because this is Rowling’s genuine beliefs.

      Hot take: HP’s popularity is responsible for more societal ills than pretty much any other book in print. Almost no-one engages with it critically even amongst the crowd that outwardly disagrees with Rowling’s more recent political activism. Fuuuuck that license.

      • Whats_your_reasoning@lemmy.world
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        12 hours ago

        Hot take: HP’s popularity is responsible for more societal ills than pretty much any other book in print.

        I’d say the bible ranks higher. But as an admitted “hot take,” I can respect that.

      • BackgrndNoize@lemmy.world
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        9 hours ago

        I don’t think even the shitty people engage with the HP books enough to take lessons on being a facist from it, the worst thing about those books is that it made a shitty human lots of money

        • azertyfun@sh.itjust.works
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          2 hours ago

          No-one is immune from propaganda. And those awful books promote quite a few bad messages. Well firstly they promote criminally bad writing. But besides that, they work very hard to make a lot of oppressive power structures sound cool, whimsical, and aspiring to the uncritical reader. From the police institution to the prison complex to the famously abusive English boarding school system to the literal ethnostate to slavery somehow, and I haven’t gone over the half of it.

          It truly feels like every other bit worldbuilding that Rowling put in sounds whimsical on the surface but makes you go “wait, the implications are truly terrible!” when you think about it for more than two seconds. Except she clearly did not think most of it through; she literally just thought “race of jewish caricatures who want nothing out of life besides being bankers” is good and whimsical worldbuilding… And somehow got away with it.

          It’s impossible to quantify or prove but these books have had the most cultural impact out of any modern book franchise, and I don’t see how the systemic normalization of so many awful things to uncritical children and teenagers can balance out the joy and whimsy that people got out of them (especially when there is so much better written teen/YA fiction out there).

          Shifting the Overton Window in the way that those books did is some insidious type shit that actually does matter quite a bit more than most people realize. New hot take: I think the bigots are correct to get big mad at Queer representation in media because it moves the Overton Window the other way and that actually impacts bigots long-term. In a very real sense a trans actor in a movie is a concrete and real step towards the de-legitimization of bigoted views. And HP is very much doing the opposite of that every time it touches on any kind of social subject.

      • btsax@reddthat.com
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        12 hours ago

        I’m not sure that the outcome of Harry Potter is fascist in nature. After Voldemort is defeated there’s no mythic national rebirth, no driving nationalism, no cult of personality at the top, and the society doesn’t treat violence as virtue. What it looks like to me is more of a reactionary neoliberal, paternalist world. Hierarchy is enforced and treated as natural, change is looked at with suspicion, institutions are trusted, and the only problems come about when bad individuals are in charge of those institutions. This is essentially the worldview of 19th century imperialist Britain.

        To be clear, though, fascism does exploit these weaknesses in liberal/neoliberal thought to bring itself about and does share some of the superficial look, but I think it flattens the term to label Harry Potter and/or JK Rowling as explicitly fascist. I think at best her work is neoliberal slop and that she has some abhorrent views about gender that people who are fascists would agree with.

        • azertyfun@sh.itjust.works
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          11 hours ago

          The work itself is definitely a fascist pre-cursor. The whole “Wizarding society” thing is the mythical ethnostate from which everyone else must be excluded to avoid violence. That fact is so central to Rowling’s beliefs that it’s barely a theme in the books, just straight up a fundamental fact about the world barely worth commenting on. And even though HP is pretty sanitized wannabe liberal slop, she still manage to slip in some very racist stuff (slavery allegory about slaves being happy, “Cho Chang”, the Irish boy who constantly blows shit up, etc.).

          I do believe that Rowling herself is not a very intelligent person (the quality of her writing is proof enough) and has incredible amounts of cognitive dissonance from trying to fit in with the liberals who made her successful, while holding some incredibly backwards view on many social topics. You’re right that she’s not a fascist per se, because she doesn’t have fascism’s consistent belief in self-ideology. At the same time much of her political activism has been so enabling to open fascists that it begs the question: does the label matter? Is the sheep who opens the gate to the wolf not, in its own way, a wolf in sheep’s clothing? Are U.S. Republicans not fascists just because they are more concerned about their own self-interest than any alliance to ideology?

          • btsax@reddthat.com
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            11 hours ago

            I certainly agree that Harry Potter has fascist precursors within it, but that’s mostly my point: Neoliberalism itself is a fascist precursor in real life, or at least fascism easily exploits neoliberalism’s weaknesses. So to that end I think the labels do matter. For example, in theory it’s easier to right the ship and turn away from fascism or recognize its warning signs in a neoliberal society than in an actually fascist one. I.e. turning away from the path of fascism and towards a more egalitarian society might have been easier in 1990s America than it is now in a 2025 America. In much the same way no one thinks JK Rowling isn’t a huge bigot, no one could have reasonably claimed that 1990s America didn’t have its problems. Neither really fit the definition of fascism, although both lead to fascism.

            I think the distinction is important because it hopefully makes it easier for imperfect, neoliberal places like Western Europe, Canada etc. that are having problems with rising right-wing movements to recognize problems before it becomes too late, rather than pointing out their weaknesses and jumping straight to a fascism label.

    • Sharkticon@lemmy.zip
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      24 hours ago

      I always found it real interesting how as soon as the Hitler parallel takes over the government and turns it into a fascist state that all of the magic cops just immediately do what he tells them to. They all line up and go along with it. No I don’t mention that for any particular reason…

      • fonix232@fedia.io
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        23 hours ago

        tbf there WAS a purge of aurors who supported Dumbledore and those who stayed with the Ministry did bail once Voldy took over.

        Even Arthur Weasley, whose job was mostly irrelevant and minor, hightailed it out of there.

        • CheeseNoodle@lemmy.world
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          15 hours ago

          Wasn’t his job trying to figure out how muggle stuff worked? With most wizards not even having a high school level comprehension of the basics of technology. Guys job was probably the most important of all given that technology advances exponentially and magic in the setting appears to be almost completely stagnant.

          • fonix232@fedia.io
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            12 hours ago

            Nope. His job was mostly to mop up after careless wizards and witches that enchanted or cursed Muggle objects to behave… differently than intended.

            His fascination with Muggle stuff was a completely personal thing, although most others disliked it. Which to me made little sense, wizards being so stuck up their own arse they completely ignore the Muggle world like they’re not part of it when the literally live around them.

          • mrgoosmoos@lemmy.ca
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            12 hours ago

            nah, he did the figuring out on his own time, and it was generally discouraged (from the context clues we are given)

    • D_C@sh.itjust.works
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      15 hours ago

      “Did I use sectumsempra 6 times, or was it only 5? You’ve got to ask yourself one question… do you feel Felix Felicis’y? Well, do ya, PUNK?”

  • Ech@lemmy.ca
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    1 day ago

    Just say ACAB. Numbers as code look like racist dog whistling.