evilthecat said:Japanese people living in Japan don't face any form of discrimination for being Japanese.PFCboom said:The Japanese liked Scarlett Johansson. Literally, people representing the country where GitS came from, thought Scarlett was a good choice. But, true to our nature, us white folks either didn't notice or acknowledge their feelings. As a lowly faculty assistant from my middle school once said, when I rightfully counter-insulted a friend, "Well I'm offended for her, so you're in trouble."
This is basically a more globalised form of the "my black friend doesn't mind when I use the n-word" argument. The fact that you can find people of colour who support you doesn't mean you're right. It particularly doesn't mean you're right when your ethnic minority "friends" live in a completely different country thousands of miles away and are foreign to American popular culture.
Japanese people don't actually share some kind of hive mind, they all have unique experiences and perspectives. In particular, Japanese people living as an ethnic minority the US have very different experiences to Japanese people living as an ethnic majority in Japan, and if you've lived as an ethnic minority in Japan you'll know this also works the other way.
For Asian Americans, American popular culture is their popular culture. It's not some outside culture separate to theirs, and yet they are barely present or represented with in it. Countless prominent Asian Americans, including those working in the TV and film industry like Constance Wu, Ming-Na Wen, John Cho and Margaret Cho have spoken openly about whitewashing and the way Asian actors are treated in American media. But I guess listening to Asians means we can only listen to real Asians whose pure Asian souls have never been corrupted by the defiled Earth of other lands, and just pretend that any American who has a problem must automatically be white.
After all, American = white, right? Sounds legit to me..
Just like how every Japanese person in Japan has a unique experience, so do Japanese-Americans, so with your logic we can't expand any personal experience of absolutely anybody at all to cover their entire group. I'd tend to agree with you if you followed your logic to its conclusion but you tend to stop half way and while some people are not a hive mind, you treat others as though they all have a hive mind experience of victimization that doesn't make sense if we want to treat people as individuals.
If anything, it's racist to use Asians who are not Japanese as an example of what Japanese-Americans would experience, cause you're treating them like they're all the same cause they're all from the far east, which is an ethnocentric view of the world that places America as the default place that other places are east or west from.
Now, I sympathize with the general point about whitewashing in American media. GitS however isn't or at they very least SHOULDN'T be American media. It should be Japanese media handled by Americans, kinda like how Dark Souls is a western-feeling game handled by Japanese devs. (but even more so because this is actually based on something with an established identity)
Finally, American popular culture is exported to the entire planet, in a lot of countries it is the ONLY culture that exists (for example, Greece has basically no animation, at all, it's all imported anime and imported american cartoons, so to any kid growing up watching animation, their culture will be a mix of dragonball and pokemon and Disney stuff). It is most definitely not the culture of just Americans and it is not a culture that has social impacts that only affect American citizens. It's just as much the culture of everyone else who basically grew up with it and enjoys it. You don't get any more of a claim to it than the Japanese people simply because you share citizenship with the creators. If anything, the fact that a movie is based on an anime classic gives them more of a claim to it because you're fiddling with people's childhood here.
This is even more pronounced now that we live in the age of the internet, where someone can simulcast a brand new Anime episode in America with english subtitles as it is being shown in Japanese tv. At this point, there's no "our" or "their" popular culture, it all belongs to every fan, outside of nationality. That being the case, the notion that American pop culture that has a worldwide audience has to primarily function to benefit American society isn't a given or something to be taken for granted like your words would imply. That's something you'd do on a case by case basis when it feels like it makes sense, like for example with the Boondocks cartoon.