(17/08/2020, 19:58)Roxas Escreveu: Não ficou claro pra mim se terminaram por moralismo mesmo. Duvido que os japas deem bola pra esse tipo de coisa, devem ter julgado que não dava pra continuar sem o autor.
Eles não dão bola quando o autor é famoso, a obra é famosa e vende muito, o crime é menor... aqui era uma obra de pouco sucesso, logo acharam que não valia a pena o atrito.
Muito legal esses tuítes em japa que todo mundo aqui entende.
Usazaki first expressed their sympathies for the victims, who Usazaki said "bravely spoke up about the incident despite their shock and fear." Usazaki elaborated that no one "naturally recovers" from sexual assault, and even seeing a person similar in dress and appearance to the assailant may trigger victims to respond in specific ways, and forever creates unneeded stress in their lives.
Usazaki mentioned that they do not want the act-age manga to be a work that triggers similar reactions from the victims, and so considered the cancellation of the manga to be appropriate. While Usazaki also regretted having to end the manga mid-way, they urged fans of the manga not to harass or blame the victims. They expressed clearly that the manga's cancellation is not the victims' fault, and that it is not a mistake that the victims spoke up about sexual harassment.
Usazaki added that they sympathized with fans of the manga, or those who find purpose in manga in general, as they were once also "saved" by manga. But Usazaki cautioned and pleaded against readers using that love for the wrong purpose of inciting violence, and instead urged fans to think clearly, consider various viewpoints, deny information that has no basis in fact, and always consider what should or should not be said.