(***This was a pain in the a** to translate, not because of the purpose of OP's thread, but because OP wrote quite a lot and the spacings between some sentences were weird, making things seem disjointed and forcing me to read the same lines 3-4 times to understand what OP was trying to say. I also had to paraphrase certain lines, mainly for things that OP had already addressed previously (there were several similar messages throughout) but I tried to make it so that OP's point was still properly delivered. Unfortunately the top 3 comments have been deleted during the time I took to translate this (don't know why) but they were along the lines of "Hanging out with white friends means she ostracized other Asians...what kind of logic???"***)
Title: Regarding Blackpink Jennie's rumors....
Source: Pann
Date posted: February 28, 2017
****Blackpink Jennie did not ostracize other Asians****
Before I get into it, the simplified version of what I'm trying to say can be split into 3 parts
#1 A photo of Jennie hanging out with foreigners can't be used as an evidence to prove that Jennie bullied Asians. (There are photos of her hanging out with other Asians)
#2 Photos that can be easily found on google to fit your narrative also can't be used as evidence.
#3 Evidence that the rumor is true should come first; not feedback from Jennie regarding such rumors
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This rebuttal is something compiled entirely by me
I didn't copy and paste some pre-existing argument...this feedback is for those that spread the rumors and the opinions of the average person who read them, so please read
As advised by some of the replies, I clarified what I'm trying to say at the end as well, so please read
I've written this because I feel really bad for Jennie...
If Jennie truly hated Asians, why would she be sitting next to an Asian in the photo above. She wasn't selecting friends based on their race
Think about it...if you were a foreign exchange student, do you really think you'd be contemplating on the ratio of white to Asian friends you should make?
You would just become friends with whoever you were meant to become friends with
And if you thought it was strange for her to have taken a lot of pictures with white people, aren't you the one at fault for having that kind of perception? That's just your prejudice talking.
You shouldn't be looking at a white person and think to yourself, "That's a bad person"
You also shouldn't assume that someone hates Asians just because they hang out with white people or they don't hang out with an Asian crowd.
[Addressing the opposing responses whenever fans stated that the facts don't match up]
When the "victim" spoke up for the very first time, she went into great detail about what transpired
And when fans stated that there was nothing in her statement that actually served as evidence to back up her claims (not that "proof" shots serve as irrefutable evidence that everything went down exactly as written) and asked for some feedback concerning that, the returning responses were always, "Even if the facts weren't true, how else would she have been able to write with such detail"
I'll go into it more later on, but the focus should've been on evaluating the evidence rather than just siding with the "victim".
As for the people who keep insisting, "How else would she have been able to write with such detail"...that's not proof, just your opinion.
[Going into more detail about what the "victim" had written...]
The victim posted a yearbook photo and identified which class at which school as part of her evidence.
But let's try looking at it from Jennie's situation...
Pretend that Jennie went to school and led normal life for a moderate period of time before becoming a YG trainee. But then someone became jealous of that so they started a rumor with only a year book photo as evidence. From Jennie's perspective, where would she even begin to refute the rumors...
Is it rational to believe the rumors just because the "victim" was in possession of a year book? No. Shouldn't the actual evidence supporting such claims come first?
A third party might look at this and say that, "Well there's no guarantee that the evidence still exists...even if it does, how do you expect anyone to find it?"...but they'll never be able to solve anything that way because they're still looking at things from the perspective of the "victim".
Think about it...a crime has been committed so the accused to brought to court. But to try and make sure that the wrong person isn't punished for the crime, prosecution has the burden of proof - they need to present evidence beyond all reasonable doubt, before the accused is actually convicted of the crime.
Without any of that, all you've got is someone needlessly complaining. And if you make that you're standard for proof, anyone with bad intentions can turn an innocent into a perpetrator. As a result, no reasonable discussions will be able to take place and nothing will be solved.
[*]
Watching Jennie's scandal unfold, I imagined what it'd be like from Jennie's perspective
If all it took was a yearbook photo to strengthen the claims of the "victim", how exactly should one go about refuting it? If there was actual evidence to support the claims, she could go around providing feedback in order to clarify any misunderstandings...but there weren't any.
And if Jennie was to say "I didn't do such things", people would demand of her evidence to support her statement....but because this was a baseless rumor, of course there wouldn't be any evidence.
Before concerning yourself with whether or not the rumors are true, the proper first step should be to determine whether or not there is actual evidence to support the claims and whether or not it's reliable evidence.
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#2 Pictures that can be easily obtained on the internet to fit your narrative can't be used as evidence
The "victim" was adamant that she knew Jennie very well...but then why did she get what class Jennie was in wrong?
All the photos that the victim provided as "evidence" were all things that were already easily obtainable from the web. There were already a lot of pre-debut photos circling the web because Jennie was a pretty well know trainee (through featuring for GD's "Black", "That XX" mv, Seungri's "GG Be" and Lee Hi's "Special") and had gained a fanbase. Then does it make sense to consider those photos as evidence?
So if a year book photo can't be used as evidence and some of the "facts" provided by the "victim" turned out to be wrong, just how seriously should we be taking those claims?





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