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Foe Yay has been cut
Deleted line(s) 1 (click to see context) :
* FoeYay: The latest books tend to give this between Lady X and Buck, though mostly one-sided on her part.
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* FoeYay: The latest books tend to give this between Lady X and Buck, though mostly one-sided on her part.
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* ValuesDissonance: In one of the early stories, Buck and Tumbler react to a (white) man Sonny [[BlackFace accidentally poured tar]] on with "Oh look, a negro!"
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* ValuesDissonance: ValuesDissonance:
** In one of the early stories, Buck and Tumbler react to a (white) man Sonny [[BlackFace accidentally poured tar]] on with "Oh look, a negro!"
** In one of the early stories, Buck and Tumbler react to a (white) man Sonny [[BlackFace accidentally poured tar]] on with "Oh look, a negro!"
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** In an early comic, the heroes ally with a [=MI6=] female agent who proves to be very good with a gun. Buck then comments that, if she cooks as well as she shoots, she'll make her husband a happy man (and he clearly intends this as a compliment).
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** A later one has a plantation owner addressing his workers as little better than dimwitted slaves. A footnote explains that this was the common practice at the time, so it may count as DeliberateValueDissonance, especially as the plantation owner gets betrayed by one of his slaves and executed for helping the heroes.
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** A later one has a plantation owner addressing his workers as little better than dimwitted slaves. A footnote explains that this was the common practice at the time, so it may count as DeliberateValueDissonance, DeliberateValuesDissonance, especially as the plantation owner gets betrayed by one of his slaves and executed for helping the heroes.
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Changed line(s) 2 (click to see context) from:
** A later one has a plantation owner addressing his workers as little better than dimwitted slaves.
to:
** A later one has a plantation owner addressing his workers as little better than dimwitted slaves. A footnote explains that this was the common practice at the time, so it may count as DeliberateValueDissonance, especially as the plantation owner gets betrayed by one of his slaves and executed for helping the heroes.
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None
Added DiffLines:
* ValuesDissonance: In one of the early stories, Buck and Tumbler react to a (white) man Sonny [[BlackFace accidentally poured tar]] on with "Oh look, a negro!"
** A later one has a plantation owner addressing his workers as little better than dimwitted slaves.
** A later one has a plantation owner addressing his workers as little better than dimwitted slaves.