+1 Theory: it's harder to get those nuances on Tumblr because many people find posts by going through the tags, meaning they don't know the author. Different people have different language styles and you don't know their post history/opinions etc. so it's much easier to misunderstand/fixate on one thing/miss nuances than in an environment where you mostly react to posts by people you know and whose past opinions and writing styles you're familiar with, like Lj or DW. Not that it doesn't happen way too often there too, Tumblr just seems even more dangerous for it.
I assume you're talking about Ward? I've mostly skipped the meta posts you reblogged on Tumblr because I hadn't seen the episodes yet, but if people are seriously playing Ward vs. Romanoff, ouch. :( (Headcanon: Natasha couldn't beat Fury's lie detector, because the person who administered the test to her was much better at it than Koenig(?I think his name was))
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Theory: it's harder to get those nuances on Tumblr because many people find posts by going through the tags, meaning they don't know the author. Different people have different language styles and you don't know their post history/opinions etc. so it's much easier to misunderstand/fixate on one thing/miss nuances than in an environment where you mostly react to posts by people you know and whose past opinions and writing styles you're familiar with, like Lj or DW. Not that it doesn't happen way too often there too, Tumblr just seems even more dangerous for it.
I assume you're talking about Ward? I've mostly skipped the meta posts you reblogged on Tumblr because I hadn't seen the episodes yet, but if people are seriously playing Ward vs. Romanoff, ouch. :(
(Headcanon: Natasha couldn't beat Fury's lie detector, because the person who administered the test to her was much better at it than Koenig(?I think his name was))