Talk:Faunus/@comment-181.110.169.172-20170803114537

An unsettling aspect of this show is that they mention that the faunus were and are subject to discrimination, but we only see the hatred of a group of faunus towards humans, without any characteristic or background that humanizes them before our eyes, while the rest of the faunus seem to live quite well, even Velvet, as they only showed a scene with Cardin, who then clarified that annoying everyone.

Nor did they invest much effort in making the problem stay in our minds for what it is. The feeling you get is that discrimination is natural and current and that you just have to adapt and move forward until society reconciles you as an equal.

The episodes of Blake and Weiss's discussion have these drawbacks. In the end it is Blake who humbles herself to keep  Weiss's  friendship, but  Weiss's  recognition and apologies are vague. Before that, they create an environment for us to justify Weiss's racism in her childhood, ignoring the fact that  the W.F. attacked her father's company for abuses that society did not seem to recognize.