Talk:School Daze - Part 1/@comment-4066758-20180803011946/@comment-7345250-20180803031305

It's not that deep. You're looking for a partisan political message or agenda where there is none. Hasbro took pain to avoid such a thing when they approved Election.

Neighsay is a bureaucrat with racial prejudices (that not only served the plot but also deepened his character). So what? It's true that America has no shortage of such people in this day and age, but otherwise there is no correlation. In fact, Neighsay is far more reminiscent of America's very interesting past than anything currently ongoing.

And unlike the American precedent, Neighsay's concerns are more or less justified by the recurring aggression of the world leaders investing in Twilight's school and the undeniable destruction wrought by the students they sent.

So the point: you have been hocking venom at the show and the writers ad nauseam lately. Nonexistent analogues to modern American politics are a poor reason to continue rambling like so. The strongest parallel that can be drawn is already history. This is not something to whine about.