@Don_Freecs:
No I don't. Don't even remember I said that. Maybe I did say it, because people here say so, but don't remember.
All I needed to know. As long as you aren't saying that, I have no big problems. So some of the women's Devil Fruit are sexist (Tsuru's, Khalifa's), and some aren't, gotcha. Then I'll go ahead and state that I don't think Miss Wednesday's Kilo Kilo Fruit is sexist. It makes her lighter, but not in a way that affects her physical appearance or adds to her beauty. While Hancock's Devil Fruit has been used in "love" ways, it had huge applications with only the petrification aspect in Amazon Lily.
I'm saying this for every character. Not only women. Sorry but Doublefinger has been defeated by Nami, one of the 3 weakest member in the crew.
And yeah
http://www.mangareader.net/one-piece/108/17
http://www.mangareader.net/one-piece/108/18
The "fight" lasts two pages.
Even Monet was more entertaining.
When was Doublefinger mentioned? And go Nami! She beat a strong woman. The fight may have been short, but that doesn't undermine the points I mentioned that she was strong enough to be above the Billions of Baroque Works and punch Zoro so hard after pinning him to the ground that the ground cracked. That's not strong according to you, but to me it is.
Stop acting like Tsuru and Khalifa were the only one. Don't try to minimize it. And yes neketsu shonen, which means it's for guys. I don't know if you realize but "book for guys', "book for women" and so long… is sexist. The very existence of such separation is sexist.
I like this manga, I'm just saying there are some sexist things in it.
There is no "film for men" or "film for women", they do not exist. And if there was a movie for men ( for example ), I'm sure almost everyone would think this is preposterous.
The only film "for girl" known are Twilight and these kind of films. And this isn't even official, only people ( let's say, most of people ) are thinking it ( the one selling the movie do not say "film for women" or something like that ).
Those were just the only examples of yours I agreed with. I wasn't trying to minimize what you said. Feel free to think they're all sexist.
I don't agree that it's sexist to have a series specifically for a target audience, this case being men. What of shows where the cast is all of a certain race? Those aren't racist.
Same here! Like I said, I agree there are some sexist elements. A big one pops up in Dressrosa that's not Rebecca.
I disagree that there are no films for women or men. Mostly because most film-makers of those types of movies are aiming for a demographic. If other people outside the demographic watch the movie, then great, but there are many films specifically trying to draw in certain target audiences, and that target audience can be a gender or a subset of a gender, therefore there are series aimed at men or women or both.