KENETROPOLIS.
4.6K posts

KENETROPOLIS.
@kenetropolis
This and That. Here and There. MD ⚕️
Nigeria Katılım Şubat 2016
519 Takip Edilen581 Takipçiler

I’m so happy!!
I’m feeling so many emotions. I don’t even know how to act.
#Match2026
#FMRevolution
English
KENETROPOLIS. retweetledi
KENETROPOLIS. retweetledi
KENETROPOLIS. retweetledi
KENETROPOLIS. retweetledi
KENETROPOLIS. retweetledi
KENETROPOLIS. retweetledi
KENETROPOLIS. retweetledi

KENETROPOLIS. retweetledi
KENETROPOLIS. retweetledi
KENETROPOLIS. retweetledi
KENETROPOLIS. retweetledi

Let’s get one thing straight right out of the gate. The excuse that Korra faced “stronger enemies” does not justify her grandiose failures as the Avatar.
And before anyone tries to pull the lazy "you just hate strong women" card, let’s shut that down immediately. The Avatar fandom reveres well-written, powerful women.
We adore Katara’s fierce maternal strength, Toph’s unapologetic badassery, Azula’s terrifying brilliance, and the sheer, unyielding force of Avatar Kyoshi.
The issue with Korra isn't her gender; it's her atrocious character development.
Korra was supposed to be a modern-day Kyoshi, a prodigy with Toph's attitude and Aang's legacy. Instead, we got a masterclass in how to have everything at your disposal and still end up a failure.
It starts with her complete disrespect for preparation. Aang knew the world was modernizing and that the next Avatar would face complex threats. That’s why he put systems in place, like utilizing the Order of the White Lotus, to raise his successor to be wiser, prepared, and protected. What did Korra do? She threw all of that away because she felt "locked up" and wanted to see the world. Abandoning that training was the foundational mistake of her character arc.
From the moment she left the White Lotus, it was one disaster after another. After defeating Amon, the audience hoped to see her mature, grow spiritually, and be less hard-headed. Instead, she chose to ignore the advice of her own father and Tenzin, blindly trusting Unalaq. Aang would have never lost to someone like Unalaq because he was too deeply rooted in his spirituality to be manipulated.
Because of Korra’s spiritual ineptitude, she committed the ultimate Avatar sin: she allowed the connection to the past lives to be severed. She permanently destroyed the link to Aang, Roku, Kyoshi, and thousands of years of wisdom. We will never forgive her for this.
Then there is her actual combat ability. The whole point of the Avatar is that they remain the most powerful force in the world under any circumstance. Yet, Korra constantly got beaten in 1v1 fights. Look at Aang: in the space of a single year, a 12-year-old boy mastered Air, learned Water, Earth (even mastering Toph's seismic sense), and Fire, while learning to redirect lightning.
Korra had over a decade of formal training, yet she fought like a street brawler. She rarely utilized the fluid mastery of her native element, Water. If she had actually tuned into her training, she could have learned sub-skills like seismic sense, which would have given her a massive advantage over an Earthbender like Kuvira. Instead, she’d just throw fire punches and still get beaten. Frankly, Azula would have easily dismantled Kuvira, which is why Korra had no business losing that fight.
Her lack of reverence extended to the Avatar State itself. For Aang, the Avatar State was a sacred, terrifying defense mechanism meant to restore balance to the world. Korra was impatient, refusing to learn from the systems put in place by her predecessors, and ended up using the Avatar State as a cheat code to win a scooter race against little kids.
Do we even want to talk about her relationships? Aang built a trusted circle of friends that lasted a lifetime. Korra completely compromised hers. Like b!tch, you ruined the chemistry of your own "Team Avatar" by dating Mako, stringing Bolin along, kissing Mako while he was with Asami, and then dating Asami. Why introduce this messy, unnecessary teenage melodrama into a group that is supposed to be saving the world?
Ultimately, her lack of real growth, her refusal to respect tradition, and her sheer combat incompetence tilted the balance of the world into chaos time and time again.
That is why we consider her a failure. She lacked the wisdom, the spiritual guidance, and the discipline to fully comprehend and overpower her enemies. In the end, she felt less like a worthy successor to Aang, and more like a poorly written DEI hire.
End.
Dr. Olawale Ogunlana@doctorwalesmd
Tomorrow morning, we are gonna talk about how Korra was indeed not a fully realized Avatar. We shall expose the fraud. For now, it’s goodnight.
English

If you're currently preparing for the USMLE and finding Biostatistics or Epidemiology challenging, American Academy of Research and Academics has created an easy-to-follow question bank to help.
We're offering free early access to the first 500 medical students/IMGs who comment or DM us.
The Biostatistics Question Bank is made to make memorization easy, using real-world examples and relatable analogies to help concepts stick with minimal effort.
Comment to receive access
English

Hello
I understand how you’re feeling
I’m so sorry
Pls if you see this
Can you send me a dm?
Dr. Afo@Dr_Afo
Kindly advise our brethren in distress fam? He makes 1m in a month but wants to pursue career advancement!
English
KENETROPOLIS. retweetledi


















