>>28447879This guy gets it.
However, some things just are. Humans don't evolve quickly enough to keep up with society's supposed ideals, which is why an unburdened society on a level playing field will naturally regress towards certain behaviors being exhibited en masse. Modernity does indeed have its fair share of serfs, lords, and whores, and vtubing is itself an online-only iteration of the world's oldest profession.
And of course, when the serfs are seeking solace in their whores, the last thing the latter should ever do is tell them to educate or improve themselves. Back in historical times, that kind of remark would've probably been met with a slap or punch to the face. Ideally, she (as well as the rest, after word spread around) would learn not to belittle their clientele in order to maintain good parasocial relations.
If there's one thing enterprising whores should try be, it's consciously class conscious. Having a good grasp of reality can help avoid any "just be yourself" moments. The smartest ones will avoid touching those kinds of issues altogether, and instead leave it to us guys to hash them out among ourselves...instead of stepping out onto the battlefield and getting themselves caught in the crossfire. After all, a vtubers primary concern is being funny, cute, entertaining, sexy, good at vidya, or whatever her niche is.
Ideally, chubas won't go out of their way to make any strong proclamations (Melody) about controversial political, social or cultural issues. While some things can be reasonably excused due to a chuba's background, affiliations and personal inclinations (ie mentioning or denouncing Taiwan depends on the chuba's nationality), I see it as a debuff if a chuba is openly hostile and actively tries to court controversy just to "own the [insert group of people]."
tldr The feelings OP expressed are exactly what a vtuber should aim to instill in their audience. That's ultimately the true essence of idol culture.