A black, female, BEARDLESS Dwarf princess?? Is that elf BLACK?!
No sir, no sir I won't stand for it.
You also criticize Tolkien's depiction of Orcs in comparison to the depiction in other fantasy settings when it is Tolkien that brought to orcs into the fantasy genre to begin with. He brought Orcs out of Beowulf, where they were a tribe of evil elves condemned by God, and brought them into the fantasy genre. His depiction is pretty well in-line with the mythology he drew from, so this criticism is also bs.
Took the words out of my mouth, again.
As with the Italian orco (“ogre”) and the word ogre itself, it ultimately derives from the Latin Orcus, a god of the underworld. The Old English creatures were most likely the inspiration for the orcs that appear in J.R.R. Tolkien's The Lord of the Rings.
Ogres and orc-like versions of Ogres existed long before Tolkein.
He twisted them into hideous disfigured creatures for no reason at all
"Ariosto
An early example of an orco appears in Ludovico Ariosto's Orlando Furioso (1516), as a bestial, blind, tusk-faced monster inspired by the Cyclops of the Odyssey.[b]
Tolkien
The orco from Orlando, along with the Old English word orc (in the sense of an ogre, like Grendel), was part of the inspiration for Tolkien's orcs in his The Lord of the Rings[3] In other manuscripts Tolkien wrote a side-note on the word:
The elves and hobbits all being caucasian af was the major gripe.
Wormtongue was white, Sauron was white before he got crushed by an ocean, Gothmog the orc was white, that one orc in the third movie with a skull on his head was white, Denethor was white.