One of the best ways to counter Social Justice is to quote them faithfully, in context. Once people realize what they're really after and what they really believe, most want absolutely nothing to do with it.
Conversation
The most common reaction I get when explaining Social Justice Theory is that they can't really mean that. I must have it wrong. Well, sometimes, sure. Even showing it to people in black and white often triggers this reaction, as though it must have some deeper, subtler meaning.
7
26
196
I have a Social Justice education book here, Is Everyone Really Equal?, Sensoy and DiAngelo. I just opened it kind of at random to give you some ideas of what they teach.
31
102
281
Note that explicit reference to using Critical Theory, which we endlessly hear from Social Justice apologists that Social Justice doesn't do. "But the postmodernists..." Yes, them too.
10
19
152
Thumbing through a little more for you. Just flipping through pages, glancing, taking photos of what's there.
12
16
111
How to ally, and what to do if you're a member of a "dominant" identity group.
18
16
112
Replying to
Every time I read anything from critical race Theory, that happens. It's not fragility, or whatever nonsense they spout, but dramatically increasing racial salience. Couldn't be more backwards.
1
1
Replying to
Yes, def. Also for me I think there's some subconscious desire to be what these people would hate most, and the thing they hate most are racists.
All woke and no joke pushes votes to... something, someone.


