4) Concurrently, whiteness isolates us further. It convinces white people that they are wholly different from people of color. And then capitalism even isolates them from other white people. And toxic masculinity isolates men from women.
-
Show this thread
-
5) Add in homophobia, transphobia, ableism, etc. and you end up with a pretty tiny, dangerous bubble for cis white straight abled men. So how does the far right exploit this?
1 reply 14 retweets 120 likesShow this thread -
6) It isolates those dudes more. It convinces them that the very things that are oppressing them are the things that can save them.
1 reply 15 retweets 113 likesShow this thread -
7) Men who can't get a date because they're so steeped in toxic masculinity? Instead of offering them feminism, so that women might actually feel safe around them and *want* to talk to them, groups like the Proud Boys tell them that it's women's fault for not being submissive.
1 reply 32 retweets 170 likesShow this thread -
8) Men who can't support themselves because capitalism has destroyed unions and ground the concept of a living wage into dust? The Proud Boys tell them that they need to "glorify the entrepreneur." In other words, be the guy who grinds the little guy down.
1 reply 27 retweets 138 likesShow this thread -
9) Let's go a little further right. Instead of abandoning whiteness and embracing interracial solidarity among workers, leading to strong unions and high wages, the alt-right tells white workers that their hard times are because of POC workers taking their jobs.
1 reply 21 retweets 113 likesShow this thread -
10) In other words, the far-right tells them to embrace that whiteness, that toxic masculinity, that bootlicking capitalist ethic, even as those things harm them. And it uses conspiracy theory to do this.
1 reply 22 retweets 119 likesShow this thread -
11) The result is that you get cis straight white dudes who are *pretty* desperate for a connection, for some kind of meaning. So when Richard Spencer tells them to "Become who you are" or when Trump says "I'm a nationalist," they eat it up like they're starving.
3 replies 14 retweets 114 likesShow this thread -
Replying to @AntiFashGordon
I’ve been watching QAnon circles a long time and one thing that’s striking is how much they *don’t* talk about right wing conspiracy stuff. It’s always under the surface and bubbles up at random, but a huge amount of it is just people hanging out and shooting the shit
0 replies 0 retweets 2 likes
Loading seems to be taking a while.
Twitter may be over capacity or experiencing a momentary hiccup. Try again or visit Twitter Status for more information.
