I'm talking about the approach. That is what I am not a fan of. People with multi-faceted marginalised identities can choose it or not.
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I can't choose it. My blackness is inseparable from my womanhood and the duality of it effects me differently than black men or white women.
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You don't have to choose an intersectional approach to address this. Most WoC don't.
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The WOC I know have always acknowledged their intersectionality as an added layer of adversity & important factor in all social debates.
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Replying to @InspectorNerd @HPluckrose and
If your circle of WOC avoid intersectionality then that goes back to those echochambers you spoke about earlier.
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Not about my circle. My other essay has stats on WoC and political/ideological views. Obv, I spend a lot of time with women who do support
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Replying to @HPluckrose @InspectorNerd and
Because this is what I study and write about.
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As do I. We're both writers, we both have research but we still have polar opposite views. That's my point! Data can be used for any side.
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Well, it can't. It shows what it shows about the number of black women who consider themselves feminists.
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Many black women oppose white feminism but support inclusivity in feminism that consider the diversity of women.
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About 20% of black American women support feminism whilst 30% regard it negatively.
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