so your argument is that creating terminology that allows one to re-examine assumptions of how the world works is bad? and somehow the other side is The Party?
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Replying to @fennecfoxguy @arthur_affect and
I'm confused just because "systemic racism" absolutely is an academic term, so who's supposed to be the experts who aren't using it
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Replying to @LizardOrman @fennecfoxguy and
Right, it absolutely is an academic term. That doesn’t mean it is used by experts.
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Replying to @JeremyPhilosoph @LizardOrman and
do you not consider Black people, and specifically Black academics, analysts, and historians, to be experts on racism?
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Replying to @fennecfoxguy @LizardOrman and
No, People aren’t experts in racism because of what they look like, historians can be if that is their expertise, and I’m not sure what “analysts” means here, so it depends.
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Replying to @JeremyPhilosoph @fennecfoxguy and
People are experts because they acquire expertise, just like in physics, not because they are up or down-gradient of power. That is the Critical Theory drug, it’s pretty lame.
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Replying to @JeremyPhilosoph @fennecfoxguy and
Hey have you thought at all about what 1984 means when it has Winston wistfully think that all hope lies with the proles (and that Party dissidents like him can never actually succeed, because of who they are)
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Replying to @arthur_affect @fennecfoxguy and
Did you have something in mind? In real life, I don’t think hope lies with anyone in particular, but I am interested in cultural discourse and who people see as the powerful or powerless and what some groups need to do and so on and so forth.
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Replying to @JeremyPhilosoph @arthur_affect and
MAGA thinks the country has been taken by “those people,” be it immigrants or the Welfare people or the Chinese, or whatever. They don’t have any particular moral vision, but the downtrodden ex factory worker must be saved.
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Replying to @JeremyPhilosoph @arthur_affect and
Critical SocJus thinks that everything is a battleground of power, including art, comedy, discourse, and everything else, that the privileged oppressors always act to exploit the oppressed, and constantly raising awareness to this will help bring about utopia.
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That's also what Orwell himself thought, or at least wrestled with himself about (he thought this but didn't like the implications always) He talked about this a lot when talking about other writers, it's his main preoccupation when he wrote Why I Write
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Replying to @arthur_affect @JeremyPhilosoph and
I mean you know that when he was reviewing books and stuff he wrote a ton of stuff you'd be calling "cancel culture" today "He wants to cancel Charles Dickens! He wants to cancel PG Wodehouse! He wants to cancel those boys' adventure stories in magazines!"
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Replying to @arthur_affect @JeremyPhilosoph and
(Not because he actually wanted to ban them or even tell people not to read them, of course, but because he wanted to talk about the political ideology those books represented, how they affected politics in the real world, he thought that was your responsibility as a critic)
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