truthdig | In the worlds of politics and nonprofits intersectionality has become
a sneaky substitute for the traditional left notion of solidarity
developed in the process of ongoing collective struggle against the
class enemy. Intersectionality doesn’t deny the existence of class
struggle, it just rhetorically demotes it to something co-equal with the
fights against ableism and ageism and speciesism, against white
supremacy, against gender oppression, and a long elastic list of others.
What’s sneaky about the substitution of intersectionality for
solidarity is that intersectionality allows the unexamined smuggling in
of multiple notions which directly undermine the development and the
operation of solidarity. Intersectionality means everybody is obligated
to put their own special interest, their own oppression first – although
they don’t always say that because the contradiction would be too
obvious. The applicable terms of art are that everybody gets to “center”
their own oppression, and cooperate as “allies” if and when their
interests “intersect.” What this yields is silliness like honchos who
run the pink pussy hat marches telling Cindy Sheehan earlier this month
that their women’s movement can’t be bothered to oppose war and
imperialism “…until all women are free,” and the advocates of this or
that cause demanding constant, elaborate performative rituals of those
who would qualify for “allyship.”
The nonprofit industrial complex, funded as it is by the one percent,
loves, promotes and lavishly rewards intersectionality at every turn
because it buries and negates class struggle. Intersectionality
normalizes the notion that the left is and ought to be a bunch of
impotent constituency groups squabbling about privilege and “allyship”
as they compete for funding and careers, not the the force working to
overthrow the established order and fight for the power to build a new
world. Even Hillary Clintonuses the word now.
Afro-pessimism is a term coined by Dr. Frank Wilderson at UC Irvine,
and a nappy headed stepchild of intersectionality. Afro-pessimism, to
hear Wilderson tell it is the realization that black people have no
natural allies anywhere, that we are born with ankle irons, whip marks
on our backs, bulls eyes on our foreheads and nooses around our necks.
Blackness, he says is “a condition of ontological death,”
and the dead have no allies, at least among the living. Wilderson is at
least honest. He freely admits that afro-pessimism leads nowhere and
offers no answers to any strategic or even tactical questions.
Wilderson’s shtick
is that of an old man throwing word grenades and he seems not to care
much where or how they explode, as long as they do. Whatever works for
him, I guess.
coveteur | Every so often, I’ll receive the occasional you’re so lucky comment
from a fellow trans woman. The sentiment is usually in reference to my
body or my looks and their proximity and similarities to that of a
cisgender woman. In other words, it’s usually in reference to my ability
to “pass” in a cisgender world. At first, that comment, you’re so lucky,
made me viscerally uncomfortable. It was easy for me to comprehend how
passing privilege is a gateway to survival for many trans people, and
while it isn’t a privilege afforded to all of us, words like “lucky” or
“easy” left me thinking. Thoughts would race in my mind, a feeling of
guilt would weigh on my heart, and I would wonder if my attractiveness
or “passability” negates how difficult it is to exist as a trans woman
in a cis-normative society. To counter my discomfort, I would often
reply to such comments with a self-deprecating joke, as if to minimize
the existence of my attractiveness as a privilege. A privilege I did not
earn nor work for.
I
suppose you can say the word “lucky” had become a sore spot for a
while. Uncomfortable with looking at the ways in which I benefit from my
looks, I was adamant to prove how I wasn’t lucky. After all, at the end
of the day, I will always be transgender and that comes with its own
prejudice and discrimination, right? To acknowledge the unearned
advantages of physical attractiveness felt as if it would undermine
everything I had to overcome to get to where I am. I mean, how lucky
could I actually be?
In my search to validate how I was feeling, I stumbled across the opposite: Pretty privilege.
Pretty
privilege is the concept that pretty people benefit in life from being
perceived as beautiful. Studies have shown that pretty people will more
than likely receive higher earnings or better grades. But what is beautiful? Like the saying beauty lies in the eye of the beholder,
what we find attractive is often thought to be subjective. However,
society inherently bases value on certain attributes over others. Those
attributes are often based on whiteness, able bodiedness, leanness,
straightness, and cisness, to mention just a few. Pretty privilege is
much like how being white or being male provides people with unearned
advantages in society.
Pretty privilege benefits and hurts all
types of people, both cis and trans, across all races and sexualities.
The intersectionality of our existence must be addressed when speaking
to the topic. Kelsey Yonce refers to intersectionality perfectly in
their 2014 thesis, “Attractiveness Privilege: the unearned advantages of physical attractiveness.”
Yonce states “intersectionality refers to the idea that different areas
of privilege and oppression do not exist in isolation from one another;
instead, they overlap and interact with each other in ways that create
unique experiences of privilege and oppression for each individual.” For
example, the privilege and oppression experienced by a trans woman of
color will look very different from the privilege and oppression
experienced by a white trans woman, despite both experiencing the
stigmatization and oppression of being transgender because of the
inherent societal hierarchy towards race.
When speaking to pretty privilege in the context of cisness, it could
be argued that the barrier for entry to such a privilege is more
difficult for a transgender person because that hurdle is our very sex
assigned at birth, my “maleness.” It’s the belief that in order to
achieve such a standing in society it would require a distancing from,
squandering of, and rejection of our transness as a whole. This
reinforces the false reality that in society, a transition is deemed
“successful” only when one is conventionally beautiful by cisgender
standards. When in actuality we all know the real value a transition can
bring to one’s life is more than mere aesthetics or looks, but rather
living more fully and freely. Suddenly, it began to feel like not
addressing my own pretty privilege head-on would be disadvantageous to
what my mission is, and that's to uplift and advocate for all
transwomen.
Having defined it, it has become shockingly easy
to see how I benefit from such a privilege. In hindsight, pretty
privilege in the context of cisness wasn’t something I was always
presented with and might be why it has felt so obvious. I haven’t always
existed in the world looking like this. While I can acknowledge how
I’ve always benefitted from certain privileges like whiteness, able
bodiedness, and leanness, benefitting from my “cisness” was a very
foreign thing for me. I started my transition 21 months ago, and only
two years ago started hormone replacement therapy, followed by a recent
facial feminization surgery. As my body and features began to change and
become more cis-passing, I had started to witness peoples’ treatment of
me change—it was almost as if one day people saw me differently, they
started smiling at me as they walked by, doors were held open, and
drinks were being bought for me from those who simply wanted my
attention. These are only a few small examples, but at first it all
seemed unnatural and uncomfortable because my experience in the world
had been different for nearly 30 years. The exact moment where it
changed is hard to pinpoint, but looking at my transition in its
totality, it’s jarring and impossible for me to not see the difference.
It is now my responsibility to swallow my guilt and acknowledge that
such experiences are not afforded to everyone and I have benefitted from
the unearned privilege of assimilating into a cisgender society because
of my pretty privilege. This has, in fact, made my transition easier
than most but not without its own challenges.
Once seen, the nature of this usurpation cannot be unseen. Black DOS (descendants of slaves) had a singularly potent claim under law against the American government. Some would argue the 2nd amendment to the Constitution, for sure the 14th amendment to the Constitution, Brown vs. Board, Voting Rights Act, Fair Housing Act - are all signifiers of precisely how potent a claim that we Black DOS have had and continue to have - if we properly assert and actively resist efforts to denature our specific priority as claimants with unique standing under law to pursue our claims.
The replacement negroe program under which 70 million immigrants have been brought into America to denature our hard fought political-economic standing
The cognitive infiltration of feminism into black politics which saw white women overwhelmingly supplanting Black DOS as the overwhelming beneficiaries of affirmative action intended principally as an economic redress for legally ostracized Black descendants of slaves (Shockley and the 70's eugenics revival was a concrete specific political backlash against affirmative action)
is the bane and singularly potent antidote for the dilution of our singular legal claims.
Under the Cathedral and its permitted discourse insistence upon "intersectionality" - everybody and their cousin has a more "legitimate" and substantive political economic claim against the American government than Black DOS. Despite the indisputable fact that we comprise an exclusive historical phenomenon driving the evolution of citizen rights in the U.S., we find ourselves profoundly and paradoxically Left Behind the curve of the hard won gains we have made under law, but which we have lost in fact due to political gatekeeping and the complicity of "go along to get along" leadership.
This is where we stand at this particular moment in time. It's not a good look, but the long arc of history is far from complete, and as I've long asserted, As goes Blackness, so goes America. Fist tap MHicks.
thefederalist | The flyer reflects the ideology of anti-Israel student groups and
their leftist allies who seek “intersectionality,” the common bond of
all “oppressed people.” This ideology brings together Muslims who love
Sharia and its denigration of women, and rabid feminists who see their
problems as a consequence of male privilege. Yes, politics does make for
strange bed companions.
Intersectionality
has resulted in an upsurge of anti-Semitism. Whether it is support for
the Jew-bashing Israel Apartheid Week or the campaign of boycott,
divestment, and sanctions against the one democracy in the Middle East,
these initiatives are thinly disguised anti-Semitic hate fests. Whenever
they occur there is a surge in physical and verbal attacks on Jewish
students.
So, it is not surprising that just days after the first
flyer was distributed, a second one appeared, this one focused on
denying the Holocaust. Like the Iranian government, which is always
denying the first Holocaust but actively promising a second, both
flyers’ tropes threaten Jewish existence.
The larger issue is not
the flyers or even their threat to Jews. The issue is that the flyers
reflect a dominant ideology that is inculcated on campuses to a captive
audience in frequently required classes that resemble the Workmen’s
Circle of early Marxism. These courses teach that all gain, except that
achieved by oppressed classes, is ill gotten.
In Middle East
studies courses, Israel is seen as the one illegitimate state in the
world, a last bastion of British imperialism. Obviously, the professors
who teach this do not recall that Britain supported the Arabs in
Israel’s 1948 War of Independence.
Canards
such as “Jews control the media and Hollywood” are commonplace among
leftist professors who spoon-feed their own ideology rather than facts.
If professors were teaching that slavery is a benign institution that
benefited blacks, there would be such public outcry that universities
would not be able to open their doors. But about Jews, almost anything
can be said with impunity.
The issue of the flyers is less that
they are the product of the twisted minds of some brainwashed students,
but that they are the logical outcome of what is taught on our campuses.
freddiedeboer |“Woke” or “wokeness” refers to a school of social and cultural
liberalism that has become the dominant discourse in left-of-center
spaces in American intellectual life. It reflects trends and fashions
that emerged over time from left activist and academic spaces and became
mainstream, indeed hegemonic, among American progressives in the 2010s.
“Wokeness” centers “the personal is political” at the heart of all
politics and treats political action as inherently a matter of personal
moral hygiene - woke isn’t something you do, it’s something you are.
Correspondingly all of politics can be decomposed down to the right
thoughts and right utterances of enlightened people. Persuasion and
compromise are contrary to this vision of moral hygiene and thus are
deprecated. Correct thoughts are enforced through a system of mutual
surveillance, one which takes advantage of the affordances of internet
technology to surveil and then punish. Since politics is not a matter of
arriving at the least-bad alternative through an adversarial process
but rather a matter of understanding and inhabiting an elevated moral
station, there are no crises of conscience or necessary evils.
Woke is defined by several consistent attributes. Woke is
Academic
- the terminology of woke politics is an academic terminology, which is
unsurprising given its origins in humanities departments of elite
universities. Central to woke discourse is the substitution of older and
less complicated versions of socially liberal perspectives with more
willfully complex academic versions. So civil rights are out,
“anti-racism” is in. Community is out, intersectionality is in. Equality
is out, equity is in. Homelessness is out, unhousedness is in. Sexism
is out, misogyny is in. Advantage is out, privilege is in. Whenever
there’s an opportunity to introduce an alternative concept that’s been
wrung through academia’s weird machinery, that opportunity is taken.
This has the advantage of making political engagement available only to a
priestly caste that has enjoyed the benefits of elite university
education; like all political movements, the woke political movement is
captured by the urge to occupy elevated status within it.
Immaterial
- woke politics are overwhelmingly concerned with the linguistic, the
symbolic, and the emotional to the detriment of the material, the
economic, and the real. Woke politics are famously obsessive about
language, developing literal language policies that are endlessly long
and exacting. Utterances are mined for potential offense with pitiless
focus, such that statements that were entirely anodyne a few years ago
become unspeakable today. Being politically pure is seen as a matter of
speaking correctly rather than of acting morally. The woke fixation on
language and symbol makes sense when you realize that the developers of
the ideology are almost entirely people whose profession involves the
immaterial and the symbolic - professors, writers, reporters, artists,
pundits. They retreat to the linguistic because they feel that words are
their only source of power. Consider two recent events: the Academy
Awards giving Oscars to many people of color and Michigan repealing its
right-to-work law. The latter will have vastly greater positive
consequences for actually-existing American people of color than the
former, and yet the former has been vastly better publicized. This is a
direct consequence of the incentive structure of woke politics.
Structural
in analysis, individual in action - the woke perspective is one that
tends to see the world’s problems as structural in nature rather than
the product of individual actors or actions. Sometimes the problems are
misdiagnosed or exaggerated, but the structural focus is beneficial.
Curiously, though, the woke approach to solutions to politics is
relentlessly individualistic. Rather than calling for true mass
movements (which you cannot create without the moderation and compromise
the social justice set tends to abhor), woke politics typically treats
all political struggle as a matter of the individual mastering
themselves and behaving correctly. The fundamental unit of politics is
not the masses but the enlightened person, in the social justice
mindset, and the enlightened person is one who has attained a state of
moral cleanliness, particularly as expressed in language. The structural
problems (such as racism) are represented as fundamentally combated
with individual moral correctness (such as articulated in White Fragility by
Robin DiAngelo, which argues that racism is combated by white people
interrogating their souls rather than with policy). The only real
political project is the struggle against the self; the only real
political victory is the mastery of one’s thoughts. The distinction
between the effective political actor and the morally hygienic thinker
is collapsed. You combat homophobia by being gay-affirming. You combat
misogyny by respecting women. You combat all social ills by relentlessly
fixating on your own position in society and feeling bad about it.
Nothing political can escape the gravity of personal psychodrama and no
solutions exist but cleansing the self.
Emotionalist
- “emotionalist” rather than emotional, meaning not necessarily
inappropriately emotional but concerned fundamentally with emotions as
the currency of politics. In woke circles, political problems are
regularly diagnosed as a matter of the wrong emotions being inspired in
someone. Someone feeling “invalid” is no longer an irrelevant matter of
personal psychology best left to a therapist but instead a political
problem to be solved, and anyone who provoked that feeling is someone
who has committed a political crime no matter what the context or
pretext.
nationalreview | Once upon a time, “political correctness” was little more than a
benign left-wing version of old-church-lady tut-tutting. Today, by
contrast, the designation is used to describe what has become a
sprawling, unhinged, and invariably unfalsifiable conspiracy theory that
can be used to dismiss anybody who violates this morning’s edition of
the progressive catechism. “Gosh,” one can almost hear DeBoer and Chait
asking themselves, “have we unleashed a brigade of poorly educated,
parodically self-indulgent, and chronically illiberal morons into our
movement, the better to destroy it from within? And, if we have, will we
ever be able to rid ourselves of them?”
The answer to the latter
question, one suspects, may well be “No,” for as Hollywood has taught us
repeatedly over the years, it does not pay to unleash unpredictable
viruses into the ecosystem — even if one gains temporarily by doing so.
And make no mistake, “political correctness” is a virus — a
nasty, cynical, destructive sickness that is akin in both theory and in
practice to the sort of irritating malware that pushes endless streams
of nonsensical dialogue windows onto your grandmother’s computer and
prevents her from e-mailing her friends. In the “politically correct”
settings that Chait and DeBoer are describing, no sooner has a
freethinking person started to say, “Well, I think” — than a grotty
little pop-up box has appeared to interrupt him with a stream of tosh.
“Error 349xxf9: Privileges unchecked,” a typical response might read.
Or, if we are dealing with a more serious case: “Error 948xxer11:
Tolerance Level Low: Fault at LGBT Sector Cis*Trans*Kin:
Intersectionality Improperly Allied.” As within computing, the genius is
the panic that this provokes. Just as scareware thrives on the
elderly’s touching belief that they can “break” the computer by clicking
on the wrong buttons, so today’s young are so terrified of
politically-correct bullying that they fail to do what is obviously
necessary, which is rolling their eyes, clicking quietly on “cancel,”
and uninstalling the problem completely. The Left is arguing about the
right level of “political correctness”? A plague on all their houses.
Want to go to the pub?
thegrio | Tubman was a true freedom fighter. Her objective was to get Black
people free and she dedicated her life and her own liberty to that
singular goal. The pink pussy hat brigade is a feminist lite reaction to
real problems. Donning a stupid hat, retweeting a clever quip, and
marching once a year does not make one a freedom fighter.
To put that piece of zeitgeist garbage on the head of a legend is
profoundly disrespectful and shows a lack of understanding about
intersectionality. Putting a hat on Tubman does not link these
movements. It does not bring Black women into this fight.
Black women have always been our own best advocates and everyone
benefits from our work because we are consistently at the bottom when it
comes to wages, civil /human rights, and a litany of other topics. So
when Black women’s conditions improve, there is a “trickle up” effect that everyone can enjoy.
So, pink pussy hatters, instead of making an empty and disrespectful
statement/gesture, find a womanist in your life who is willing to
tolerate your level of ignorance and learn a few things. If you’re
lucky, she’ll tell you what you can do to be a true advocate for all
women. Planned Parenthood’s president Cecile Richards echoed this sentiment when she urged white women to “do better” at the Women’s March.
In the meantime, keep your hands off of Sister Tubman.
NewYorker | It’s unlikely that the adornment was meant to project any message
besides optimism and frenetic cheek. Nonetheless, the image acutely
captures the schisms of the contemporary women’s movement. The Women’s
March on Washington originated as a Facebook event, posted in the
shell-shocked days following Trump’s election. At the time, it was named
the Million Woman March, after a 1997 march in Philadelphia organized by
the black women activists Phile Chionesu and Asia Coney. The organizers
were roundly criticized for what registered as a white-feminist appropriation of black intellectual labor. Quickly, the event’s title was changed, and the Women’s March
established a national board primarily composed of women of color. But
the sense of ideological mistrust—the suspicion that the March promotes
an agenda that diminishes the work of nonwhite people, and that it is an
uncritical extension of support for Hillary Clinton—persists. Last week,
a call to boycott the Women’s March in Philadelphia went viral after
many L.G.B.T. activists objected to the organization’s insistence that
attendees be screened by the police. The pussyhat, too, has been
ridiculed: for its origin in a repellent Trump slur, for its possible
exclusion of transgender women, for its flippant embrace of the racial
connotations of pink.The branding of the Women’s March has unified millions and, as would any
phenomenon of its size, has also left many feeling disaffected.
“Harriet Tubman with Pink Pussyhat” feels like an accidental effigy
that has bred that skepticism. It’s a question of politics and of taste.
The recruitment of historical figures into contemporary mores and
fashions is a tic of the movement, a yearning not just for a better
future but for a neater past. The dissonance has flared up before: on
Election Day in 2016, hundreds of people, mostly women, made a
pilgrimage
to Mount Hope Cemetery, in Rochester, to decorate the gravestone of the
suffragist Susan B. Anthony with “I Voted” stickers. (Anthony
collaborated with Tubman, who fought, toward the end of her life for the
enfranchisement of black women and men, but Anthony also once said, “I
will cut off this right arm of mine before I will ever work or demand
the ballot for the Negro and not the woman.”) On seeing the photo of
Tubman in a pussyhat on Instagram, some commenters wondered, drolly, if
a gentrifier had been trying to spruce up the statue. When the
photograph migrated to Twitter, someone who manages the account of Ralph
R. McKee Career & Technical Education High School, on Staten Island,
chimed in with “solidarity.”
The hat does not belong on Tubman. Or, depending on who’s looking, it does.
timesofisrael | Bias against homelands can hurt minorities in the Diaspora. Prejudices
against Africans (‘primitives,’ ‘hotheads’) devalue Black migrants
around the world. Prejudices against Asians (‘mystical people’)
dehumanize Asian migrants the world over. But propaganda against Israel
hurts Jews in their Diaspora like no other minority. Zionism is to Jews
what feminism is to women. Men who ‘like women but not feminists’ show
they don’t like women; rather, they like being served. Jews and Gentiles
who ‘like Jews but not Zionists’ show they like Jews as long as they
feel scared all the time so that they can be manipulated to serve and
comfort the Gentile powers to be; but not when they are independent and
proud of themselves.
Judaism laid much of the foundation of all Monotheism (One G^d),
Science (One Universe), and Democracy (Equality) in the world. That’s
why hatred of Jews is the ultimate ungratefulness, throwing mud on
Abraham, Moses, Jesus, Einstein, and Herzl. And therefore, the Holocaust
doesn’t compare to any other genocide, Armenian included—though they
are all horrific.
It seems that Intersectionality was designed to promote
Antisemitic. It advocates comparing oppressions and seeing how they are
all interwoven. Because Antisemitism is so unique, and because Jews are
kept hostage by the top level of societies (and blamed for all ills), it
often ends up uniting all oppressed groups against the Jews, the
victims of the oldest hatred.
And so, you see there is reason not to just regard Antisemitism
as one of the forms of Racism. Jews-oppression is too specific. It’s a
special bigotry.
aljazeera | According to conservatives, political correctness was hampering free
speech, restricting behavior and hindering ostensibly objective
policies such as school admissions. America the great, birthplace of
freedom and liberty, taken hostage by college students armed with ideas
from Franz Fanon, Judith Butler or Michel Foucault and a rising tide of
people who insisted their identities and experiences be accurately
described and taken into account. I was one of those college students
and was rigorously trained to deconstruct everything from your coffee
cup to your favorite television show to ensure you understand the full
meaning of what you are seeing, hearing and saying.
Building off the civil rights movement and feminist activism of the
late 1960s and early 1970s, identity politics as a field emerged in
response to the unfair treatment that people from marginalized groups
received in daily life and the ways in which American culture did not
reflect or include our experience or realities. Identity politics
emerged in academia as a response to history’s not including the plight
of Native Americans, women or black people. It was a response to
racism, sexism and homophobia that pushed back on the assumption that
everyone was straight, white, cisgender and middle-class. Identity
politics — also known as the fields of women’s studies, ethnic studies,
African-American studies, queer studies and the like — paved the way
for Edward Said to study colonization’s role in how the West
understands “the Orient,” Kimberle Crenshaw to consider a politics of
intersectionality and the powerlessness of women invisible to the legal
system and Audre Lorde to insist that her words as a lesbian and woman
of color mattered.
This group of supposed pc bullies paved the way for generations to feel
as though they belong to something even if they don’t see themselves
reflected in the world around them. The development of identity
politics was a transformative moment: the beginning of a push to make
the country a more inclusive, less hateful place for those who are
different — the very values politicians of all stripes tout as a great
characteristic of a great nation. It was also an important intervention
to political dialogue and intellectual thought production and pushed
academic institutions to be more thorough and rigorous in their
assumptions, values and research. And it refuted the idea that there is
an objective truth, as opposed to subjective realities, when it comes
to telling stories about our lives.
But the rise of identity politics as an academic, political and
cultural movement came with some baggage. A side effect of people
feeling invisible for generations is anger. While identity politics
pushed culture and politics, it also released decades of anger and
animosity that previously went unexpressed in our finest educational
institutions. This scared those who preferred to assume that everyone
was happy in the good old days or believed that certain ideas were
universally true. Of course, fear and anger had always been under the
surface; it just finally had a chance to breath.
This isn’t to say that the sanctimonious overreliance on saying the
right thing can’t be distracting and self-serving. Looking back at my
college activism, I am slightly embarrassed by the emotional energy and
time I spent judging other people’s politics and decisions. It was a
natural part of growing into a political thinker and differentiating
myself, but in other ways it distracted me from looking at broader
issues outside my day-to-day life.
The use ofsocial media
as a powerful tool for free education on various topics continually
rises, with definitions, experiential narratives, and resources being
shared through Twitter threads, short videos, Facebook statuses, and
even memes. And while this is a mostly positive phenomena, there seems
to be a trend of words, and thus words’ associated theories, being used
misguidedly.
Often, this is a simple case of
fighting character limits and the loss of nuance that occurs through
online mediums, and other times it seems a phenomena of genuine
miseducation and confusion. Words like intersectionality, decolonize, imperialism, socialism, and other loaded terms that come with decades of jargon are at times applied to everything, and their actual meaning is lost.
Observing this pattern is what lead
me to the idea of an article series titled “Words Mean Things,” wherein
each month I choose a different word and discuss the theories, uses,
theorists, examples, applications, and praxis surrounding it. The goal
is to do this as concisely as possible and, understanding these will
never be wholly conclusive of all definitions, applications, and
examples of certain words, to deliver small primers that exist as
resources to lead readers to study deeper. I often say that words mean everything, and then anything, just before meaning nothing.
Colonialism
Colonialism is a system of land
occupation and theft, labor exploitation, and/or resource dependency
that is to blame for much of our modern concepts of racialization. It is
an act of dominance in which a forceful state overtakes a “weaker”
state; this means that colonization is the act of forcefully stripping
sovereignty of a country through acquisition of land, resources, raw
material, and governmental structures. Systems of colonialism are based
in notions of racial inferiority, as they as they perpetuate
white/European domination over non-white colonial subjects.
The most obvious (and broad) example
of colonialism is the expansion of Europe into Africa, Asia, and Latin
America, and the subsequent creation of colonies. Through violence and
manipulation, a relationship of control and influence
was exerted economically, socially, politically, religiously, and
culturally. In Jamaica, for example, the British empire invaded and
colonized the island in the mid-17th Century, and subsequently
established British colonial school systems, laws and regulations
creating dependency on Britain, and pushed European gender, religious,
and wardrobe norms onto the society.
“Between colonizer and colonized
there is room only for forced labor, intimidation, pressure, the police,
taxation, theft, rape, compulsory crops, contempt, mistrust, arrogance,
self-complacency, swinishness, brainless elites, degraded masses. No
human contact, but relations of domination and submission which turn the
colonizing man into a class-room monitor, an army sergeant, a prison
guard, a slave driver, and the indigenous man into an instrument of
production.”
nakedcapitalism | If we consider modern privilege discourse as a sort of semi-animate
entity, a part of its genius lies in its ability to convince its
adherents that questioning it means claiming that no disadvantages
distributed unfairly according to collective patterns exist.
Or that questioning it means denying the existence of subtle
conventions that make certain people feel unwelcome in certain settings.
Or, closer to home, that critiquing McIntosh’s Å“uvre means dismissing all of her ideas.
I believe, on the contrary, that there are important questions that
should be asked about all of these topics. Privilege discourse doesn’t
exactly encourage asking them, but that doesn’t need to stop us.
First, the lateral/vertical world distinction is worth thinking
about. The way in which the distinction is partially overlaid on gender
in McIntosh isn’t really essential, even to her own treatment of the
idea.
Real questions arise at this point. To what extent can things
smacking of meritocracy be done away with? To what extent can the
vertical world be marginalized?
To what extent can people, even well-meaning people working towards
similar goals, discuss ideas without sometimes tearing the social
fabric?
The lateral world seems less uncomplicatedly good than McIntosh
suggests. The secretary praised by her for “keeping everything going” might
be working for an elementary school, but might instead be working for
an arms dealer. In a case like the latter, the lateral world’s
relationship with the vertical world is not conflictual but symbiotic.
One thought I’ve had is that I think people respond better if treated
as individuals who are potentially involved in larger group patterns,
rather than as exemplars of groups, fighting an uphill battle in any
effort to be seen as single people.
One way in which privilege discourse has been “efficient” is by
separating the process of classification of something as a privilege
from the process of assigning it a moral charge. I don’t think there’s
anything inherently wrong with trying to look at advantages as a single
large category. But from this starting point, it seems clearly important
to make distinctions about where these advantages come from, what they
signify, and what can be done about them.
In the spirit of McIntosh’s vertical/lateral distinction, we could
make a (not at all hard and fast) distinction between “vertical” and
“lateral” advantages. Vertical advantages would include things like
money, where people generally feel like having more is preferable.
Lateral advantages would include things like speaking French versus
speaking English, where either one can be preferable, depending on the
milieu.
One problem, in fact, with classifying lateral advantages as
“privileges” (and therefore presumptively bad) is that they are more or
less coterminous with culture. If the goal is to make it so there are no
environments where some people are more confident and others less
confident, I don’t see how to do this without leveling all cultural
distinctions. After all, one name for a place where a particular group
of people feel disproportionately comfortable is home.
thehill | Conservative commentator Bill Kristol rips Fox News's Tucker Carlson
in a new interview, saying his show could be "close now to racism" or
"ethnonationalism."
"I mean, it is close now to racism, white — I
mean, I don't know if it's racism exactly — but ethnonationalism of
some kind, let's call it. A combination of dumbing down, as you said
earlier, and stirring people's emotions in a very unhealthy way,"
Kristol told CNBC's John Harwood in the interview published on Thursday.
Back from Israel, where you see "that inner freedom, that simple dignity" of "people who remember their heritage & are loyal to their fate."
Carlson recently questioned the
widespread outrage over Trump's reported comments referring to Haiti,
El Salvador and African nations as "shithole countries."
"So, if
you say Norway is a better place to live and Haiti is kind of a hole,
well anyone who’s been to those countries or has lived in them would
agree. But we’re jumping up and down, ‘Oh, you can’t say that.’ Why
can’t you say that?" Carlson asked.
frontpagemag | Intersectionality frowns on expecting civil behavior from
“oppressed” protesters. Asking that shrieking campus crybully not to
scream threats in your face is “tone policing”. An African-American
millionaire’s child at Yale is fighting for her “existence”, unlike the
Pennsylvania coal miner, the Baltimore police officer and the Christian
florist whose existences really are threatened.
Tone policing
is how the anger of privileged leftists is protected while the
frustration of their victims is suppressed. The existence of tone
policing as a specific term to protect displays of left-wing anger shows
the collapse of civility into anger privilege. Civility has been
replaced by a political entitlement to anger.
The left prides itself on an unearned moral superiority (“When they
go low, we go high”) reinforced by its own echo chamber even as it has
become incapable of controlling its angry outbursts. The national
tantrum after Trump’s victory has all but shut down the government,
turned every media outlet into a non-stop feed of conspiracy theories
and set off protests that quickly escalated into street violence.
But Trump Derangement Syndrome is a symptom of a problem with the left
that existed before he was born. The left is an angry movement. It is
animated by an outraged self-righteousness whose moral superiority
doubles as dehumanization. And its machinery of culture glamorizes its
anger. The media dresses up the seething rage so that the left never has
to look at its inner Hodgkinson in the mirror.
The left is as
angry as ever. Campus riots and assassinations of Republican
politicians are nothing new. What is changing is that its opponents are
beginning to match its anger. The left still clings to the same anger
it had when it was a theoretical movement with plans, but little impact
on the country. The outrage at the left is no longer ideological. There
are millions of people whose health care was destroyed by ObamaCare,
whose First Amendment rights were taken away, whose land was seized,
whose children were turned against them and whose livelihoods were
destroyed.
The angry left has gained a great deal of power. It
has used that power to wreck lives. It is feverishly plotting to
deprive nearly 63 million Americans of their vote by using its
entrenched power in the government, the media and the non-profit sector.
And it is too blinded by its own anger over the results of the election
to realize the anger over its wholesale abuses of power and privileged
tantrums.
But monopolies on anger only work in totalitarian
states. In a free society, both sides are expected to control their
anger and find terms on which to debate and settle issues. The left
rejects civility and refuses to control its anger. The only settlement
it will accept is absolute power. If an election doesn’t go its way, it
will overturn the results. If someone offends it, he must be punished.
Or there will be anger.
The angry left demands that everyone
recognize the absolute righteousness of its anger as the basis for its
power. This anger privilege, like tone policing, is often cast in terms
of oppressed groups. But its anger isn’t in defiance of oppression, but
in pursuit of oppression.
Anger privilege is used to silence
opposition, to enforce illegal policies and to seize power. But the
left’s monopolies on anger are cultural, not political. The
entertainment industry and the media can enforce anger privilege norms
through public shaming, but their smears can’t stop the consequences of
the collapse of civility in public life. There are no monopolies on
emotion.
When anger becomes the basis for political power,
then it won’t stop with Howard Dean or Bernie Sanders. That’s what the
left found out in the last election. Its phony pearl clutching was a
reaction to the consequences of its destruction of civility. Its
reaction to that show of anger by conservatives and independents was to
escalate the conflict. Instead of being the opposition, the left became
the “resistance”. Trump was simultaneously Hitler and a traitor.
Republicans were evil beasts.
downwithtyranny |Wokeness, “a term referring to awareness of issues that concern social justice and racial equality,” is everywhere these days. What is going on? The CIA going woke? The Pinkertons, long-time nemesis of labor unions, flying the Rainbow Pride flag? Raytheon pushing critical race theory? Has the U.S. Left finally triumphed over their foes? No, in fact, progressives are circling the drain (Medicare for All is going nowhere, the minimum wage remains $7.25/hr, unions are on the verge of extinction, impotent Twitter protestations by Bernie notwithstanding) but so are their woke-boosting corporate foes. Why and how is this so? The explanation has its roots in 1) the state-sponsored battle against civil unrest U.S that began in the 1960s. and 2) intellectual concepts discovered by polymath thinker Gregory Bateson.
The U.S. during the 1960’s suffered an eruption of domestic rebellion, ranging from the civil rights movement and the feminist revolution to organized labor and the anti-war movement. Strangely enough, most of the leaders in these movements were assassinated (RFK, MLK, Malcolm X) or died under mysterious circumstances (Walter Reuther). Was it enough for the ruling elite that the leaders of these movements were dead (neutralized)? I contend that it was not and that the elites embarked on an additional strategy: capture of the movements to 1) prevent a resurgence of rebellion against the ruling elites and 2) prevent cross alliances between the various rebel factions, a reason theorized by some to explain the death of Rev. Martin Luther King Jr, who was trying to unite the civil rights movement, the antiwar movement, and the organized labor movement at the time of his death. From feminism, where a movement leader (Gloria Steinem) has been revealed to have worked for the CIA, to civil rights, where Black Lives Matters is subsidized by the Ford Foundation to the tune of $100 million, to organized labor, where the AFL-CIO provided assistance to various U.S. government regime change efforts, these movements are infested with corporate and state actors. Meanwhile, concrete measures of material progress, such as increased wages for the working class, universal healthcare, and support for organized labor remain curiously out of reach.
There is a name for this highly effective signal jamming by government and corporate elites: maintaining the schismogenesis.
Schismogenesis means the beginning of the breakdown of a relationship or a system. Gregory Bateson, a scientific polymath, actively conducting research from the 1930s throughout the 1970s, in a wide array of fields including anthropology, semiotics, cybernetics, linguistics, and biology, first developed it while observing the social interactions of a New Guinean tribe called the Iatmul. Interestingly enough, Bateson later weaponized the idea of schismogenesis and deliberately sowed divisions while working for the OSS, the precursor to the CIA. This perpetuation of division, schismogenesis, is what I contend all of these woke corporations and government agencies are actively engaged in.
The explosion in wokeness launched in the years immediately following the Occupy rebellion of the Left and the Tea Party rebellion of the Right. Very curious timing indeed. Absent in all of these modern woke campaigns, of course, are the aforementioned measures that actually represent material improvements for the working class nor any mention of the menace of war and imperialism Even now, divisive and unpopular concepts like Critical Race Theory and Intersectionality, launched from academia by upper class elites, are being touted by woke corporations and labor unions. Against this goliath force, it looks like progressives are doomed. Ironically, it looks like the woke propagators may have created a tool that will also insure their own demise. Why? This explanation relies on another of Gregory Bateson’s concepts: the double bind.
Intersectionality, the “buzzword” taken up so faithfully by mainstream Democrats
in 2016, requires an acknowledgment that like race and sexual identity,
class is a dimension that mediates one’s perspective. That means the hashtag #trustblackwomen shouldn’t collapse the interests of Oprah, a billionaire, with, well, anyone else’s.
Similarly, not all blacks or latinos should be presumed to speak
equally to the interests of poor and working class people of color. This
is a truth easily internalized when Democrats consider figures like Ben Carson or Ted Cruz. It’s a more difficult reality to swallow when considering one of our own.
None of this is to say that in every scenario, race, gender, sexuality, and class are equal inputs. Affluent black athletes are still tackled by cops despite their wealth, and black Harvard professors are arrested
trying to unlock their own front doors. But the fact that racism hurts
even those with economic privilege is not “proof” that class doesn’t
matter, as some race reductionists have claimed. It’s simply affirmation
that racism matters too.
Consider, for instance, my colleague Zaid Jilani’s review of comprehensive police shooting data in 2015, in which he found
that 95 percent of police shootings had occurred in neighborhoods where
the household income averaged below $100,000 a year. Remember that
Philando Castile was pulled over, in part, because he was flagged for
dozens of driving offenses described as “crimes of poverty”
by local public defender Erik Sandvick. Failure to show proof of
insurance, driving with a broken taillight — these are hardly patrician
slip ups. If anything is privileged, it’s the fiction that there’s no
difference between the abuses suffered by wealthy black athletes and
working class blacks like Philando Castile. Race can increase your odds
of being targeted and abused. Money can help you survive abuse and secure justice — something which sadly eluded Castile.
“There is a tendency to reduce issues
that have quite a bit to do with the economic opportunities available to
all Americans, African Americans among them, and in some instances
overrepresented among them, to matters of race,” explained Dr. Reed, who
is currently writing a book on the conservative implications of race
reductionism. He pointed to the water crisis in Flint, Michigan, as well
as the mass incarceration crisis, as examples. “In both those
instances, Flint and the criminal justice system, whites are 40 percent,
or near 40 percent, of the victims,” he said. And that’s an awfully
high number for collateral damage.” He went on: “There’s something
systemic at play. But it can’t be reduced, be reducible, to race.”
Tennis umpires are reportedly considering a boycott of Serena Williams matches. The public statement of boycotting Serena’s games underscores beyond any shadow of a doubt the specific nature of this particular tempest on a tennis court. Even in the twilight of her career, the disparate economic influence of the GOAT on the worldwide enterprise of tennis vs. the butt hurt bleetings of some expendable little men - will be most interesting to observe and measure.
There have been rumblings for years about replacing these overpaid and underperforming accessories to the match with computers, taking the element of human error (and human sensitivity) out of the equation. If the umpires go on strike, it will be a perfect opportunity to begin testing a new and improved HawkEye system which does a bit more than accurately track tennis ball ballistics.
In the interim, while the final and permanent disintermediation of highly fallible human umpires is developed, it will not be difficult to find other umpires to replace the ITF's little men with their panties in an ill-considered bunch. Technology has advanced to the point where umpires aren't really necessary.
The victorian-era rules of tennis are a little archaic and arbitrary to being with, the fact that they are selectively enforced means it's overdue time for a change.
medium |Serena’s
unhinged outbursts in yesterday’s US Open Championship, was an
embarrassment and an eyeopener to who and what she’s become. We can go
back and forth on what other male players have said and gotten away
with, one has nothing to do with the other in this case. Serena’s issues
over her career have not been because she was a woman but because she
was Black. It’s disingenuous of those who claim to be woke, to not
acknowledge that Serena used every liberal and feminists excuse, except
for the real issue that’s plagued her career; her skin color.
This
intersectionality game that Feminist play to ensure that White women
are the real benefactors in all things related to womanhood and civil
rights, is becoming irritating. The fact that Serena did not acknowledge
her Blackness as the real issue she has been constantly discriminated
against, was a slap in the face for Black women and more importantly
Black female athletes. Serena has attempted to use her giving birth and
being a mother as somehow a foreign thing in women’s sports. She has
also bought into the social media hype and White liberals newfound love
and praise for her because she’s a mother.
politico |Elizabeth Warrenhas pushed back hard on questions about a Harvard Crimson piece in 1996 that described heras Native American, saying she had no idea the school where she taught law was billing her that way and saying it never came up during her hiring a year earlier, which others have backed up.
But a 1997 Fordham Law Review piece described her as Harvard Law School's "first woman of color," based, according to the notes at the bottom of the story, on a "telephone interview with Michael Chmura, News Director, Harvard Law (Aug. 6, 1996)."
The mention was in the middle of a lengthy and heavily-annotated Fordham piece on diversity and affirmative action and women. The title of the piece, by Laura Padilla, was "Intersectionality and positionality: Situating women of color in the affirmative action dialogue."
"There are few women of color who hold important positions in the academy, Fortune 500 companies, or other prominent fields or industries," the piece says. "This is not inconsequential. Diversifying these arenas, in part by adding qualified women of color to their ranks, remains important for many reaons. For one, there are scant women of color as role models. In my three years at Stanford Law School, there were no professors who were women of color. Harvard Law School hired its first woman of color, Elizabeth Warren, in 1995."
Padilla, now at California Western School of Law, told POLITICO in an email that she doesn't remember the details of the conversation with Chmura, who is now at Babson College and didn't respond to a request for comment. It is unclear whether it was Padilla's language or Chmura's.
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